Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, December 01, 1893, Image 1

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    llSI'I'NKIlJAZfiTTK.
NOTHING RISKED,
NOTHING MADE.
HEPPNEH GAZETTE.
PATER
OFFICIAL
STO RISK,
IsTO TEADE.
o--o-ooooo
The man ho doesn't advertise, doesn't
gt the eaah.
fine
Hirmnu who advertise, gets the tush.
Nottce It.
ELEVENTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1893.
WEEKLY i0. MO.
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. lM.j
1 "
SEMI .VEtKLY ii Lv. I k.
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
fllK I'ATTIiRSUN PUBLISHING COMPANY.
:AH W. PATTERSON ...Bub. Manager.
i.:'IS FATTfcHBON Editor
V " y 5 1 per year, 11.25 for eix months, 7fi ctB.
i, rtmw iimii urn.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Apptication.
The EA-GMjEI, of Long ('reek, Grant
County, Oregon, is published by the name com
uiitiy every Friday morning. tSubscriptioii
p'-ii-e. f!p:r year. ForudvertlHingratuB.addresB
OXeiiT Xi- FJi.XI'EiaSOiT, Editor and
Ma:;u ,'( r, Ixng Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette,"
Ht'.ppner, Oregon.
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREETO OURREADERS
' I M l IS PAPKK is keot
I Advertising Agency, II and
on tile at E. C. Duke's
05 Merchants
K-i-liiiiiK, San 1'raneiBco, ('alifonna, where cou-
ritels lor advertising can Da inaue tor ll.
THE UAZETTE'H All iNTS.
Winner, B. A. HiuiBaker
Aiuiiigton Phill Heppner
I.., us Creek The Eagle
Keho Postuiast-r
Caiua'a Prairie, Oscar De Vaul
Nye, or H. C. Wright
Uaruiuan, Or., I'os in; ster
ilnuiiltoii, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster
lone, J - Carl
Prairie City, Or R- R. Metlaley
Canyon City, Or 8. L. Parrish
Pilot Kock, 0. P. Skelton
Uayville, Or., ;,;! S1,low
John Day, Or., F. 1. McCalluiu
Athena, or John Edlngton
Pendleton, Or Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster
Shelby Or MisB Stella Flett
Fox, Grant Co., Or., J- F. Allen
Eight Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew Ashuaiigh
Upper Khea Creek B. F. Hevland
Douglas, Or Postmaster
Lone Kock, Or K. M. Juhusoii
Gooseberry J. K. E teb
Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead
Lexington Jas. Leach
AN AUBMT WANTED IN KVEKY PBKCWCT.
Umos Pacfig Railway-Local card.
No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m.
10, " ar. at Arlington 1'lSa.u,
y, " leaves " Sioa p. m.
" 0, " ar. at Heppner 6:2U p. in. dailj
except Sunday.
Kast bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :2o a. m.
West " ' " leaves " lsW a. m.
Day trains have been diBjontinned.
United States Officials.
...i. ..Grover Cleveland
...;v..Ad ai Sieveuson
.... Walter Q. lireshum
...Intiii U. tarlisl.
lei S. Ijauiom
ry A. Herltei-I
Att,ri.Bl-tieueral . .KloharO B. Uluej
Secretary of Agriculture.. - i..J. Sterling Mono,
ol Oregou.
1 1. indent .......
Vice-l'reeldeut
oec-e'ary ol Slate..
ii;i .'lary ol 'I reaMUry . . ..
i-l.,i..1 i. y of Interior.,
fleoruiary of War
tenroiarj or. wavy.. Akd'' "i"J"
Posliuaaler-Ueueral f"Bjou tt. Hiaeell
.iiiui
. Irs
tiy a special arrangement with the
publishers we are prepared to furnish
FREE to each of our readers ft year's
subscription to the popular monthly
agricultural journal, the American
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland. Ohio.
This offer iH 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
Farmer enjoys a large national circula
tion, and ranks among the leading
agricultural papers. By this arrange
ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re
ceive the American Farmer for one
year. It will he to your advantage to
oall promptly. . Sample copies can be
sen at our office.
Ttie orlKlnal
DIGTIOHHRY."
VWrUIEfW.lrF
YHl inn-Hi
"As old aa
the hills" and
never excell
ed. "Tried
and proven "
13 the verdict
o f millions.
Simmons
Liver Regu
lator is the
J-JCftC and Kidney
medicine to
which you
can pin your
faith for a
cure. A
mild laxa
tive, and
purely veg
etable, act
ing directly
on the Liver
and Kid
neys. Try it.
Sold by all
Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder
to be taken dry or made into a tea.
The King of f.lver Medicines,
" I have used yourslmnions Liver Regu
lator and can eonscieneiounly say it Is the
kluirof nil liver medicines, I consider It a
medicine chest In Itself. UKo. W. Jack
8on, Tacoma, Washington.
3-EVEIt PACKAGE'S
Uas the Z Stamp In red on wrappeit
Pills
SPECIAL AKKAiNUEJlENl WITH THE
I ft V
IJ publisheri, ive are able to obtain a number
OH
1.
;y
school and business hoiiBe. It 1111b a vacancy,
of th above book, and propone to furnish a
py to each oiour suoBcn iters.
The dictionary 1b a neceBsity In every home,
QUICK TX1VIE2 I
TO
aiiL Franolsoo
lid all points In California, via the 31t, Bhasta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
he great highway through California to all
points Kast and South. Grand Beenld Bouts
' of the Pacific Coast. . Pullman Buffet
Sleapera, Second-chus Sleepers
Attached to express trains, affording snpenor
ecommodations for second-olass passengers.
or rates, ticket., sleeping oar reservations,
to,, oall upon or address
KtlEHI.EK, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst.
ten. F. 4 P. AgU. Portland, Oregon.
and furnishes knowledgt
dred other volumes of tn
supply
ricn
Hovorpor. JW.o" '4 ....8. Peunoyei
Treasurer Phil. Melacliau
Bnpl. Public lustrui tion K. H. Monlroj
t J. H. Mitchell
Senators 1 j. N.D.duh
I Hiinrer Herinaul,
1 oimreMMiut.il
Printer
Supreme Judge)
I
i W. u. Jillis
, Frank I). Hakei
i F. A. Aloort-
W. P. tord
(U. S.
. Beau
Seventh Judicial District.
Cucu.t Judge VV. L. Hradaha
proi-ii niini: Attorney VV. a. Wile i.
Morrow County OIHcial".
j.i,i Senator Henry Mlackmai,
Representative..,
iry Hh
.J.N.
Hrowi.
omity Judge juiiun iveiuni
C iniuiiBBiouerB r eiei euuw.
J. 41. Uaker.
i-larfc J. W. Morrow
Sherilf eo. Noble.
Ireasurer VV. J . L eze.
AsseBsor I. - '"
Surveyor lsaUrown
' school oup't ...VV. 1.. Baling
'owner T. W . Ayei, J .
UKPFNBB TOWN OrKIOKBS.
J. R. Simon
rouueiim'en O. E. FaruBWortli, M
Liidneuthal, Otis Patteraon, Julias Keiuily
W. A. Jonuoton, J. L. Yuager. ....-
itecomei ; A; H"bt,r"'
rreaeutel ; U Slocum
Marshal VY. Kaauiua.
FiTCiuct OIHcers.
Justice of the Peace.. F. J. HbIUmjI.
(oualable C. W.Hjohar.1
United states Land Orhcem.
TUE DALLES, OB.
J. W. Lewis K iB '
1.8.Latig 1
LA OBANDB, OB.
B.F, Wi'son Reglstei
J. 11. Uobbins Ueceivei
which no one hun
e choicest books could
l uuim nuu mil. vuuiawu ou ik iiuibiiii
and Door, should have it within reach, and
refer to its contents every day in the year.
As some have asked if this is really the Orig
uirI Wehster'B Unabridged Dictionary, we art-
able to state we have learned, direct from the
oulilishers the fact, that this Is the very work
comuiete on which about forty of the best years
.11 the author's life were so weU employed in
.vntlug. it contains tne enure vocabulary oi
about 100,000 words, including the correct spell
ing, derivation and definition of same, and n,
the regular standard slise, containing about
too.uoo suuare inches of printed surface, and Is
fiouua lu cioin nan morocco aiiu sneeu.
Until further notice we will furnish this
valuable Dictionary
First To any new subscriber.
Second To any renewal subscriber,
Third To any subscriber now 'n arrears
who pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, viz
Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bad
stamps marbled edges. $i-oo
Half Mo occo, bound, gilt side and bac
stamps, marbled edges. $1.50.
Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbles
dges, $2.00,
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
ige to Heppner.
av-AB the publishers limit the time and
lumber of books they will iurnlsh at the low
urices. we advise all who deBire to avail them-
selves of i.his great opportunity to attend to Ii
it once.
SILVER'S Oll-VMPION
HTUEE
iio-:-News
6ECBET SOCIETIES.
Doric Lodge No. W K; of P. meet ev
iry Tuesday evening at 7. HO o clock in
their t'astle Hull. National Hank bullu
ng. Sojourning brother cordially in
.lied to alteuu. VV. L. SALINO. 1.1 .
VV. B Potteb. K. of K.&o. tf
KAWUNS POST, N.). 81.
G.A. B.
eu, at Lexington, Or., the hurt Saturday of
.,1 miuith. All veterans are inviiea hi joiu.
'. C, boon,
Adjutant, tf
lino. W . Smith.
Coiuinauuei .
PB0rE3SI01TAiJ.
A. UOBEUTS, Ki al Entalu, lusui
u.,oh hii.I (Jolltctious. Office ii
uuoil Chambers, Heppner. Or.
A
swtf.
S. P.FLORENCE,
THE DAILY-BY MAIL.
Subscription price reduced as follows:
fjne Year (by mail) : : $6 00
Six Months " : : 3 00
Tim e Months " ; 1 50
nne Month " : : 50
THE WEEKLY BY MAIL
'hie Year (in Advance) '. ft 00
The News is the only consistent c.iairpion of
illvcr in the WeBt. and should be in every home
In the West, and in the hands of every miner
itid buslueRB man In Colorado.
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
THE NEWS,
TJoiiver. Colo
L U M BER!
nr RAVE TOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN
V dressed Luuilier, IdmlleRof Heppner, at
vhat Is known as the
-OOTT SAWMIIjIj
EK 1.0110 FEET. KOt'HH,
" CLEAR,
$10 00
17 50
STOCKRAISER
HKI'PNKH. tmK"N
'rilK r . i-l i'.d iirina-k-l "'"
Ue. 1W1U .a nww'." .k
notion of any verso" stealing my stock.
fK DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD
1 16.00 per 1,000 feet, additional.
I, HAMILTON, Prop.
r. A.. H sTr 1 1 tori . Mnn'fgr
liatiooai BanR ol 'im'.
V
Wl. PENLANH. ED.TK BISHOP.
President. Cashier.
MANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING Bt'SlNESS
OOLLKOTION
MaiIa nn FnvnrnhlA Tenr
KXCHANT.EROlir.HT
'em rwtr
IEPPNER. tf OREGON
Free Medicine !
A Gulden Opportnuity for Buffering
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Ke medics to the People
nil Villi eriWEB 9 Write usatonce.explaln
IIU lUU iLPPf.K tng your trouble, and we
will send you FREE OF CHAkOE a full course
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
your case, we want your recommendation.
We can cure the most aggravated diseases oi
both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and
ileformitlesare modern and scientific, acquired
hy many year's experience, which enables us to
Uuarautee a Cure. Do not despair.
N. B. We have the only positive cure for Ep
ilepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References given.
1 eruiaueuuy locaieu. viu camuu.iipii.
IlL W I.MAMB MEDICAL AND SUBOICAL INST1-
tutk, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.
ki .Oil A1SY GOOD AT JCZZLES ?
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 greateat on record. There Is fun, Instruc
tion and entertainment In it. The old and
learned will And as much mystery In It as the
voung and unsophiitlcated. This great puzzle
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 Mr newspaper
workers in New York. Generous friends have
given t'26,0011 in prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "Press Club
Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mail.
PRIZES ON PATENTS.
How to Get Twentv-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing.
The Winner has a clear Gift 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 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 tt would
like to handle thousands more. There Is plenty
of inventive talleiit at large In this country
needing nothiug but encouragement to produce
practical results. That encouragement the Press
Claims Company propose to give.
NUT SO HAI1D AM IT KEE.V1M.
A patent strikes most people as an appalling
ly formidable thing. The idea is that an in
ventor must be a natural geulus, like Edison or
Bell ; that he must devote years to delving in
complicated mechanical problems a 'id 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 ciear 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 ashamed of bringing them to the
attention of the Patent OfUce.
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
hundred and fifty years, but the whole bril
liant result rests upon the simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at the point In
stead of at the other end,
of the toil of hundreds of busy brains through
THE LITTLE THINGS THE MOST
VALVABI.F..
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
frictious 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 Buch a way."
What was the man who made the saucepau
thinking of?" grumbles the cook. "Ho never
had to work over a stove, or he would have
kuown how it ought to have been fixed."
"Hang such a collar button!" growls aman
who is late' for breakfast., "If I were In the
buslue8s I'd make buttuiisUhat wouldn't slip
out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my
peck Vi - : . ' v "
And tne vailous sutf'erers Wgot 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 tben 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 OFFLK.
To induce the people to keep trackiof their
bright ideas and see what there In them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
rize.
To Ihe person who submits to it
lie ainipleMt and moat promiaiiisr
iveiitiou. from a commercial
point of view, the company will
give twenty-five hundred dollar-,
in chi.Ii, in addition lo refunding
the fee for aecurins; a patent.
t will also advertise the Inven
tion free of charge.
This offer la subject to the following condi
tions:
Every competitor must obtaiu a patent for
his invention through the company. He must
lirstapply for a preliminary search, the cost of
which will be Ave dollars. Should this
seach show his invention to be unpatentable,
he can withdraw without further expeusc.
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 uot, 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 Wasliihg
ton. Intended competitors should fill out the
following blank, and forward it with their
application:
" , , 1893.
the PreHS Claims Company's twenty-fivo hun
dred dollars.
The responsibility of this company may ba
judged from the fact that its stock Is held b4
about three hundred of the leading newspapers
of the United States.
Address the Press Claims Company, Johi
Wodderburn, managing attorney, 618 F stree'
M. W., Washington, D. C.
ii. A. K. NOTICE.
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers tbat the new oommia
eioner of pensions bag been apuointed
Ue is an old soldier, and we beliive
tbat soldiers and tbeir beirs will re
eeive justice at bis bauds. We do not
anticipate tbat there will be any radina
cbauges in the administration of p,mnio
affairs uuder tbe new regime.
We would udvise, bowever, that TJ. fi
soldiers, sailors and their heirs, takt
step.4 to make application at ouoe, ii
tbey have not already done so, in order
to secure tbe beneSt of tbe early filing
of tbeir claims in case there Bbould be
any future pension legislation. Snob
legislation is seldom retroactive. There
tore it is of Kreat importance tbat ap
pltoatious be filed in tbe department at
the earliest possible date.
It Ihe U. S. soldiers, sailors, or tbeir
widows, obildren or parents desire in
formation iu regard to pension matters,
they should write to the Press Claims
Company, at Washington, D. 0., and
tbey will prepare and send tbe neoessary
appliontion, if tbey find them entitled
nudei the numerous laws enacted fot
ibeir benefit. Address
PKE3S CLAIMS COMPANY.
John Weddbuburn, Managing Attor
ney, Washington, D. U., P. O. Box 385
If.
THE WESTERN PEDAGOGUE.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
ii cry
.ABSOLUT
9 Baking
1
rowaer
LY PURE
CHANGE OF BUSINESS.
to occupy as exalted a position as in
modern society. Zobeida, the wife of
ilorun, plays a conspicuous part in tbe
history of the age, and, by her virtues.
History of the V-aael Which Is Now a
Brooklyn i:othel Miip.
At the foot of Thirty-sixth street, as well as hy her accomplishments.
Brooklyn, a dismantled bark is made leaves an honored name to posterity,
fast to the strwpiceo by heavy chains, 1 Humieda, the wife of Frauk, a Medenite
says the New York Recorder. Upon its ; citizen, left for many years the sola
main deck forward has been constructed ! iruardian of her minor son. educates
a chapel and within the six pillars that
support the roof hanrrs a large bell
which is used to call tofrether the con
grefrntion of sailors from the surround
ing shipping, who thrive times a week
assemble there in worship.
For twenty years the craft has been
used us a bethel ship, with Rev.
Timothy Lane as pastor, who has al!
these years been saving tip money tc
buy a plot of land at the intersection oi
Thirty-sixth street and Erie avenue
where he is to erect a stationary cditics
for his con.-rrerration. When this is
finished he purposes selling the presenl
floating structure. Mr. Lane describes
the hull us stanch, copper bottomed anc
fastened, so it is not without the
bounds of possibility that it may b
rigged and s:til L'te seas a;rain.
The bark has an exeiting history
She was built and
Capt. John Tam,
remembered by old whalemen,
who speak of him as one of the
DID
YOU TlvY
"PiaS IN. CLOVER
or the "FIFTEEN PUZZLE."
Well, the man who Invented them has juit
completed another little playful mystery for
young and old, which Is selling for TUN CENTS
for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for
newspaper workers In New York. This puzzle
Is the nroDerty of the New York Press Club
and generous friends of the club have donated
over 126,000 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 mall. Address "Press Club Souvenir,"
j,emple Court.New York City.
I'l.nw.'IM f'L' 'TL I I 1YI-X
V 1 . v-U ' 1 1' llh tirL i.ikw
(Northern Pacific R, R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME CARD
Two Through Trains Daily.
A
pn!!:mMsnTffi'ii:;lizmi5-r;;om
1.15pm 7lKiii l.v Ashland.. Ar Mior,m l.lpm
7.15am m.5.imAr. .Chicago. .I.vsoop "l 1.43
"icketssol-l and hmiemre checked through to
, ,,(,,., in Ihe fnitiil afaiid ""''" ...
,,,. ,., linn made in ' hlcago with all
tii1ii llnliis East and South.
H'r full liilnrmutioii a..lv to vonr liearesl
tM Ten" P. and Tkt.. Chlca'io.'lil
f 10 1-2EHT STAMPS
(-.'liiilttl' priCtJ i'X. )'iHl Mil-
'fn;n it' wet veil within 3fl
J'.: ,H'L ,iuv.-u.-,!l ! fur 1 vear boldlv
Vjj3L.',y printed on gummed
ufg . L'WlH. uniy firwmr;
011rH!IWJllllf I jhi.vv
(jUMioiiiers ; from pb-
rVL tiirfr villi II receivi
IICMe nrohahlv. thousand i
.J.-.. . -T1- valuable noons, papery
.ITt All fi'' d eacli pan
...in. . t..fv.,iiri,riiitwl ndrtrww iwwu
L M print ami "Way "J
vour urtdiww. 10 you; bleb
itb-k on y.n.r T1MlV'S.'l
nrM.f-iu thi-tr Mnft lo-t- J- A r RK
Knitil. My aniln-tw you jcallerec
re :, ri K-Iiik dally, " valuanie
i ., Iri.in nil -uris ill i" "v.
WORLD'S FAIB DIRECTORY CO,
k: ii? Fnnkford and Olrard Ave. Philadel
phia, Pa.
(Mm
.122 VXS
him to become one of the most distin
guished juris-consuls of the day.
Sukinah or Sakina, the daughter of
Hussian and the granddaughter of All,
was the most brilliant, most accom
plished, and most virtuous woman of
her time "la dame des dames de son
temps, la pins belle, la plus gracieuse,
la plus brilliante de qualites," as Perron
calls her. Herself no mean scholar,
she prized the converse of learned and
pions people. Buran, the wife of the
Caliph Mamun; Ummul-Fazi, Mamun's
sister, married to the eighth imam of
the house of Ali; Umm-i-Ilabil, Mamun's
daughter, were all famous for then:
scholarship.
In the fifth century of the Hegira, tbe
Sheikha Shuhda, designated Fakhrun
nissa ("the glory of women"), lectured
publicly at the Musiid-i-Jama of Bag-
commanded by dad to a large audience on literature,
who is weli rhetoric and poetry, says a writer in
the Nineteenth Century. She occupies
In the annals of Islam a position of
I submit the within described Invention In
competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar
Prize offered by the Press Claims Company."
NO BLANKS IN THIS COMPKTIOI.
This is a competition of rather an uuusal na-
tu-e. It is common to otter prizes lor tne oesi
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, andf he one who helps him self to the
best advantage Is to be rewarded by doing It.
The prize is only a stimulus to do something
that would be well worth doing without it.
The architect whose competitive plan for a
club house on a certain corner is not occept
ed has spent his labor on something of very
ittleuse to him. But the person who patents a
simple and useful device Insthe Press Claims
Company's competition, need not worry if he
fail to secure a prize. He has a substantial
result to show mr ms worn one that wil
command its value in the market at any
time. , , . , . .,
Th. man who imps anv art c e in his naiiv
work ought to know better now to improve it
than the mechanical expert who
only from the theoretical point oi
We are in receipt of tbe May number
if our state sobool paper. It exceed
any of the former numb rs ic vain
The paper this month contains mam
new and valuable features. Tbe illus
trated eeries on tbe schools of tbe stati
ia introduced by a paper on tbe Friendi
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon
These papers cannot fail to be of great
value botb to the schools an to th.
public.
There are also several fine article'
by our best writers and the department
"Current Eveuis,""SKturday Thoughts.'
"Eduoational News" 'Tbe Orscl
Answers, Correspondents," etc., eno1
ooutain much valuable reading to
teachers or parents. The magaziu'
has about 60 pages of matter, wel
priuted and arranged. We prnnounc
the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa
tional monthly on tbe ooast.
Everyone of oar readers should huv
tbe paper if tbey are at all interests
in education. No teacher school direc
tor or Btndent can get along well with
nut it. We will receive subscript. on
at this office. Price only $1.00 a yeai
When desired we will send the Wester'
Pedagogue and Uuzette one year to ou.
address for 83.00. Call and examiui
i-ample copies. Teaobers, directors am
parents, now is the time tn subscribe, t
Bnckleu'a Arnica Salve.
Tbe best salve in tbe world for en I
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, ftrVt
eores, tetter, chopped bands, chilblain
oorns and all skin eruptions, and poa
lively oures piles, or no pay required. 1
is guaranteed to give perlect satisfaotio
or money refunded. Pnoe 25 cents pe
box. For sale by Slooum-Jobnson Dru.
Company.
Kusslun Law.
A case before a justice of the peacs
In St. Petersburg showed the rigidity ol
the Russian law. An ice-cream vender
named TsyganoII was caught peddling
Ins ware in a wagon, while it is the cus
tom of such verniers to carry about
their loads on ijo.-ir Inutds. Tho city
councillor is.-d punr Tsyganoff ol
acting cunt fury ti tlie city ordinance.
The ju!l:;c, however, took a different
view of the matter. "Sinco the vender,
Tsygatiiilt, wui lii-.'nsed to sell ice
creuin, and fitui- hi-, lt.ti-nc paper doei
not presenile in wli.it m. inner he tthoulc
carry about his kj:?, I i-amiot imposx
a piiiiii-hinctit on i-'n foreaiTying about
his heavy barrel bi a wagon. The pris
oner is ili:v.:'.K.rr,i,'' h,. .1 tbe judge.
y councillor declarer;
earn verniers had ap
ion to cart their bar
frying them on then
mi In irlties could not
:!: .in.Mon because tht
i'. i' conic before tht
iipoti. Tsyganoff wai
Idle his ice cream in t
oldest and most successful of whalers, equality with the most distinguished
For years he commanded a five hun- ulemas. What would have bcfallcD
dred-ton brkr, but she was sunk by s this lady had she flourished among the
whale, and then lie had a bark built ol fellow-religionists of St. Cyril can be
live oak and balimetaek in Belfast, Me. judged by the fate of ilypatia. Possi
He and b''s crew made, fortunes in this bly she would have been torn to pieces
vessel, and in tie retired. In 1866 by enthusiastic Christians, but she
t'.ie bark, chnn.red into a propellor, would to a certainty have been burned
made hi r appearance in these waters as a witch. Dzat-ul-Hemma, corrupted
as an Kast l.i.Ua trader. Like moM Into Dzemma, "the lion heart," the
whaling ship:., her hull was saturated heroine of many battles, fought side by
with whale i il, which is a great preser- side with tho bravest knights,
vative of wood. She was purchased by It Is a calumny, therefore, to say tbat
a Norwegian benevolent society to be the Islamic system has lowered the
used as a bethel ship, and was mnde status of women. The teacher who, in
fast to pier 11, North river, where an age when no country, no system, no
she lay for sevonti-eti years as a float- community gave any right to, women,
ing church for Norwegian, Danish, anil maiden or married, mother or wife
Swedish sailors. There she remained who, in a country where the birth of a
until ISS'I, wben she was towed tc daughter was considered a calamity,
Brooklyn and u-ude fast lo the pier al secured to the sex rights which are only
unwillingly and under pressure being
conceded to them by the civilized na-'
the foot of Thirty-sixth street.
THE EXTRA SHILLING.
A Trick Tlutt 1.4 i'l lyed on Guile..
Aiiicric.'tni Whilo Abroad.
Here is a trick that isf.layed every day
during the seai ou on Americans in Lon
don, says nn exchange. It nearly al
ways works, simple as it is. A gentle
man from Uorhe.-.t 'i N. Y., who is well
known in that city, bought a pair oi
gloves on Oxford atreet the other day,
gave the man a soveivi;'.i and took as
Americans very generally do hit
change without counting it, shoveled it
oft the counter into his pockets, lie
was walking down Oxford street when
a breathless person overtook him and
tapped him on the i.houbler.
T beg your pardon, sir, but I'm very
tions of the nineteenth century de
serve the gratitude of humanity. If
Mohammed had done nothing more his
claim to be a benefactor of mankind
would have been indisputable. Even
under the laws as they stand at present
in the pages of the legists the legal po
sition of Moslem females may be said
to compare favorably with that of Euro
pean women.
Th
UNTHINKING
Mental
YOUTH,
of Sweat Girl
Grasp
Graduates.
"I was mother confessor at the queer
est confessional the other day," writes
the Autocrat of the Tea Table in the
Minneapolis Times. "One of the sweet,
studies It
view, (iet
rid of the idea that an nnninvement can be ton
simple to be worth patenting. The simplerlhs
belter. The person who best succce is
combining simplicity and popularity
Hereupon th'.1 i V.
that many ic -'.
plied for :!,
rels instead oi ea
heads, but
grunt them th. t ;
question bad 1
senate to doi ide
warned not to pe
wagon again.
will get
Tho Itlght Kind of Woman.
A Massachusetts woman suggests, at
a way to make one kind of cruelty tc
horses unpopular, that t.ll women in the
United States who are interested in the
cause should sign a pledge not to ride
behind a horse whose tail has been
docked. .But how many women are
sufficiently interested to undergo tht
humiliation of being out of fashion ir
so conspicuous a matter?
OWGE'S
m
Baking
Powder.
sorry we gave you a shilling too much ukuvsiiiiiiiwj"o imcr,,.
change." sa'd to me with real concern in her
"I)?d your said the American, pull- voice: 'Do yu know- 1 never think.'
ing out a handful of change from his I tried not to smile at her seriousness,
pocket and looking at it hopelessly. nd replied, consolingly: 'Well, my
"Yes, sir, 1 am very sorry, sir, but iear- yu coula not expect, to grapple
you see, sir, it will be taken out of ay with abstract problems at your age.'
wages and I don't get any too much. But she was not ti be consoled. 'No,
We don't in t.iis count it, sir. Won't but. literally, I cannot think, abstract
you come bad:, sir, and l:ll explain how '.V or concretely, or any other way. I
it happeu 'd." never reason anything out like other
"Oh, it's all right,". said tbe Rochester people.'
man, and he banded t ho fellow a shU- ''Vet she is a girl of unusual intelli-
gence and a high school graduate. It
" Would von like to go back and see If xems 10 mo thcre is something radical
It's till right, ' i ai I th i salesman. wrong with a system of education
"Oh n I -,i . i li " I that can produce, such results. Train-
"l'm very run h obliged to you, sir," ing is too much a matter of knowledge,
cnii the ..h-i i.- i.ein -imr hi f i,r,.fl nirei- and too littlo a matter of growth. A
up to his bare l.ea 1.
That shilling and ninny others like it
went into the clerk's pocket.
THE ART Or
For Idling May I'c t illed
This W.iler.
IDLING.
Art, Bays
for all the facts that can be learned!
A few good books of reference would
answer the purpose of education, if
knowledge were all it gave. It should
give rather mental grasp and balance,
and a perfect understanding and con
trol of every faculty.
"Mental grasp? Fancy accusing our
sweet girl graduates, or our boy grad
uates either, of possessing it. They
know little more of using their brains
nnd thcre is a true "aa wncn w,u "' sa" v , " -"""""
vvnati two young people were over
heard to talk sense for more than five
"Women seldom idle well," says the
philosophic worn m, "though they frit
ter awny much time. For thcro is a
busy idleness that achieves a vast
amount of nothin
art and craft of idling.
"V.,.,. i ,.,,,.1-..,, .,, ..!.
a connoisseur in this .mutter, for if there minute, together? What young person
is one thing I am familiar with In all 'as the least conception, unless he has
its branches, and with which I am on happened to stumble upon it by natural
terms of perfect understanding, it is tendencies, of the , pleasure of mdepend-
this art of idling. A line art, look you. ent thinkmg? There are few delights
that must be studied with the same as- satisfactory as that of observing,
siduity and sympathy one gives to reasoning, drawing deductions rind then
:r
painting, to im,
or lyinif. Yo.ir
made, but iu
evasion of w orb
she proves her ..
Rations falliti'
jar upon oi i r
ought to b- :r 1
they huvi' i.-i i'o
your Idler em.---she
lie: ii-. '' !
artist i.
adorn it as e. ' !i "
anyone who eulfi'."!
ant of ph'l l'1'e n:
castle of phii-'i.i :e
workaday world, v.-
i -. .ctrv, b
i 'l r is
In r happy
and its ri st
tit,
L '
;!ly
ously live nt cas
mur of the toilers
of A ready, .in. I v, .
that eaeh ii mr imi
profit of .i r'.:."
making
born, not
and easy
in.ibilities
her obli-
a-.d without
i ) . !. -i-.-s that perhaps
. ir some penance
'-".vd. At least
1 ' : if so, if indeed
i -n. Thus to idle
' . '.!'.! e 1 imp, but to
a; ; Hands. And
'e i t his most pleas
,iy build herself a
In the midst, of thi
bi-ivin she m iy iov-
n,l 1
.ho
i -ten to the; mur
never dreamed
r lit",! ;ht bt'
produce its fuiJ
ISLAM'S GREAT WOMEN.
Moslem Women Who Compare Favorably
with Europeans.
finding in a flash of recognition that you
have discovered for yourself some
truth you have heard all yout life and
never fully comprehended. If only the
fevered, hurrying world would slop to
think. If only the youth of tlte day
were trained in the lost art of reason-
icgl"
How People Hie.
A French medical journal, quoted In
the London News, has arrived at the
conclusion that the annual mortality of
the entire human race amounts, rough
ly speaking, to 3,000,000 persons. This,
It is observed, implies that the average
deaths per day are over 1)1,000, being at
the rate of 3,730 an hour. The notion
of 02 people dying every minute of the
day and night all the year round pre
sents our death statistics perhaps in the
most lugubrious aspect that is possible.
Pursuing his cheerful researches this
authority finds that a fourth of the race
die before completing their Sth year
and one-half before the end of the 17th
year; but tho average duration of life
Is nevertheless about 38 years. Further
Tbe only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used ia Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard.
In the early centuries of Islam, he has ascertained that centenarians
almost until tbe extinction of the Sara- are so rare that not more than one per
aenic empire in the east, says the ton in a hundred thousand attain this
Nineteenth Century, women continued patriarchal age. . ,