5 itfPNEf MC1AL Sif PAPER HEPPNER GAZETTE. OF NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. NO RISK, oooooooo The manwho doesn't advert 1b, doesn't get the cash. 'tlieiuu who ailvttrtiiiet,, get the casti. Notice it. ELEVENTH YEAR I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2(5, 1893. WEEKLY 10. KH.j SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 191. 1 1857 SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY ME PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. AI.VAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTERSON Bdltor At S.6: P year, $1.25 for six months, 75 ots. lor three nioiiins. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. run " of Long Creek, Grant rouiitv Oregon, is published by the same com m V every Friday morning. Subscription Kr , t" per year. Forartverttslngrates.address K&i&Xi. PATTBBSOHr, Editor and Mauser, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Uaaette," Heppner, Oregon. ...... vw rtn fila Rt E. 0. Dake's T KCrS?ra,Soo': tlaliVomia', w"heV"e son- ritctB f 'advertising can be made for it. TIIE GAZETTE'S AG'iNTS. ... . . B. A. Hunsaker itftS'n ""Ill Heppner ft m Creek ' ' ......... - The Vagle LonsCreeK postmaster (.!' pirie Oscar lie Vaul Nvi or V. H. 0. Wright 5 'i.',;'ni Postmaster SZ"; Grant iiiT. 0 . I'ostuter ffi'KSty' or:'v.v:.v:.-.v.v.-::-.v.G: ft K5 Dayville, Or T McCaUum feS':'v:vMrB:xndJh l-me Rock Or' ............ K. M. Johnson Son'oron. . Herbert Ilalstead Lexington JaH' AN AGENT WANTED IN KVKRY PKKC1NCT. Union Pacfic Railway-Local card. No. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 600 a. m. ". " ar. at Arlington 8315 a.m. leaves ' 10:00 a. m. . ii, Hr. at Heppner 12:35 p. m, daily nioeptL lay. EHBt bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1:28 a. m. Wet leaves " liin a. m. West bonnd local freiglit leaves Arlington 8:85 a. m., arrives at The Dalles 1:15 p. m. Local passenger leuves The Dalles at 2:00 p. m. arrives at Portland at 7) p m. OPFIOIAL 33IiaSCTOX5."2". United States Oaiclals. IV.-rtent Grover Cleveland Vim President Adlai Stevenson S.To1fa'te.V.V. WVcSSaS Secretary of Treasury ..John G. I .arhsle Secretary of Interior Hoke buurn Hanremrv of War Daniel B. Lament Eeul?v of Navy. Hilary A. Herbert &Ser'S: Wilson 8 bisseU itt .pnuv-finnnrtil Richard d. Oiney SSr of Agricuiture . ..... J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor VV ' W MeSSdJ K..n.trnf State G. W. Mollride Phil. Motsotian tepuUiolnBVrueiion: A B. Jfl, ( J, H. Mitchell Senators J Biner Hermann W. H. Ellis .. ..Frank 0. Baker Congressmen., Printer .jf. A. Moure Supreme Judges , P. Lord 8. Bean Seventh Judicial District. r..n,t.Jn1l W.L.Bradshw Prosecuting Attorney... .W. H. Wilson Morrow Coauty Officials. , ..,,. Senator Henry Blaekman Hote osentative i- ". u , rnn!v .Tnrlirn J nUUS IVBlu.., ' CommiBBioneri Geo. W Yinoent Clerk . ' J W' M"T Treasurer waj; Assessor I Brown Wn ranvnr ABB HrV.wu Hnrvevor. School Bup't... Coroner w. L. Haling ,.T. W. AyerB, Jr HErPNBB TOWN OFFICERS. J. R. SlmonB Mayor.. ri V Uouncilineu 'KJt ' 1 ;.,!,, ontl.nl flli PatterBon, TTnrnHWOrth. Mi Julius Keithly, W. A. Johnston, J. " ' a, a. Roberts. Recorder., E. (i- Blocura &Ikl!t.V.V.V."V.".VV.V.V.'.J. W. Rasmus. Precinct Officers. United States Land Officers. THE OAIjLKS, OB. I- w. Lewis A. a. i-miie - LA OBANDI, OB. B.F, WilBon... J.H. Hobbins., ...RogiBter ..lleoeiver SEOBBV SOCISTIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. mtt J; ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'olook in their Castle Hall, National ixuix ouuu. ing. Sojourning brothers oontiallv in vited to attend. W. L. Saliko, C. C, W. B Potteb. K. of R. 4 8. ti RAWLINS POST, NO. 81. G. A. B. UneU at Lexington. Or., the last Saturday of act. montb. All veterans are inviteo )'"' C 0. Boon, fivn w. Smith, Adjutant, tt Commander. PEOFESSIOlTi-u. A A. ROBERTS, Real Estate, Insnr- nr. and Collections. O&oe in Oounoil Ohombers, Heppner, Or. swtf. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER HEPPNEH. OREGON. Cattle branded and ear marked as shown above. Horses F on right shoulder. My cattle range in Morrow and Umatilla conn, tiss. I will pay $100.00 for the arrest and oon. Tietion of any person stealing my stock. nm 11 1 uTT? I Hi" s.sisTy VALUABLE PRESENT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FRKETU OUKKEADERS jy a efeeinl arranijemeut with tbe (iiibliabera we are prepared to furnish FREE to ench of onr readerB a year'B subsoriptjon to tbe popular montbly agriuultural journal, tbe Auebican Faiimk,!, published at Springfield and Clcvelatid, Obio. Tbia offer is made to any of our sub Bcribere who will pny up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advance, and to nny new subscribers wbo will pay one year 111 auvnuee. lne amkbioan Fahmkk enjoys a lnrjse national oironla tion, and ranks among tbe leading agricultural papers. By tbis arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the Ambmoan Fakmeb for one year, It will be to your advantage ro oall promptly. Sample oopies eao be seen at onr office. Tlie ox'ltxlnEsl WebsteT's Unabridged DICTIOHflRY. BY BPEClAl. AKKANOKMENT WITH THE publiahers, ive are able to obtain a number of th" above book, and propose to furnish a copy to each of our subscribers. The dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house. It fills a vacancy, niirl furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated ana Ignorant, ncn ana poor, SUUUIU uhvb u hhuiu irou;u, iuu refer to its contenls every day in the year. As some have asked if this iB really the Orig inal Wehster's IluRhridired Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this is the very work cooiDlete on which about forty of the best yean of the author's me were so wen empioyea in writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of nhnnt ifio.nno words, includine the correct spell ing, derivation and definition of same, and n the regular standard size, containing about 800,000 square Inches of printed surface, and is bound in ClOin nan morocco anu aneeu. Until turther notice we will furnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bacr stamps, marbled edges. $i-oo. Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50, Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2. 00 Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. Ctr-As the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low nrteeii. we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to it at once. SILVER'S CHAMPION ;the THE DA IL YB Y'MA IL. Subscription price reduced as follow One Year (by mail) Six Months " Three Months " One Month " THE WEEKLY-BY MAIL, One Year (in Advance) : $6 00 3 00 1 50 60 $1 00 The News is the only consistent cjampion of silver in the West, and should be in every home in the West, and in the hands of every miner and business man In Colorado. Send In your subscriptions at once. AddreBS, NEWS, Denver. Colo L U M BJE R ! ITTE HAVE FOR SALE ALL K1NU3 ur ui, yV dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is known i SCOTT SAWMIIjI-i PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, 10 00 17 60 " CLEAR, F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, J5-00 per 1,000 feet, additional. WILL ADD L. HAMILTON, Prop. Hamilton. Man'itr r- Ai WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINhb ( Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.) LATEST TIME (JAltu Two Through Trains Daily. 4.0.-)pmLv...Dulnth...Ar 11.10 7'nr.nmlLv. . Ashland. ArlH 15am T.lSam'lb.oamjAr... Chicago. Lv5.00p "10.10" I Tickets sold and bareaire checked through to all points in the United hm 'o with all Close connection made in Chicago wltn an trains ftoing East and South. For full information apply to "De,t tlerrand. Tkt, AgAM'-V "As old as the hills" and never excell ed. "Tried and proven " is the verdict of millions. Simmons Liver Regu Xi lator is the ?rf?fonj Liver JLJ Otl Ci and Kidn' medicine 1 0 which yon 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 Powdor to be taken dry or made into a tea,. The Kins; of Liver Medicines. "1 have used yourHimmons Liver Regu lator and can consolenciously sav It is tn hit eunslder it a medicine chest In itself.. Geo. W'. Jack- Son, Taeoma, Waaalngton. 43-EVEKY PACRAOK- las the Z Stamp In red .in wrapper. TO J?fiix Fi'anolsoo And all points in California, ria the Mt, Bhaata 9 route of the Southern Pacific Co. rhe great highway through California to all points East and South. Grand Bcenio Route of the Pacific Coaat. Pullman Buffet Sleepers. Second-class Sleepers . Attachedtto express trains, affording superior accommodations for Becond-olass passengers. For rates, tickets. Bleeping oar reservations. etc.. call npon or address R. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst. Gen. F. & P. Agt, Portland, Oregon. Naiionai Gaol of 'tfsppnei. WM. PENLAND, EI), R BISHOP. President. Cashier. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Free Medicine ! A Golden Opportnnity for Suffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Hemedles to the People DO YOU SUFFER ? Write us at once, explain ing your trouble, and we will send yi ou FREE OF CHAKGE a full course of specially prepared remeaies oeei uneu u your ease. 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. Dr. Williams Mkdicai. anb suiwicai. Insti tute, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. ARE 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, which is going to be the greatest on record. There is fun, instruc tion and entertainment In it. The old and learned will find as much mystery in it as the young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle I the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newspaper workers in New York. Generous friends have given $25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN CENTS sent t6 the "Press Club Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mail. " 3G00 PARCELS OP MAIL" FEES FUR 10 1-CtnJ STAMPS (regular price 26c.) your an areas If received within .is days will be for 1 year boldly prinveu on Kiimiueu labels. Only Inreeu.ry guurunteeinK fiM.OOU cuatoinen; from p ib llabrs and manufite tururs you'll racelm probably, thousands oi RAID DlBS.IUMCtiZl HAP ,ftC All free aiid each pun-e nnp of vour printed addreWLilfel' wited thereon. BXTBSAI e wn sine print and prepay postage on i c your label addressm to you; wl Ic. stick on vour envelopes, books, eu-., t( prevent iheir being lout. J. A. ai: of Heldsvllle, N. V., writes : "1-ryi' my 2 cent address In your I.ifhiili. Directory received my M .! labels and over 3000 I'.rm-l- o Mnil. My addKwes you ty'Ktt. re. arr'arrrvlng dully, on vnlii.'Mi- -imIl of mull frumall i'rts r l .or WORLD'S 'AIK DIRECTORY CO., No. 147 Frankfora ana uirara v, phla, Pa. "Many-diseases arise from one cause blood impurity. Beecham's Pills . a fioi-J tiawK; yj Purify the blood and, thus, go to the root of many maladies. s cents a box. Ml C, WUJ1 oooooooooooo (OUINEM PRIZES ON PATENTS. I How to Get Twenty-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 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 HAKD 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; that he must devote years to delving in complicated mechanical problems and 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 desire to dispel. It desires to Ret into the head of the. uMic a clear comprehension of the fact that it Is not the great, complex, and expensive inventions thatbriiiK the best returns to their authors, but the little, simple, and Cheap ones the things that seem po absurdly trivial that the averaire citizen would feel somewhat ashamed of bringing them to the attention of the Patent Ohiee. Edison says that the profits be has received trom the patents nu ail his marvelous Inven tions ave not been sufficient to pay tne cost of his experiments. But ihe man who con ceived the Idea of fastening a bit of rubber cord to a child's ball, so lli.it it would come back to the hand when thrown, made a fortune out of his scheme. The modern sewing-ma chine is a miracle of ingenuity the product a hundred and fifty years, but the whole bril- liaut 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 MONT VALUABLE. Comparatively few people regard themselves as Inventors, but almost every body has been struck, atone time or another, with Ideas that seem calculated to reduce some of the little frictions of life. Usually Buch 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." "Haug such a collar button 1'' growls a man who is latefor breakfast. "If I were in the business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my neck And the various sufferers forgot about their grievances and began to think of something else. If they would set down the next con venient opportunity, put their ideas about car windows, Baucepana 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 puzz le. A TEMPTING OFFER. To Induce the people to keep track'of their bright ideas and see what there in them, the Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a jrize. To the person who submits to it the simplest and most promising; ivention, 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 Inven tion free of charge, Tbis offer is subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent for his invention through the company. He muni flrstapply for a preliminary search, the cost of which will be five dollars. Should this seach show his Invention to be unpatentable, he can withdraw without further expense. Otherwise he will be expected to complete his application and take out a patent in the regu lar way. The total expense, including the Government and Bureau fees, will be seventy dollars. For this, whether he secures a prize or not, the inventor will have a patent that ought to be a valuable property to him. The prize will be awarded by a jnry consisting of three reputable patent attorneys of Washing ton. Intended competitors should fill out the following blank, and forward it with their application: " , , I submit the within described invention in competition for the Twenty-five huudred Dollar Prize oifered by the Press Claims Company." NOKXANKS IN THIS CO.II lKTIO. This is a competition of rather an unusal na ture. It is common to offer prizes for the best story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the competitors risking the loss of their labor and the successful one merely selling his for the amoun or.the prize. But the Press Claims Company's offer is something entirely differ' ent. Each person is asked merely to help him self, andthe one who helps him self to the best advantage is to be rewarded by doing ft. The prize is only a stimulus to do something that would be well worth doing without it. The architect whose competitive plan fur a club house on a certain corner Is not occept- ed has spent his labor on something of very lttleuse to htm. But the person who patents a simple and useful device in the Press Claims Company's competition, need not worry if he fail to secure a prize. He has a substantial result to show lor nis worn one that wil command Its value in the marke at any time. The man who uses any article in his dally work ought to know better now to Improve it than the mechanical expert who studies it only from the theoretical point of view. Get rid of the idea that an improvement can be too simple to be worth patenting. The simplertbn better. The person wbo best succeeds in Awarded Highest 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 dollars. The responsibility of this compauy may be judged from the fact that its stock is held by about three huudred of the leadiug newspapers of the United States. Address the Press Claims Company, Job a Woilderburn, managing attorney, tils K street A. W Washington, D. C. G. A. It. HOTIC1C. We take tbis opportunity of informing our subscribers tbat the new ooinmia- eiouer of pensions has been up coin ted He is an old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and their heirs will re ceive justice at hie hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radioal changes in the administration of ponsio affair 6 under the new regime. We would advise, however, thut XT. 6. soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make applioatiou at one, if they have not already done so, in order to Beoure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Snob legislation is seldom retrouotive. There fore it is of treat importbnoe that ap plications be filed in the department at the earliest possible date. If the U. S. soldiers, Bailors, or their widows, ohildreu or parents desire in formation in regard to pension matters, they ehonhi write to the Press Glaitne Company, at Washington, D. G., and they will prepare and send tbe necessary application, if they fiud them entitled under the numerous laws enacted for their benefit. Address PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Wedderburn, Mnunging Attor ney, Washington, D. 0., P. 0. Box 385 If. THE WESTERN PEDAU0GUM. We are in reoeipt ut tbe May number of our state school paper. It exceed any of tbe former numbers ic valun. Tbe paper tbia month contains many new and valuable features. Tbe illus trated series on the schools of the state is introduced by a paper on tbe Friends Polyteohnic Institute at Salem, Orecon. These papers cannot fail to be of great Talue both to the schools an to tbe nublio. There are also several fine articles by our best writers and tbe departments "Current Events,""Satarday Thoughts," "Eduoational News" 'The Oracle AnBwers. Correspondents," etc., eaoh contain much valuable reading for teasers or parents. Tbe magazine prii7Vtt and arranged. We pronounce thet Western Pedasosue the best educa tional monthly on the coaBt. T. J - I ! 1 jl 'fjryooe ot our reauors buuuju nave the paper if they are at all interested in er'-'oation. No teaoher school direo torrr student can get along well with out it. We will receive subsoript.ons atthisoffloe. Pnoe 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. Teaohers, directors and parents, now is the time tn subscribe, tf Bncklen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for onts bruises, sores, uloers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped bands, chilblains corns and all akin eruptions, and posi tively onres piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perieot satisfaction or money refunded. Pnoe 25 cents per box. For sale by Slooum-Johnson Drug Company. Land For Salb. 480 aores over in Wilson prairie. A good stock ranoh . n.. will be sold cheap. Call at Qu.e te oHice for particulars and terms. Better subscribe for tbe Oazet and get ready for the long winter evenings. NEWSPAPER WAIFS. Waiter "How did you find your steak, sir?" Guest "Elamed if 1 know how I did find it, it was so small." De troit Free Press. First Citizen "How is it that so many Englishmen fight shy of home rule?" Second Ditto "I fancy because it begins with the letter h." Boston Herald. When a man eloped with lligg's wife, he exclaimed: "Well, 1 can't blame him, poor fellow! I was awfully infat uated with her myself once." Boston Transcript. Piiotoohai'hkr "Your son ordered this likenesR from me." "It is certainly very much like him. Has he paid for it?" "Not yet." "That is still more like him." Tid-Bits. Physician "Considering the weak state of your eyes, it will be as well if you gaze as much as possible into emp ty space." Patient "All right, then, I'll keep looking into my purBe." Blumcnlese. His Daughter's Letter. "Dear Father: We are all well and happy. The baby has grown ever so much, and has a great deal more sense than he used to have. Hoping the same of you, I remain your daughter, Molly." TM Bita. Honors, World's Fair. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report 'ShMjJ Baking Powder ABSOLUTE UNDER A TRIP HAMMER. Exhibition or Faith, Skill and Perfect Machinery at the Krupp Gun Works. "The most wonderful exhibition of confidence by one person In another came before me a short while back on my tour through Germany," said a trav eler to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat re porter. "I have a great deal of confidence in some men's ability and a wonderful trust in some men's nerve and steady strength, but not enough to stake my life on either. 'The exhibition that I saw seemed foolhardy. It was in the works of the great Krupp Arms company. One part of the machinery is for flattening bars of steel into plates. For this a special machine is had, which has an immense steel block or table on which to lay the bars, and a great arm sledge, which weighs several tons and comes down with crushing velocity. It is perfectly regulated by machinery, however, and the man at the throttle can stop it with ease at any given distance from the block, providing he has sufficient stead iness of nerve. "Tne day I went through the manager accompanied us and requested the man at the check-valve to show us how sure and certain was the machinery. With out reply the mechanic whistled to a lad working some thirty feet away. The boy dropped what he was doing and came running. ' Jump up," said tne first, and muttered something about showing us the machine. Without re ply the lad leaped to the steel table be neath the great iron blocks. 'We were horrified, but the work was too quickly done to permit objection. The moment the lad settled down the engineer grasped the lever and the great sledge with lightning rapidity flew up and down again toward the block. It was all done by the steady fingers at the valve, and it stopped a few inches above the lad's head, who smilingly climbed down and started away. "We raised a purse to present the twain with, which was at first refused. The manager flually consented to order them to take the money, which they did. I never expect to witness such another exhibition of confidence and nerve." FALLS OF MONTMORENCI. They will lie Ruined to Supply Eleolrlo Power. The beauty is likely soon to depart from the far-famed falls of Montmo renci, so familiar to all American tour ists to Quebec. The entire waterfall and all the surrounding property have just passed into the hands of the Que bec Electric Light company, the price paid being two hundred and thirty thousand dollars, says tho New York Sun. Already the company has been utilising a portion of the water power from the river above the cataract as motive power for their dynamos, which, situated in a factory near the foot of the falls, furnish all the lights for the illumination of the streets of Quebec. Now thoy are likely to draw off so largely increased an amount of water for the proposed extension of their op erations that there will be little or none left, particularly in the dry sea son, to come over the precipice. It is proposed to manufacture elec trical motive power for all the factories and other industrial houses in Quebec, as well as storage light for all the pas senger cars on the Canadian Pacific rail way. New iron supply pipes, twelve hundred feet long and six feet in di ameter, are being constructed to tap the river above the falls, and some of the water so conducted will be used twice over, one of the new factories be ing erected half-way up the cliff ad joining the cataract A lake twenty miles up the river will probably be dammed in order to insure a supply of water in dry seasons. In the purchase of this property is included that of the magnificent manor house overlooking tbe falls which was the summer resi dence of Queen Victoria's father, the late duke of Kent, when commander of the forces in Canada in the commence ment of the present century. Here it was that the beautiful and accomplished Mme. de St. Laurent presided over the household establishment and petit Boupers of his royal highness, whom the French-Canadian beauty accompanied to England, retiring to a convent after the duke's marriage to the mother of the queen. MEN OF MUSICAL MINDS. Dvorak, the composer, goes to bed every night before nine o'clock, isup by 4:!i0 and works the next three hours. A I'arkkrhrijrg (Va.) musician has just perfected and patented a novel musical instrument, which he calls a "key zither." It is simply a zither played with keys, but it is said to be a revelation in the way of a musical in strument. Verdi, who Sb as fond of work as he was in his young days, is busy writing an opera, the theme of which he will not tell until the score is further ad' vanced. "It is impossible for me to re main idle," he says. "I am alive and well; why should I not begin another woi!'?" Besides Signor Bolto and M. Saint Saens several other eminent European composers are to receive the degree ".Mus. Doc." from the Cambridge u versity next June. Herr Brahms and Sig. Verdi have been obliged to decline the honor, the former having such en gagements and the latter being so hampered by the infirmities of age as to be unable to attend in person. LY PURE FOR STAMP COLLECTORS. Mr. Wanamaker Telia How to Obtain Columbian Souvenirs. Those Who Cannot Afford to Uoy six Stamps of Illffher Denomination May Obtain Them from Hank Officials. How can tbe stamp-collecting girls and boys of this country procure full sets of the new Columbian postage stamps for their albums?" repeated Postmaster General Wanamaker, thoughtfully, whe j a question on this point was put to him the other day by a New York Press reporter. "Let me see," said he. "Of course they can always be procured at any post office. But obviously there are few of our young collectors who can af ford to buy them in that fashion, inas much as an entire series would cost six teen dollars and twenty-six cents. For most of them the only practical method will be to obtain the stamps already canceled. That will be easy enough as far as the lower denominations are con cerned, but not so with the higher de nominations." "But on what mail matter will those high-cost stamps be used?" I asked. "The high-priced Columbus stamps," said the postmaster general, "those which represent one, two, three, four and five dollars each, will be largely in demand by bankers and brokers for mailing bonds and other securities to Europe. Such valuables go in sealed packages at regular foreign letter rates, which are five cents a half ounce. At that rate a very moderate-sized bundle will cost as much as five dollars for postage across the ocean. In this man ner a large part of the stamps of big denominations will go abroad. Amer ican boys and girls will not get those for their albums. However, a great many of these high cost stamps will be used for mailing large packages at letter Tates from place to place in this country. People often send big parcels containing valuable things in that way at two cents an ottnee, sealed and regis tered. I dare say you know that you can transmit through the post anything you like no matter how bulky and heavy it is so long as you pay letter rates on it, though you cannot forward any package exceeding four pounds at the ordinary charges for merchandise. Young collectors must rely on getting the canceled stamps from parcels for warded in this manner at letter rates. "That does not solve the puzzle, I know," Mr. Wanamaker continued. "Of course, big packages sent at two conta an ounce, sealed and registered because their contents are valuable, do not roach every merchant or professional man. The bankers are most likely to get them, and I would recommend the boys and girls who are anxious to pro cure the high-priced Columbus stamps to make friends with people at the banks with the view to securing posses sion of such coveted treasures. A good natured cashier or teller would be very apt to find an opportunity to detach a few of the canceled stamps from bun dles of securities once in awhile. It is well worth trying, because these curiosi ties arc likely to go up considerably In value on account of the difficulty in ob taining them. I suppose that dealers in stamps will not Bell them cheap." VOLCANIC DUST. A Londoner Who Collects and Sella tlie Product of, iluriiliiK Mountains. In all the large centers of the world there are a few dealerB who make a business of collecting mineralogicul specimens and other material illustrat ing natural history. A man in London has recently been making something of a specialty of the collection of volcanic dusts. He sent a trustworthy agent uwhile ago to the great Andes of the equator, and now he is advertising dust from a ' number of famous volcanoes. He sells tho material in bottles at about thirty-five cents a bottle. Each sample contains one grain or more. Among these collections is volcanic dust from Ootopaxi which fell at Quito on June 2fl, 1877, after a journey through the air of thirty-four miles Then he has dust from Cotopaxi which was ejected to a height of forty thou sand feet above the level of the sea in 1880 and fell on Chimborazo after a journey of sixty-four miles. The finest particles of this dust weigh less than one twenty-five-thousandth part of a grain. Then there is dust from the terminal slope of Cotopaxi such as is daily ejected by the volcano at the height of nineteen thousand five hundred feet above the sea. There are many specimens of lapelli from A ro bs to, mostly pumico. The town of Am bato is built upon a deposit of this ma terial. Fine volcanic dust has been se cured from Machachi, where it exists as a continuous stratum ten inches thick, the product of some unrecorded eruption of great intensity. It consists largely of feldspar and hornblend, and Mr. Whimper says it is "almost as soft to the touch as cotton wool." Fine pumice dust from the same volcano forms beds many foet in thickness. These volcanic dusts form many inter esting and instructive objects of the microscope. The sarao dealer has fine and coarse dusts from Mount Etna and the typical lavas from Cotopaxi and Chimborazo. He also sells pieces of puinice from Krakatoa which were washed ashore, thousands of miles away, on the coast of Madagascar, and volcanic dust from St. Lucia which fell on a ship off Barbadoes. -