ill SSSE IIMKIl GAZETTE. IIEPPNER GAZETTE. OFFICIAL PAPER i ; ( 5 NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. ilSTO RISK, NOTRABE. The man ho advertises, gets tha oash Notice It. The man ho doesn't advertise, doesn't let tha oasa. ELEVKNTIl YEAR IIEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1893. I WEEKLY riO. MS. I i SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 1. 1 fafefk SEMI ABE K L Y CAZETTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE I'ATTEHSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. AIVAH V. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIH PATl'KKHON Editor A' 2.5i per year, $1.25 fur biz months, 75 eta. for three mouins. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "E-A-a-XiE," of Long Creek, Grant County. Oregon, is published by the aame com pany every Friday morning. Subscription Hire W per year. Korailvcrtlslng rates, address fcjsil-T X.. PATTEESOIT, Editor and Manager, I.oiig Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette," llepuuer, Oregon. THIS PAI'HK ia kept on tile at E. C. Dake'B 1 Advertising Agency, lil and US Merchants Bscluinua, Han rrancisco, ('alifornia, where eou rncts for advertising can bo made for it. TUB UAZKTTE'B AU iNTS. W,Mier, B. A. Hunsaker Arlington, Pl'ill Heppner L.niu Creek, '1 he Eagle Echo Postmast'-r Camas Prairie, Oscar be Vanl Nye, Or., H. C. Wright Uardinan, Or., 1'oBimi.ster Hamilton, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster lone, T. J.Carl Prairie City, Or R. R. Mcllaley Canyon City, Or S. L. Parrisl. Pilot ltock, G. I . Hkelton Uayville, Or J- sow John bay, Or., F. I. MoCallum Athena, Or John Kdiugton Pendleton, Or PoBtinuater Mount Vernou, QrailtCo.,Or., Postmaster Shelby, Or Miss Stella Hett Fox, Cirant Co., Or., J- F. Allen Eight Jlile, Or Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh Upper Rhea Creek, B. F. Hevland Douglas, Or Postmaster Lone Kook, Or R. M. Johnson Gooseberry J. It. E tell Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead Lexington Jas. Leach AS AOBNT WANTED IS KVKKY PWtUiNCT. Umon Pacfic Railway-Local card. No, 10, mixed lea veB Heppner 6:00 a.m. In. " ar. at Arlington S-Xt a.m. , " loaves " 111 U" a.m. " ii, " ar. at Heppner iii::jii p. m. daily except Sunday. Knst bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 : :B . m. West " ' " loaves '" 1:2-1 a. m. West honed lo al fr inh leav a Arlington 8 S5 a. in., arrives ,t The IJ dies 1:1 i p. lu. Loeul paaseng-r leaves Th Dalles at Z:0Jp. m. arrives at torilaud at 7;0j p. in. OrPIOIAL BISECTOBT. United States OUicials. picHiiient Grover Cleveland 8.uary of War D"lel H. Laiuu.lt ,ry ot wavy V. '? ' i Yr;:.ii Alt .rmv-Ueueral Itiobard B. Oluey rXV?rnitt J- Morion State of Oregou. Governor ;" Beertilary of Suite Tieaaui'er . bopt. Public Instruction. . S. Pennoyer .U. W. McHnde ..Phil. Meleehau ....E. U. Motlroy I .1. H. Mit . H. .llitcnell Senators Congressmen.... Printer.... Bupreme Judges I J. N.Uoloh I Hioger Hermann 1 W. it. Ellis Frank C. Haker F. A . Moore .W. f It. I: P. i,ord S. liean Soveiitl' Judicial District. Circuit Judge w H Wds u pros-willing Atloruoy W. U. NViIb ii Morrow County Oltlcials. join; Senator Representative. I'ounly Judge ' Comniissionere.. J. Jl. Maker. (Merlr Sheritf 'treasurer ' Assessor ttarveyor '- auhool Sup't... " Coroner Henry Blackmail J. IS. Brown Julius Keithls .Oeo. W. Vincent ....J. W. Morrow lieu. Noble. W. J. L ezer It. L. haw laa Brown W. L. baling ..T. W.Ayers, Jr HEPPNBU TOWN OITKI0ICK8. , 3. R. Simons fuSlV.iViV':"."'.".'.'.V.'. .O. E. Famswortl., M; US,!dnai, Otis Pattgrson, Jul.ua Keithly, W. A. lohnston. J. L. Yeeger. Kecoiuer E. 0-Slocom ri"";ar,-'1 "...J. W.ltasinus. MarBhal Precinct OHIcerf. J ustice of the Peace of W Kard Constable v'- Doited States Land Otlicera. THE DALLES, OU. J. W. Lewis. T. 8. Lang.... ..R'Kis' . Receiver T.A nRAMPE. OR. 6ECE2T SOCIETIES. ,..-i. . 1 w... n K. of P. meets ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'oliHik 11. their Castle HaU, National Hank build. nig. Sojourning Drome ' , vi&d .0 al.end. W, L Saling. L, W. B POTTEB. K. OI U. 4 O. 11 RAWLINS POST, NO. 31. O. A. K. -. el, at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of acl month. All veterans are invited to ,mn. ., " r'.mRiHlr Adjutant, tt PEOFESSIOlTAiJ. A A. HUBERTS, Br-al Estate, Iusur t. on.l Collections. Offioe 11 Oouucil Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf, S. P. FLORENCE, STOLKKAlStK HEPPNER, (JKMJON. n.l. branded and ear marked as shown above, Homes P on right shoulder. Mv ..hi. , In Morrow d D"?, r A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN PR Eli TO OURREADERS by a special arrangement with the publishers we Hre prepared to turniab FP.EE to each of our readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly atrrioult n nil journil, the Ah eric an Farmer, published at Springfield an! Clevolmid, Ohio. This offer is made tn any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advanoe, atid to nuy new subscribers who will pay one yeni in advance. The American Fahmkh enjoys a lurjje national ciroula hiin, mill nuiKs among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the Amrhioan Farmer for one year, It will be to yonr advantage to oail promptly. Sample oopies can be 8'cn at our office. The OrlKlnal ster's Unabric DIGTIOHHRY. cn.cl.vi. auuA.ut.jllL.xi illlii llili publishers, A'e are able to obtain a number oi tn above book, and propose to luruiun a copy to each of our subscribers. 1 ne dictionary is a uecesslty In every home, school and business house. It llili a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and iguurant, rich and poor, should have it withlu reach, and reier to its contents every day in the year. As Boiue have asked if this ia realty the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to Btate we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this is the very work complete on which about forty of the best years oi the authorsg -tyao well employed in about ruu.iiuu words, lncludrtig'thecorreiSt spell ing, derivation and delliiUlon of same, and is the regular standard size, containing about JOU.UOU square inches of printed surface, and la uouua lu Cloin nan luuiooco auu ilocu, Until turtner notice we will turnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and back stamps marbled edges $i-oo. Halt Mo occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00 nfty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. UV"As the publishers limit the time and uumuer of books they will furnish at tha low vine, nil who deal re to avail the in- Helve oi Uiia great opportuuity to attend to it nt once. SILVKK'S CHAMPION :THE ocky-. MountaiQ -:-News THE DAILY BY MAIL. ISubBcrlption price reduced as follows: One Year (bu mail) : 1 6 00 Six Months " : 3 00 Three Months " ; : . 1 50 One Month " : 50 THE WEEKLY-BY MAIL, One Year (in Advance) : (1 00 The News Is the only consistent e.iarrpion of silver In the West, and should be in every home in the WeBt, and in the hands of every miner and business man in Colorado. Send In your subscriptions at once. Address, TUB NEWS, Douvor, Colo LUMBER! 17E HAVE FOK BALE ALL KINDS OF ON ' dressed Lumber, 16mlleB0f Heppner, t hat is known as the KK 1.0110 FEKT. KOUUH, 1. ' CLEAR, 11000 - 17 SO F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD $6.00 per l.uw ieei. anoiuouai. 1.. HAMILTON, Prop, D a. . HamlltoniMan'er ATSC0NS1N CENTRAL LINES (Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.) r.4TV,RT TIME CARD Two Through Trains Daily. IjSpm'atftnm'U.amneafHJlMlAr'a.-- ..j-. 1 i-,tni7 ir,pml.v...8t. Paul. -Ar ttiam d.wpra 7.15am 10 Tnk'r.:.Chicago. .LvUp"100" Ticket sold anrl bafftratre rnecKen " all point, in XhtVnMt. ..rrrnuth For full information apply to your nearest I I Li "As old as the lulls" and never excell ed, "Tried and proven " is the verdict 0 f millions. Simmons Liver Regu Tv . lator is the rPllPt"0? Liver AJtsMkl 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 an Pills neys. Try it. Sold by all' Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry ormadointoa tea. The Kins; of Liver Medicines. " 1 have used yoursimmons Liver Regu lator aud can couscienciously say it ia the king of all liver medicines. I consider it a medicine chest In Itself. Geo. W. Jack son, Taoorua, Washington, M-EVERY PACKAGE-.. alas the Z Stamp In red on wrapper .Sfcin Francisco Vnd all points in (.'Alifornia, via tha Mt. tihasta roate of the Southern Pacific Co. rhe great highway through California to all points Kaet and South. Grand Hoenio Route of the Paoifio Coast. Pullman Bnffet Bleepera. Beoond-oUue Sleepers Attached.to express trains, altordtng superior iccommodations for seoond-olass passengers. For rates, tiokets, sleeping oar reservations, ito. call upoiyr address tt. KOEHLEK, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst. 4eu. F. & P. Agt. Portland, Oregon. National Bank oi inner. WM. PENLANII,. ED. B BISHOP. President. Cashier. rilANSACTS A GENElUlBjKlT, RUSIXFSS COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Free Medicine ! A Golden Opportunity for Suffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Remedies to the People DO YOU SUFFER rpS.dte will send you fkkb ut w""?;' ,V"?'" 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 j";..:iHor.mrtr.i and scientific, acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to liuaraniee a v.ure. wunmv"i"' N B - We have the only positive cure for Ep ilepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References given, Permanently located. Old established. Da. Williams Medical and bueoioal Insti tute, 719 Market Street, San KranciBco, Cal. ARfc TOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ? The genius who invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, Has In vented a brand new one, wnicn is going 10 ue 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 tne young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle s the property of the new ora rress uu, .0. hnm it was invented by Bamuel Loyd, the great puzzlcist, to be Bold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great nome .or ..e.iF. workerB in New York. Generous friends have given t2S,0ooirr prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TKN OKNTS sent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. DonTLose Heart. T1 kt ivfrrY'H HEEDS thts year, and mak up for loM time. J k irlve you many valuable hints i mtrrvi neu Annum s m . . 1 I . U(...nil kABllA i raise it. xtconiaiiiBiDioriiu-j k tlon to ne nan from no oiaey t source, trrmm to wuj ,.l.M.rerTjC.j Detroit Mich. mt 11 ' Z rlC-. . l riila Is rtPi ti Uhliltl at irifKtliial 1IH ., ciays win di- lor i r rflll.ril "li pt'iinui ys, Only rsuy truaruntPlnr ivn.wtf ouHtotuers; from pit VtahHn and nuifiuiyj Mirni vou'H rerciv- All fl'e aiH WU-'l' J Mall'! with r.m J an . ,.., -. r.VTT-' i,.i.t a,iArt.xtn tn v ,itf. nr-tnt and uitrrHj1 yum- ifim ' i.i. VxVCi,. prevent tbeir helng 1.1-1. J.A..."' V, i.id.fville, X writ": - slick on your unvfn i" y-"'1 would fmk DlRliCTOIiy CO. M7 Frankford aud Oirard Ave., Phlladcl. with one of PRIZES ON PATENTS. How to Get Twenty-five Hundred Dollars for Nothing. The Winner hat a clear Cift of a Small Fortune, and the Loser 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 ft would like to handle thousands more. There is pleuty ofinventlvetalle.it at large in this country needing nothing but encouragement to produce practical results. That encouragement u Press Claims Company propose to give. NOT SO ll lltn AS IT SP.F..TIS. A patent strikes most people as an appalling ly formidable thing. The idea is that an in ventor must be a natural genius, like Edison or Bell; that he must devote years to delving lu complicated mechanical problems sud 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 avoraeo citizen would feel somewhat ashamed of bringing them to the atteution of the Patent Office. Edison says that the profits he has received Irom the patents od ail his marvelous Inven tions avc not been suflicicut to pay tne cost of his experiments. But the man wbo con ceived the idea of iii.itcnlng a bit of ruK.er cord to a child's ball, so that It would come back to the hand when thrown, made a fortune out of his scheme. The 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 toil of hundreds of busy brains through THE LITTLE THINGS TIRE NUKT VALUABLE. Comparatively few people regard themselves as inventors, but almost every body has been struck, at one time or another, with ideas that Beem 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 1 were running the road I would make them in such a way." "What was the man who made the saucepan thinking of?" grumbles the cook. "He never had to work over a stove, or he would have known how It ought to have been fixed." Hang such a collar button!" growls a man who is late' for breakfast. "If I were In the business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my nnjek.... ,-. ....'- . . grievances and begau to think of something else. If they would set down the next con venient opportunity, put their ideas about car windows, saucepaus aud collar buttons Into practical shape, aud 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 be fifteen puzzle. A TEMPTING OFFER. To induce the people to keen track of their bright ideas and see what there in them, the Press ClalmB Company has resolved to offer a irize. To the person who inbinils to it the simplest and most promising invention, from u, commercial point of view, the company will give twenlYffve hundred dollars in cash, in addition to refunding the fees for securing a patent. It will also advertise the iuven. tlon free of charge. This offer Ib subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent for his invention through the company. He must firstapply for a preliminary search, the cost ol which will be five dollars. Should this seach show his Invention to be unpatentable. he can withdraw without further expense Otherwise he will be expected to complete his application and take out a patent in the regu lar way. The total expense, including the Government aud Bureau fees, will be seventy dollars. For this, whether he secures a prize or not, the iuventor will have a patent thai ought to bo a valuable property to him. The prize will be awarded by a jury consisting 01 three reputable patent attorneys of Washihg ton. Inteuded competitors should BU out the following blank, and forward it with their application: I submit the within described Invention lu competition for the Twenty-live hundred Dollar Prize offered by the Press ClaimB Company. ,OIU.AIVKS IN THIS COIUPETIO&. This Is a competition of rattier an uuusul na ture. It Is common to offer prizes for the uesi story, 01 picture, or architectural plau, all the competitors risking the loss of their labor and the successful one meruly selling his for the amoun of the prize. But the Press Clnlmv Company's offer is something entirely differ ent. Each person is asked merely to help him self, and I he one who helps him self to the beBt advantage Is lobe rewarded by doing It. The prize is ouly a stimulus to do somcihlug that would be well worth doing without 11. The architect whose competitive plau fur 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 patents a simple and useful device lu the Press Claims Company's competition, need not worry if he fall to secure a prize. He has a substantial result to show lor nis work one that w command lit value in the marke at auy time. The man who uses auy article In bis daily work ought to know better now to Improve It than the mechanical expert who studies It only from the theoretical point of view, (let rid 01 tne iaea mai an improvement can ue u simple to be worth patenting. The siniplerlbe better. The person who best succeeds In Awarded Higheist The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard, combining simplicity and popularity, will get the Press claims Company's twenty-five hun dred dollarB. The responsibility of this company may be Judged from the fact that its stock Is held b? about three hundred of the leading newspapers of the United Slates. Address the Press Claims Company, John Wodderburn, managing attorney. 61H F stree K. W Washington, D. C. . A. R. NOI'ICK. We take this opportunity ulit.Iorming onr subscribers that the new eonioiia eioner of pensions haa been apooinled He ia an old soldier, and we teliuve that soldiers and tbeir beira will re ceive justice at bis bauds. We do not anticipate that tbere will be any radiilal changes in the administration of ponsioi affairs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that U. 8, soldiers, sailors and tbeir beirs, take steps to make application at onoe, if they have sot already done so, in order to secure the benefit of the early filing of their olaims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Snob legislation is seldom retrouotive. Ibere fore it is of great iniportauoe that ap plications be filed in the department at the earliest possible date. If the TJ. 8. soldiers, sailors, or their widows, ohildren or pareuts desire in formation iu regard to pensiou matters, they should write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, 1). C, and they will prepare and send the necessary application, if they find them entitled tinder the numerous laws enacted fur their benefit. Address PKESS CLAIMS COMPANY. John Weduekbirn, Managing Attor ney, Washington, D. 0., P. O. Box 385 If. THE WESTERN PKDAttuUUtt. We are in receipt of the May number of our state school paper. It exceed any of the former numbers ic value. The paper this month oontains mnuy new and valuable features. The illus trated series on the schools of the state is introduced by a paper on the Friends Polyteohnic Institute at Suletn, Oregon. These papers oanuot fail to be of great value both to the sohools ao to the public Tbere are also several fine articles by our best writers and the departments "Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts," Eduoational News" "The Oracle Answers, Correspondents," etc, each oontain much valuable reading for teachers or parents. The magazine the Western Pedagogue the best educa tional monthly on the ooast. Everyone of our readers should have the paper if they are at all interested in education. No teaoher school direc tor or student can get along well with out it. We will receive sabsonpt.ons at tbis offioe. Price only $1.00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and Gazette one year to one address for $3.00. Call and examine sample oopies. Teachers, directors and parents, now is the time to subscribe, tf Backlen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, nloers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chopped bands, chilblains corns aud all skin eruptions, and post lively oures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perleot satisfaction or money refunded. Pnoe 25 oents per box. For sale by Slooum-Johnson Drug Company. Land For Sale. 480 acres over in Wilson prairie. A good stock ranch an will be sold oheap. Call at Gnze te office for particulars and terms. U. Better subscribe for the Orzet and get ready for the long winter evenings. GEKMAn" FIELD-POSTS. Management of the Malls During the Franoo-PrusBlan War. Hard Work of the Offlcere Who Had the Mulls In Charge Some of the Queer Things That Were Sent to th. Soldiers on the Field. One of the most useful and well managed institutions of the Prussians ih.rintr the war with France was the (icld-no.st. bv means of which the boI ,li::rs of the German army were able to .tcop up constant communication with their friends at home, receiving and dispatching: letters as regularly and i nsilv as tliev could in times of peace, The "field-post, according: to an article In Youth's Companion, was a traveling nosT. oflice. or postal carriage. There office clerks and soldiers whose duty was to attend to and de fend it from the attacks of the enemy. Wherever the army marched, the field mist followed it. Never during the whole campaign was there any inte: runtion in the course of the post; eve on the dnvs of the greatest battles the posts started at the usual fixed hours from the temporary post office, which consisted of a simple bivouac on the battlefields. Honors, World's Fair. owaer. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. TTV a. mm P ia ST ABSOLUTELY PURE iOtulr In the morning the letters hich had arrived during the night were sorted and delivered to the dif ferent divisions of the troops who sent r them, or w ere dispatched to them oy special express. At dawn of day after the battle o. t. I'rivat the post began its work, in the midst of dead aud wounded; im- ndiatelr hundreds of coldiers hast ed up to dispatch letters and post rds; that afternoon eight large sacks full of letters were sent off to Oer- auv. gain, after the battle of Vionville e post officials were in full activity, round them lay dead soldiers aud horses, l'ostunen, porters and postil- foruied a group arouiKl the hastily .temporized table. The clerks, sit- ng on the ground, sorted the letters liich poured in in a constant stream. I'he wind was high, und many post cards were blown away aud had to be based and brought buck. The field post gave a glimpse of busy, peaceful work amid all the horrors of war. The field post had very little rest; henever the signal to march sounded it had to go to new work. It was al- ays the first to arrive aud the last to part; frequently it did not leave au nemy's town till all the other troops had gone, and had to protect itself from an attack. It was hard and rough work for the field post officials when rain poured down, and the carriages were up to the axles in mud, and no shelter could be found, and attacks from francs tireurs threatened from the forests. Thev had to make marches from seven in the morning till midnight, under torrents of rain, among the forests of the Ar dennes, when the carriages had to be drawn by six horses. Among the passes of the Vosges the field post car riages had to be dragged through deep snow and over slippery ice, where there was constant danger of rolling over precipices. And whY T !rN.they tniQale oi ine nigni, clerks, letter far riers and postilions had often to pass the night on their letter bags in mis erable cellars, packed together as In a slave ship, unless, as was frequently the case, they had to bivouac out in the rain. The field posts were often attacked by the enemy, the letter bags robbed, and the brave soldiers and postilions who defended them left dead on the field. The number of letters sent to the army from home inr exceeaea mose dispatched by the soldiers. From Ber lin alone three hundred inousana let ters and parcels were daily sent off by the field post. The good people often wranned their parcels in turn paper or tied them with weak string, so that when many of these packets arrived at Berlin such a little distance on their way the covers were torn and the contents visible. In one would be chocolate; in an other bread and butter, and in another a pair of stockings in which the good wishes of the mother or the betrothed were interwoven. All this the good natured post brought into order as well as it could. The letters and packets of the army of the Moselle alone used daily to fill seven large wagons. During the siege of Paris the largest field post depot was at Lagny, which distributed a mil lion packets to the troops, lin the eve of Christmas, 1870, nearly every Ger man soldier in France received some parcel or letter from his home. From July 10, 1870, to March 81, 1871, there were dispatched to and from the German army over eiglity-Bix million letters and post cards, two million packets, and two and a half million money orders, and more than two mil lion newspapers. The Uses of Superstition. Superstition is not without its uses. During the prevalence of the recent drought in Italy the children of one of the landed proprietors of the province of Kalerno had a dream in which the Madonna appeared to them and said that rain would fall as soon as an image of herself buried in a certain field could be dug up. Many peasants acting on the supernatural "tip" began at once to dig for the image. After several days' lubor they unearthed two tncient tombs decorated with mural paintings, and some valuable vases. Near by them they uncovered an an tique house, in one of the rooms of which was a clumsy representation of a human figure. This the peasants de clared to be the Image designated in the dream, and it has been an object of adoration to the thousands of visit ing enthusiasts. An energetic priest has established an altar there, and as every pilgrim leaves some money when he visits it there has been a rain of gold if not of wn.tpr. LAST OF THE DRUIDS. Strang. Welsh Character Who Bald to Druid flltes and Beliefs. We regret to announce the death of the high priest of the sun, at the ripe age of ninety-two, says the rail Mall Budget. To the eye of faith he was the lost of the druids; the profane knew him only as Dr. William Price, of Llantrissant, m Glamorganshire, anil characterized him as "a most eccentric man." It must be admitted that they were not altogether without excuse for this opinion, lie attempted to imitate the pontifical raiment of his predeces sors in the priesthood, wearing a whole fox skin on his bead, a light green coat bwder with trousers to match, and a scarlet waistcoat. As a reproduction of druidlc costume the profane may perhaps be again excused for thinking this a little unconvincing. Even high priests of the sun are not without human weak nesses, and Dr. Price signalized this truth at the age of eighty-one by mar rying his housekeeper, a girl of nine teen. One must allow that this step ia a touch of prose in such a character, but he redeemed it shortly afterward by attempting to burn the body of his child on a funeral pyre which he erected in a neighboring field. The druid could hardly take account oi the constable. Curtailed by state Lines. At a recent club dinner in Boston (says the Harvard Lampoon), a visitor from Rhode Island had occasion to re fer in his speech to "Demostheens," as he pronounced it. "DemosthenM." cor rected the toastmaster. "In our shtate," said the Rhode Islander, firmly, who knew good wine when he tasted it, "we shay Demostheens." "You're very wise," retorted the toastmaster; "your state couldn't accommodate the extra syl lable." VARIOUS PEOPLE. Bib Edwin Arnold has abandoned his proposed spring trip to this country, and for the present will remain in England, working up his claims for the poet lau reateship. Dr. Roberts Bartholow, the emi nent professor of Jefferson college, Philadelphia, who became insane some two years ago from hard study and overwork, has recovered his mental bal ance. Mrs. Sarah Kipplk, of Scranton, Pa.. still persists in smoking, after seventy- nine years experience of the noxious and deadly weed. As she is only ninety nine years old there is, however, time for her to reform. Rubinstein says that he would be- ??.S?.S3 AlisftiLSiseiUf XsYsrwi'afc - Field, "but I am also a republican, and America is the land for those that love liberty." OF GENERAL INTEREST. It is said the city of Pittsburgh now stands on ground once given in ex change for a violin. Tannino is done in this country in about one-quarter of the time usually allowed in Europe. Thk origin rff the geysers at Sonoma, Cal., is supposed to be a volcanic crater filled by a landslide. The earliest chest was merely the trunk of an oak tree, scooped out and cut down the center, one-half serving as a lid, which was first kept shut by a strip of leather, and later by a strip made of iron. One gets an idea of the loneliness of the Pacific when learning that the City of Pekin, so long overdue, having broken, her shaft and taken to wing, covered 1,240 miles without seeing a sail. She went out of her way In the hope of meeting a sister ship and re ceiving aid. THE BRITISH ISLES. Enoland has eighty miles of tunnels. At Norwich, Eng., a tl-irty-flve ton weight stone has been quarried. It is the largest on record. English women who devote them selves to the Somerset hunts have un qualifiedly adopted the men's saddle and don divided skirts, mannish hats and blouses. Some appear in long rid ing coats and boots. Englishmen are said to favor this Innovation on long established customs. A proposition has been made to con nect Scotland and Ireland by a tunnel under the north channel of the Irish sea at its narrowest part between County Antrim in Ireland and Wigton in Scotland. The length oi the tunnel would be twenty-seven miles, and eminent engineers have pronounced the project entirely feasible. REMINISCENCES OF NAPOLEON. The (ireat Man Was Furious Over the Alarriage of Ills llrother. 1 never snw Bonaparte in such wrath as when he learned that his brother l.ucien had married at Senlis the widow of Jonberthon, a Paris broker. He ordered me, says a writer in Cen tury, to send for the notary and tell him to bring his register. When the notary arrived I took him to St. Cloud at nine in the morning. Here is word for word the dialogue between the first consul and the notary: "Was it you, sir, who registered my brother's marriage?'' "Yes, citizen first consuL" "Were you unaware, then, that he was my brother?" "No, citizen first con sul." "Did you not know that my con sent was necessary to the validity of the act?" "I do not think so. Your brother has long been of age, he has filled high posts, he has been a minis ter and ambassador, he has no father, he is free to marry." "But he has a mother whose consent was necessary?" "No; he Is of age anda widower." "But 1 am a sovereign, and as such my con sent was necessary." "You are a sov ereign only for ten years, and your family is not bound to you." "Show me the marriage register?" "Here it is." The first consul rend it, and In shut ting the book wns very near tearing the page. "I shall annul it." "That will le difficult, for it is carefully drawn up." "He off with you." The notary retired without having for a moment lost his composure. - t : a ! ' ' il -. 'I f ! 1 i. U7. IwiU payllOO.OUfor.the "rem ..