Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, January 02, 1894, Image 1

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    IN'iWt GAZETTE.
NOTHING RISKED,
NOTHING MADE.
i it
OFFICIAL
HEPPNER GAZETTE.
- yr ' I , , .
-J
s oTx i
3STO RISK,
NOTEADE.
Theiuau who advertises,
Mutiw It.
guts the vuati.
wtwf
i
ELEVENTH YEAR
hM 1 .VEliKLY GAZETTE
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Al.V.Ul W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager,
OTIS l'ATl'KHBON jCditor
M A2.5 I per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 ots.
lor mree inuuiuv.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The E-A-O-XiE, " of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, li published by the same com
pany every Friday morning. Subscription
g-ii'u, J'iper year. Joriulvertisingrates.addreBB
Ulir X.. PATTEKSOIT, Kdltor and
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette,"
VALUABLK
I1EPPNER, MORROW
The man who doesn't adverttie, doetn't
get tha cash.
nPHIS PAPEKiskopt on tile at E. 0. DHko's
1 Advertising Agenoy, M and 05 MerohantB
Kjdi.'uiKM, Kan lrnncisoo, California, where co
riicts for advertising uun be made for it.
THE GAZETTE'S AGiNTS.
Wagner, B. A. Hmmaker
Arlington, 1'hlll Ileripner
Lone Creek, The Eagle
I'-clio Postmaster
Caniaa Prairie Oscar Do Vanl
Nye, Or., 11. C. Wright
Hardinau, Or., Postmaster
Hainil'on, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster
tone 'Pi J. Carl
Prairie City, Or., U. R. Meilaley
Canyon City, Or : 8. L. I'arrish
Pilot Kock O. P. Skclton
IMVVille. Or J. V. Mnnw
John Day, Or., F. 1. McCallum
Athena, Or John Edington
Pendleton, Or Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., Postimuuer
Shelby, Or MIbs Stella Flett
"ox, I, rant Co., Or., J. F. Allen
tigm nine, or., Mrs. Andrew ABhbaugh
Upper lihea Creek, B. F. llevland
Douglas, Or Postmaster
ine itook, or K. M. Johnson
Gooseberry J. It. Esteb
uouion, uregou Herbert Halstead
Lexington j8. Leach
AN AUENT WANTED IN KVKRY PRKCINCT.
V o .
i ears subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OUKKEADEKS
i
"j n rH!ii arrangement with th
puDiwMerg we are prepared tn fnrni.h
to encli of onr readers a n.r'.
subscription to the popular monthly
Kuuuunrai jourua. tie Am mm,...,
Farmer, published at finrimrflnlrl
uieveinntl, Ohio.
u.t, iir in made to any of our Bnh.
soribers who will pay np al arrearages
"ii miosmption and one year in nrlvanm,
uu to any new subscribers who will pay
one yoar in advance. The American
Fabsihr eujoyg a huge nBtiouul oircula
tiou, ami rang among tlie leading
agricultural papers. By this arrange
ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re-
oeive the American Farmer for one
yoar, It will be to yoar advantage to
oail promptly. Sample oopies can be
seen at onr office.
Union Pacfio Railway-Local card.
No,
ID, mixed leaven Heppner 600 a.m.
io, ar. at Arlington 8:35 a.ni.
U, " loaves " 10:110 a. m.
" C " ar. at Heppner 12.35 p. m. daily
sxcept Sunday.
East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :26 a. m.
West " " " leaves " lflJd a. m.
West bonnd local freight leaves Arlington 8:85
a. in., arrives at The Dalles 1:15 p. m. Local
paBsonger leaves The Dalles at 2:0Up. m. arrives
at Portland at 7:00 p m.
1'13 Orli;ln,,i
Webster's Lfnabridffed
u
COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAyTjANUARYTimI
r
G. A. K. NOTICK. I "
WEEKLY WO. HT&.I
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 1K3.
"As old as
the hills" and
never excell
ed. "Tried
and proven "
is the verdict
o f millions.
Simmons
Liver Regu-
7") jj 'ator s l'ie
AJZMCf Sidney
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.
t, . Sold by all
Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder
to be taken dry ormadeintoa tea.
The King of Liver Medicines.
Son, Tacoma,' Washington. K"
WKVERT PACKAGE'S
flas the Z Stamp In red on wrapper
Tha
n
Pills
mwm.
Dnited States Offlciala.
I'l.eBjdent Grover Cleveland
V iVft-Preslden t . . . Ad lai Stevenson
ttreiary of Wato. j. ., .... Waiter Q. Gresham
HiTretafy " "fie-Umo
bocretary or vYr.
..HilHry A. Herbert
SSSZXh of Agriculture J. Bterlmg aiortoc
State of Di'egon-
S. Pennoyer
Kupt. Public Instruction,
Senators . . .
Hovernor
fcjHcr;tary of State p-hil Met8(!han
'Jruuiiuwr. . . ...... ' M. B. McElroy
ruvuuu ,r M:u
J. II- 1U1WI10"
JJ.N.Dolph
( Binger Hermann
- 1 w K H.I lR
v,ongr.. , '.France. Baker
printer (F.A.Moore
, , W. P. ljord
Bnpreine J udges ' U. 8. Bean
o...,.,ii. in.liciKl District,
, . .W. U Bradshaw
Cironit JdV,'; ..W. H. Wilson
l'rosi:u".
,,. (lonnty OtBcials.
...nenry rnuc..ujii
..J.N. Brown
Inliiis Keithly
"- ''.Geo. W. Vincent
J. W. Morrow
' ' .(4o. Noble.
,...W. J. Leezer
u. L. ihaw
,,,lsa Brown
!"!".W. L. Baling
T. W. Ayers, J
joint Senator
Uopierteutalive
County Jntige....
' ConimisBioners.
J.M.. Baker.
Clerk
Sheriff
Treasurer
" Assessor
purveyor
" School Bup't..
" Coroner
ttl:ioi
Couueiliiien. . . ...... ,nljl.B Keithly
Lichtentnai, uti
nUPPNItB TOWN OFFIOERB,
J. K.Simons
n M. Farnswortn, in
W. A. Johnston, J- 1j. lengoi.
Itecordor
rreasurei
Uarshal
Precinct OffleerP,
JuBtioeotthe Peace
Constable
United States Land Officers.
TUB DALLES, OB.
J. W. Lewie
T.H.Lang
LA OBAHDK, OB.
B.F, Wilson
J. H. KobbinB
A. A. Koberts.
. ..B. G- Blocum
.J, w. ttasmus.
v .T Hallook
'.'(j. W. ltyohard
.Kogister
. Beoeiver
T Y SPECIAL ARRANrHTIklirurn WTd mr
1 publishers, e are able to obtain a number
Of tb" above book, and nrnnn.o t ...' u
copytoeachofoursubBcrfbers. a
The dictionary is a necessity in every home
BChOOl aild blJI iaoi hnnu ff li. - ."
SlSi (.'!Kni8h0, k"owlfige which no one T hu&
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
ft, Voungand old, educated ".Mant
afnd.fpoor' ?h0,uId have " wlthi" rich, and
refer to its contenls every day in the year
if w"le .haye a,Bled 11 thl 18 rea"y the Orig-
inal Webster'H 1 nnttriH doI ninti .r V?
able to state we have learned direct from the
publishers the fact, that this is the very work
o?'?, HhZt, about forty ' the bet y
oi tne author s life w.n m
Writing Tt .,,I. .u " .VJ" "'P'V)'U " I
,?..,.. ini.hu of rir nted surface, and is r
bound In cloth half morocco and sheen.
Until further notice we will turnish this
valuable Dictionary
First To any new suDscriDer.
Second To any renewal subscriber.
ThirH To anv subscriber now in arrears
who pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, yu:
Full Cloth Douna, gut sme ana uatr
stamps marbled edges, i-oo.
Halt Mcocco, Douna, gut siue oo uoi."
stamps, marbled edges, i. 50.
hull oheep Douna, leaioei ialoi,
edges, $2.00
Fifty cents added in an cases Torexproba
ao-e to Heppner.
.rav-As the pubiisners limit tne time
..T.T.. r hnnC. thev will furnish at the low
prices, we anviBe an who om iy " " j ; 1.
selves of tliiB great opportunity to attend to It
at once.
SILVER'S OHA.MPION
the;
QDIOK TX1VIEJ I
TO
San Francisco
And aU points in California, via the Ht, Shasta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
rhe great highway through California to all
pomte East and South. Grand Bcenio Route
ef the PooiSo Coast. Pullman Buffet
Sleepers. Seoond-olass Sleepers
Attaohedto express trains, affording
accommodations for seoond-olass passengers.
for rates, tickets, sleeping oar reeervation..
eto call upon or address
K. KOEHLER, Manager. E. P. Rnnttna i..t
Gen. Y. S P. Agt.. Portland. ni.
Of
I.
Wl. PiSNLAND. ED. E BISHOP,
President. Cashier.
TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
'"Made onTfTWoTnoro-
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
HEPPNER. tf OREGON
Free Medicine !
for Suffering
A Golden
Opportunity
Humanity.
Physicians Give ttteir Bemeuies h mo
Write ub atonce, explain
SMUGGLER'S PARADISE.
How Chinamen Gain Access to the United
States.
Looking at the map one may see that
the northwest corner of the state of
Washington is torn off, and the space
mat, is leit, is niiea with water, dotted
witn an archipelago. The island of
Vancouver fits partially into the g-apine
corner as if it had been torn out by
some gigantic convulsion. The tatters
and debris of the rent form the archi
pelago. Our national interest centered
in that corner long afro when that nor-
tion of the boundary was in dispute, and
the tension of a war feelintr was onlv
relieved when a foreign arbitrator set
tled the boundary, and gave us the
island of San Juan, the most important
in the group. The city of Victoria,
writes Julian Ralph in Harper's Marra-
zine, confines nearly all tho population
on that corner of Vancouver island: the
city of Vancouver is the main settle
ment on the British Columbia shore.
and on our borders are such little placce
as Whatcom, New Dungeness. and Port
Angeles, in the state of Washington.
Port Townsend, on Puget sound, is the
principal American town near by, and
me neadquarters of the scanty force of
customs officials who are supposed to
guard against the smitforli:.?, :md who
are entitled to the presumption that
they are doing their best in tin;; direc
tion. Victoria has only twenty thou
sand population, Vancouver fewer still,
and the islands only here and there a
house. Deer abound upon these islands,
which are heavily timbered, and the
waterways between them f jel the kgels
of but few vessels of nono nt all. ex
cept the smallest craft, outside the main
channels. It would be hard to imagine
a more difficult region to police, or a
lairer field for smugglers. Old London
itaelf has scarcely a greater tangle of
crooked and confusing thoroughfares
than this archipelago possesses, and
these waterways are so narrow and
sheltered that mere oarsmen can safely
and easily travel many of them. It is a
smuggler's paradise.
Those who transport the Chinamen
are all white men. The resident Chi
nese act as their confederates and as
the agents of the smuggled men, but do
no part of the actual smuggling, that if
to say, the boating. The great smug
gling is of opium. The introduction of
the Chinese themselves is of small ac
count, so far as the defiance of our lawf
is concerned, as compared with the in
troduction of opium. Yet that exten
sive business also is carried on by white
men. The Chinese can not pass to and
fro as white men can,' therefore they
leave the traffic to the whites.
These white men are of the class one
would expect to find iu such business.
A government employe '.n Victoria told
enlightenment, anu as
tain any proof that any oum""' "
tailed respectable men proniu uuwj
by the business, I did not and do not
believe that there are many such. Those
who do the smuggling of the Chinese
are unprincipled and reckless charac
ters. They maKe men- irarum
those Chinese whose business it. is w
arrange for the carriage of their coun
trymen into our country. The boats
employed are small sail-boats, and quite
small steam-iauncneo.
owner of one of these boats nas secureu
a sufficient number of Chinese to make
the venture profitable if it succeeds, the
NOTICE.
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers that the new oommis
siouer of pensions Las beeu apoointed
He is an old s,,l.i;ar j
that soldiers and their Leirs will re-
juouw at His imnda. We da not
anticipate tbat there will be any radioal
onanges m the administration of pinsioe
aunirs unaer the new regime.
We would advise, however, tbat U.
... -
numie. aaU0rs and their beirs, take
steps to make application at ouoe, if
they have not already done so, in order
to Becure the benefit of the early filing
of their claims in oase there should be
any mture pension legislation. Snob
legislation is seldom retroaotive. The
fnr if la nf ...1 !
, ((11-01 importance toat ap-
uiiuKiious ue men m the department at
the earliest possible date.
It the U. 8. soldiers, sailors, or tlmir
widows, obildren or parents dnsim in.
formation in regard to penaioo matters,
they should write to the Press ninima
Company, at Washington, D. O., and
they will prepare and send the neeesaarv
application.it they fiad them entitled
under the numerous laws enacted for
their benefit. Address
J.Jlih,SS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Weodeububn, Mauauing Attor
ney, Washington, D. C, P. 0. Box 385
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
aWng
bwder
ELY PURE
AN niSTOJUC KOOM.
The Vice PreaidAntfa aqw,v
ujcm MUOU
at the OapitoL
ime of the Interesting- Helios of tue
Former Holders of the Offloe A
Singular Custom of Betlrlna;
Occupants.
tf.
THE WESTERN PEDAGOGUE.
tit- . . .
ve are in reoeipt of the Mav number
of our state school paper. It exceed
any of the former numbers ir. valm.
Tho nana. 1I..S. 11. . , .
,ui0 uiuiiiu contains many
new and valuable features. The illus
trated series on the sohools of the stale
is introduced by a paper on the Friends
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon.
These papers cannot fail to be of great
value both to the sohools au 1 to the
publio.
There 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 valimlilo roi.,li
teachers or Barents. The mnt,o;no
has about 50 pages of matter, well
printed and arranged. We pronounoe
the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa
tional monthly on the ooasl.
Everyone of our readers should hnvn
the paper if they are at all interested
in eduoation. No teaoher Bohool direo
tor or student can get along well with
out it. We will recmivn anlunrint
address for o.ou. v - r
sample oopies. Teaohers, direotors ana
parents, now is the time to subscribe, tf
BUILT A RAILROAD ON FAITH.
Rods-. MouDtain-:-News
THEDAILYBrMAIL.
Subscription price reduced as follows:
One Yp.nr (6a mail) : $0 00
Six Months "
Three Months "
One Month "
References given,
Pefmanentiv located. Old established.
DB. WILLIAMS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL INSTI
tutb, 710 Market Street, San Krancisco, Cal.
3 00
1 50
50
DU IUU SlOTtK f ing your trouble, and we
will send you FREE OF CHARGE a full course
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
2L'P.. yff w,.t vour recommendation.
" ' . .-j ji...ui nt I . . i filimit. pnm-
We can cure the mosi aggravaveu journey is maue uv mBiii,
both sexes. Our treatment tor all dise e. nd u with tHe law which requires
deformities are , modern and 0.vSu'r?o oapla sailirjS after dark to display
..m.R"Lie.a "IS notdesiiir. their sides. At times the con.
""" . TI . , , T1.... .1
N B.-We have the only poiinve cure 10. f- trabands are landed near 11 .
,,ep.y v.. A .,,Hhed. times near ron ahbcic . o-
n .Tuun island, wiunu uiu
.Aar. lo nnlv twelve miles from Vic-
r rn.! l,lmt
toria, and has a lew liuu .v.o-u
,n it. At times Chinamen are car
ried there. Once there they can cross
to the mainland witn more irecuum,
j ii, rxmsiViilitv of obtaining testi
mony to the effect' that they are and
ViPPTl domiciled on American
T, amiiB-trlcrs charge twenty dol-
1. ttwontv-five dollars for landing
each Chinaman on our coast; iwcuty
rlnllnrs is the ordinary ana usum
oliaro-e. Wherever tne t,niii;tui:ii
ARE YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ?
THE WEEKLY BY MAIL.
RmrlBter 1
.Receiver 0ne year (in Advance)
$1 00
-ri,. who Invented the "Fifteen" puz
zle, "Pigs in Clover," ana many .,
vented a brand new one, which 1b going to be
the greatest on record. There Is fun, instruc-
n ni ontertitinment in 11. it
learned will And as much mystery In it as the
voung and unsophisticated, rnisgreai y .......
3 ..... Dm., nlnh for
. .I... nMnorW Of tnB WeW luikuc. . -
it was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the fili u.hfir men of their
great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the I nationality to secrete them, or
movement to erect a great ... ...-r-r- awttitinir their arrival, anu
to take them to some cniiiear
SEOBBT SOCIETIES.
. u 'Mir .f P. meets ev-
.. 'P..ua,lov Aveninff at 1.30 o cloca in
i 'eir Castle HaU, National Bank . bui 1Q.
ig Sojourning brothers oordml ly in
citort to attend. W, L. Halino, c. k.
I"
W. B. POTTKU. n. ui . u,
tf
in,. Mews Is the only consistent ciampion of
silver In the West, and should be In every home
in the West, and in the hands 01 every
and business man In Colorado.
Send In your subscriptions at ouce.
Address,
Den-cor. Colo
workers In New York. Generous menus nate
...., onnoninr,rizes for the successful puzzle
:., ran nif.NTS sent to the "Press Club
n..n,i, nH Chrritv runa," leinpio v,uu..,
v.k ratv. will get you me uiyswij i
return mail.
HAWL1N8 POST, NO. 81.
o 1 II
:etsatLexington,'or.,the last Baturday of
month. AU veterans are .
. L: Boon,
Adjutant ,
tf
Commander.
PEOPESSIOWAii-
LUMBER!
n.m ITT WTVTiQ filT I1N
W'dH KStSavS milesof Heppner; a.
what is known as tne
HCOTT SAWMIIilJ
a a BOBEETS, Beal Estate, Insnr- pBR 10OO FEET,
A ' , .ii..t;. Offloe in
ance ana vaihcu"""
.-it u..B Ponnner. Or. Swtl.
jounon uubuiuwi -
ROUGH,
CLEAR,
- S10 00
- 17 60
S. P. FLORENCE,
I
$5.00 per i.iwu icei-,
HEPPNER, WILL ADD
D. A'
L HAMILTON, Prop.
Hatniltoni M.r'ir
iljftCPARCELSOP MAIL" F&GS
Quarters. Once on land the danger ol
. . 1 1 nr.A nfii. a
arrest Is greauy iesein;u, m -newly-smuggled
Chinaman has made his
way to one 01 tne larger wmo '
near the coast, his fear of detention by
our government vanishes entirely.
end in l.fiFNT ST
ViSi ir U.lvil within m
...Ol I.W fnr I Veur boldW
tlibelB. Only llirecUir.
guaranteeing l.0OC
Ushers and manutac
Siturers you 11 receivii
X, probably, thousands o
All free and each parce
rinTP(l inereuil. " . .
t so orlnt and prepay POge
TcentdrBinvm,rIlKt,H,;
Tlfrertcrv Ie received m sm
51 ail. My addresses yon
.1inr.-a B'AIR BIllKCTORV CO.,
" wi .nd Girard Aves. Phlladei-
WO. 11 fi"M -
phia, Pa.
wmm
It
Descendants of Great Men.
It is a noticeable fact that great men
seldom leave direct descendants. Na
poleon, Wellington, Washington, an
. .. tr nlTT
prove the rule. Biisrai:ji ""j
two daughters, whose children died
without issue. Probably the nearest
relative to the great poet now living is
one Thomas Hart, a resident of Aus
tralia, who is said to bj the eighth in
descent from Shakespeare's sister Joan.
Walter Scott's line ended .with tne sec
ond or third generation. It is also a
notable fact that great men rarely leave
great descendants, as witness liismarck
and Gladstone. Among other celeb
rities who left no direct heir wa8
Beaconsfield.
The Plucky Texivn Who i!ullt the Arkansas
Pass llond Did Hood Financiering.
Pmin South Texas came a man who
built six hundred miles of railroad with
five-dollar bill and faith, and the bill
was a borrowed one. lie moved up irom
Corpus Christi to San Antonio with all
of his possessons heaped on a two-
wheeled cart, according to tne St. JjOuis
Globe-Democrat, lie got a charter to
build a railroad from San Antonio to
Arkansas Pass. lie graded a mile of It,
throwing a great deal more than one
shovel of dirt with his own hands. The
receiver of another road loaned this in
defatigable builder enough old rails
for a mile of track. In a distant part 01
the state was purchased an old engine
which had been condemned six years
before and sent to the shops to be
wrecked for scrap iron. Two old cars
were nicked up somewhere else at a
bargain. And that old engine, drawing
those old cars, steamed into Ban An
tonio. On engine and cars in bold let
ters were minted in lamp-black: "S. A.
and A. P." With one mile of old rail
track and with the equipment of the
old engine and two old cars Uriah Lott
started the Arkansas Pass system. There
has been some tall financiering in the
history of railroad building in thiscoun
t.rv. but there isn't anything which for
dazzling pluck quite approaches the
Ktirv of the building of this six hun
dred miles of road in South Texas. To
the one mile of track three were added
three miles by a dicker for some second-hand
rails which & Btreet car com-
nanv had bought from a narrow guage
company. On this basis a credit was
made with a Pennsylvania rolling mill
for ten miles of rails. Whentneyar
As soon as Mr. Stevenson taV.o tha
oath of office as vice president, sayB a
Washington letter to the Boston Adver
tiser, he will be the possessor of a room
mar, is both beautiful and historic
Tllio lo ll,n J-- r .
" luuui just orr irom the sen
ate chamber which is used as the office
01 tne .m president In the senate
wmg of the capital there are two rooms
set apart, one for the president and one
for the vico president. The former is
but seldom used, while the latter is used
daily as an office and contains some
very interesting relics. The former en
trance to the vice president's room, just
outside the lobby, has been for some
years closed, and the little alcove made
thereby is now used as a wash-room.
This little place contains one of the
most interesting relics in the room. It
is a small mirror two and one-half feet
by eighteen inches wide and was pur
chased by the senate for John Adams,
the first vice president of the United
States and the political
of Washington. It has a very ordinary
gilt frame and is made of poor materiaL
Still, it caused a great controversy in
the senate at the time of its nureha
some of the senators objecting to the
price, which was forty dollars, saying
that the amount was entirely too much
for the government to expend for a
mirror, even for a vice president, and
only after a lengthy and interesting
debate was it decided to purchase it.
A ne mirror has received every care
and is now in almost perfect condition,
having been for the last fifty years in
the care of the vei .jrable Capt. Hassett,
Wffhfey; Rttd-fcit a-tri.l.l .
and manufacture niinseu. wu unt.
the walls of the room is a painting of
George Washington, and this painting
is considered the best of Washington in
existence. It was executed by Hem
brandt Peale in 1795. Peale had three
sittings of Washington, and at that
time dentistry was not practiced as
scientifically as it is at the present day,
and it is a historical fact tnat at eacn
of these sittings Washington used raw
cotton as a substitute for false teeth, so
as to fill out the mouth and cneeics.
This gives his face a very determined
look, and not the peaceful expression
with which he is generally credited n
portraits.
Above the painting, rolled up on its
staff, is a large silk American flag. In
1885 this Hug was presented to the sen
ate by tho Ladies' Silk Culture associa
tion of Philadelphia. The weaving and
the making of the flag was ail done in
the United States, of tho finest of silk,
superior even to tho imported articlo.
On the riifht and lvft of the painting
are marble busts of Lafayette S. Foster
and II uiirv Wilson. The former was a
senator from Connecticut, and wits, at
the death of Mr. Wilson, who, during
his terra as vice president, died from
nlexv in this very room, elected oy
the senate as vice president pro tem
pore. Near the wash-room, is a very
handsome gold clock, which was pur
chased by Vice President Dallas, and
which refuses to keep good time.
There is also in the room a large mir-
passion flowers and other tropical
plants and blooms abound but you
meet few people, and those are mostly
women. The grassy streets, according
to a Paraguay correspondent, have a
sad, deserted look, constantly remind
ing one that the sons and husbands
and lovers and brothers perished on
the battlefields or died of starvation in
hiding, or rotted in prison, as thou
sands did who were ignorant even of
wnat tney were accused, or were tor
tured and murdered by the three ty
rants who ruled and ruined the coun
try. Here women do the work that in
other parts of the world is monopol
ized by the stronger sex such as
cleaning the streets, loading the ships,
orivmg the ox carts, cultivating the
fields, carrying on the markets, etc.,
and it is said that during the long,
hard war, they made the best and
bravest soldiers. Naturally, where
men are in the proportion of one to
seven, they are at a higher premium
than elsewhere, and in Paraguay they
are figuratively kept in cotton-wool by
their admiring female relatives.
OUR DEBTJTO RUSSIA.
What tho United atltes Owes to' tha
House of Romanoff.
"That we are under tremendous ob
ligations to the house of Romanoff is
recognized by every American who
knows the history of his
says the New York Sun. ' Wl,t,.,,,L
may have been the mnfivn ,i,iL ij
r-ii T . . . . w
vomerine 11. to Join the so-called League
of Neutrals, the result of the act was
to complete the discouragement of the
British ministers, to break the stubborn
will of George HI., and to compel the
acknowledgement of American lnde
pendence. Whatever, again, may have
been the purpose controlling the mind of
Alexander I. when, braving the anger of
Napoleon, he refused to enforce the
Brlm decrees against the American
vessels thronging the Baltic ports, there
is no doubt that he rescued from ruin
our commerce. We accepted redemp
tion at his hands; we profited by his
lionnl" existence1- J .
French emperor having put forth all
his influence at Westminster to per
suade the British government to join
him in intervening on the side of the
southern confederacy. Then it was tnat
the czar, who freed the Russian serfs,
caused his ambassadors at fans ana
London to announce that, if 1' ranee
and England undertook to assure the
destruction of the American union and
to perpetuate the regime of slavery in
the western hemisphere, they would
find Russia arrayed against them. Nor
was that friendly interposition of Alex
ander II. confined to words. Simulta
neously with the utterance of diplomat
ic warnings a Russian fleet was di
rected to proceed under sealed orders
to the harbor of New York, and a
Russian fleet was dispatched to the bay
of San Krancisco. For us, for the
American republic, for the consolida
tion of our union, the czar made known
his willingness to fight, and there is
not the shadow of a doubt that his
willingness averted a catastrophe."
. TiiKitK was much timidity among pro
fessed republicans in New Y'ork in 1774,
and two distinct parties were formed
among them. The line of separation
was a social one patricians and trib
unes the merchants and gentry and
the mechanics. They coalesced in choos
ing delegates to the First Continental
congress.
Tki.kscoi'IC steel masts or rods are to
- and a very exquisitely carved book- be used in lighting the Pees
i .1... l....l.oD1i
case. Hie lower part in wiu uiiu
is used as a wood box, and the cnpitol
guides tell strangers that "this is
known as the two-thousand-dollar
wood-box." It was not originally in
tended as such, but it was found incon
venient to have the wood for the fire
place stered in the senate lobby, and
1 .. . .1 ...I A Al,n l.ilFlir tin ft
rived there wasn't money enough in the be' nsS for thai
The custom has been to pre-
trnBBiirv to nav the freight. But it was
. 1 " m . ., m . i ntirnose.
gotsomeliow. xen miies oi trae Lnt the fender, with itH accompanying
foundation for bonds wmcn duui, xorty mw and other fire uten
sil", to the retiring vice president, and
there is also given him the inkstand
which he used while he was holding
the office.
The inkstand is usually a large and
mn.rrnifif.unt affair of Bilver. The
WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES
(Northern Pacific R, R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME CAIiD
Two Through Trains Daily.
STOCKRAISER !
HKPPNEB. OllEGON. '
Cattle branded and earmarked as shown above,
norses F on right shoulder.
12.45pm!
1.25pm1
7.15am
Su"HrPauL:Arjani,3.10pm
,4.05pm I.v...Dulutn ..a "j
7.05pnLv. . n4..Artm
lO.Oam Ar...vu.-e - 1
I
"m?TLT:Zrv to your nearest
..KPJ.i'i-n or AS. C. Por.n,
OOOOOOOOOOOO
t i-ix: Ciiffpriner O
O is no virtue if there U
rt be a remedy U
Beecham's
Pills.
JtnW (Tasteless)
positively
Now ia Ihe time to snbujffbe for the
Semi-Weekly Gaeette.
miles more, and so the system grew into
its present proportions. 1 his man wno
built the Arkansas Pass system rode from
San Antonio to Chicago at one critical
period in his enterprise without a cent
in his pocket, lie had transportation,
but he hadn't anything to buy food, and
he went through hungry.
in Urnssels. The obioct of tlnB system
is to preserve the beauties of the parks
in the daytime.
Sevkuai. lots in Cornhill, London, in
the immediate neighborhood of the
Bank of England, were sold several
days ago at a price that averaged 50
per foot, or something over 2,000,000
an acre. Several neighboring lots of
equal size were offered for sale some
weeks ago, and were bought in by the
owner at a price considerably higher.
Land Fob Hale. 480 aores over in
Wilson prairie. A good stock ranoh m
will be sold cheap. Call at G..:c re
office for particulars and terms. '.
Better subscribe for the Gr.zet and
get ready for the long winter evenings.
Awarded Highest Honors, World's Fair.
1 For iuii ilul
tuT tFSS V&t7o7thn rfr.nd eon. tlekgentor Agt.iw(lttke., Wis,
fiction of any person etealiag ml stock.
cure Indi
gestion, iilllOUMlCM,
c:M, Hparlache. Why
rrinre continued
mr .,1im S5;u
fOOOOOOOOO
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, V ,.;t:..i.
Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Suudard.
present fender and inkstand have been
in the room for some time, as Mr. In
galls, vice president pro tempore before
Mr. Morton came in, either forgot to
take them away or did not care to.
Each vice president upon retiring pre
sents the room with some ornament,
and Mr. Morton's gift win ne an easy
chair of the most approved design.
Altogether the room is a most delight
ful retreat, with its largo square form,
stuccoed ceiling, tinted walls, ecru
mmet rosewood tables, mahogany
chairs and massive desk. Besides the
room IK the custodian of the electoral
votes, for here stands the little steel
safe where the electoral packages of
electoral votes are placed as fast as
they arrivein Washington.
WAR'S DESOLATION.
I.i Aiuri'.rii.M Ihe Women Outnumber thfl
J" oil Keven to One.
Ihe oil town presents a half ori
ental half medieval appearance its
few splendid palaces, which belong to
the late dictators and their families
and favorites, sandwiched among huts
of mud and cane, with bark roofs and
one window apiece. Palms, bananas,
WITH THE AUTHORS.
.Tnt.iAs Hawthorne, who lives In a
pleasant cottage at Sag Ilarbor, with
his seven children, has christened his
home "The House of the Seven Gab
blers.''
Dr. Ouvkr Wendell IIolmks is rare
ly seen in society this winter, owing to
necessary precautions for his health.
When he does appear he is surrounded
by admirers, and his presence is consid
ered an event.
Bill Nvb proposes to write a history
of the United States. "It will contain
a few facts," he says, "as it is almost
impossible to keep them out, but there
will be only enough for a spinal col
umn. It will be the first real book I
have written."
Ehnkht Rknan was very careless
about money matters and, although his
celebrated "Life of Christ" had reached
its twenty-first edition, his wife finds
herself compelled to sell her husband's
library and apply for a pension from
the state of th. w.its.
A y0ung Australian traveler claim to
ha-rato;aSwlss,
,,t. nf the ostriches of Africa.
...... iw. everv morning
at
He as-
sunriso
1 . . , uumble in eroups
these amiauie oir- move.
and cgin arcs-" than tn8
ment whicn
waltz.
is none other