HEPPNER GAZETTE. OFFICIAL PAPER NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. Tliaman wUo advwrUsus, guta the ouh. Notice It JSO RISK, NOTEADE. oooooooo The xnan who doesn't advertise, doesn't get the cBh. ELEVENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1894. i WEEKLY rJO. S0O.I ! SEXI-WJU.Y NO. SOS.) PlJHf SEMI '.VEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTISH80N Editor At 42.5 1 per year. $1.25 fur biz months, 75 ots. (or three muut.no. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The ZL&aLE, " of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, Is published by the same com pany every Friday morning. Subscription price, I'iper year. For advertising rates, address railT X. X-A.-rx:E:SSOiT, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oreguu, or "Gazette," Ueppuur, Oregon, 'pHla PAPKU is kept on Hie at E. C. Pake's A Advertising Agenuy, til and 115 iVierchaiits ExgIihiikh, oan tfriinclsou, l.&iunruia; wnere cui racts fur advertising can be made fur it. THE UAZifiTTETJ AO SNTS. Wagner fi. A. Hunsaker Arlington Phlll Heppner Long Creek, The Kagle Echo PostiuasttT Caums Prairie Oscar De aiil Nye, Or., H. C. right Hardnuin, Or., Poslmi.ster Uamllton, Urant Co., Or Postmaster lone i. J. uun Prairie City, Or K. R. McHaley Canyon City, Or 8. L. Parrisn Pilut Kcio.k, G. P. skelton Uayville, Or., i. E. Snow John Day, Or F. I. McCalluin Athena, Or Juhn Edlugtou Pendleton, Or., Postmaster Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Klutt Fox, Urant Co., Or., J. F. Allen Eight Mile, Or.,. Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh Upper Rhea Creek, B. F. Hevland Douglas, Or :.Postinaster Lone Honk, Or R. M. Johnson Gooseberry J. R. E teb Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead Lexington Jas. Leach AN AUENT WANTKD IN EVEKY PRECINCT. Union Paofic Railway-Local card. No. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 6:00 a. m. ' 10. " ar. at Arlington 8:si a.m. 9, " leaves " 10 01) a. m. " 9, " ar. at Heppner : 12:311 p. m. dully sxoept Sunday. East bnnnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :?o m. Wert " '' " leaves " l:'Zia. in. West honcl 1 ul T.-mkIi lav9 Arlington 8 85 a. m., arrives it The D ills 1:1) p. in. L oal passengfrliivrf Tu Uiildiat 2:11.1 p. ra. nrriv s t Purtlaudat 7i0j p. m. airr-IOIAX. BIUEOTOETr. I'nlted States OlUolals. , .- PlesMivit. j.Gruver Cleveland Vire.l'rtjsuleut Ad ai S'eWuson See' erary of tilnle Waller Q. (ireslmm- Kecr"Uiry ot Treasury Junu ti. tlarlislo BemeUiry of interior....' lloae Smith Seoielary of War Daniel S. Laiuont boiH'utary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert PoatiUHter-tieneral Wilt-on S. Bissoll Att.r.rjy-tieum'Hl itiulictrtl S. Oluey Hecieuiryuf Agriculture J.tilerliiig .Uoriou State. of Oregua. Governor S. Pennoyer Secretary uf State U. W. McBride Treasurer Phil. Metschan Bunt. Public Instruction E. li. Mcelroy I J. H. Mitchell Senators j j Ni jj1tl - - 1 Uluger Hermann Congressmen W. h. Ellis Printer Frank L). Baker )F. A. Muore W. P. LAvd U. 8. Bean . Seventh Judicial District. Circnit Judge W. L. BradHhaw l'roswuting Attorney W. H. Wile n Morrow County ulliciala. joini Senator... Henry Blackmail Hepresentative J- N. Brown I'ouutyJudge Julius Kellhly 1 Commissioners Geo. W, Vincent J.M.Baker. Clerk J. W. Morrow Sheriff Geo. Noble. Treasurer W. J. L ezer " Assessor K. L. haw ' Surveyor Ibb Brown ' School Sup't VV. L. baling " Cnmuer T. W. Ayer. J i HEPPNEK TOWN OfKIOKBS. Majoi ... J- R. Simons Couiu-iIiiimi O. E. Fanisworth, M Jjichtenthal, Otis Patterson, J alius Kuitlily. W. A. louur.tou, J. L. YeugBr. Keo.mlHi A. A. Kotierti.. rreasutei K. (1. Slocuin Marshal J W. Ituauiiu.. Precinct OlUi'erl1. J uetioe of the Peace V. J. Hall. .ck Goustable t). W. Kychard United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OB. J.W.Lewis R'-gis'i-r T. 8. Lang ....lteceiv r LA OBANDE, OB. B.F, Wi'son Rniter J.H llobbins Receiver eECXaE-r SOCIETIES. Iliirir Lnrlirr No. 20 K. of P. meets BY. ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in W Wra their (Mantle Hall. National Bank build ing. Sojourning brothers enr-liallv in vited In attend. J. N. BROWN, t". '. W. V. CUAWFOKD, H. of It. HL S. tf RAWLINS POST, N J. 31. G. A. R. Jl eets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of ch month. All veterans are invited to Join. CO. Boon, Geo. W.Smith. , Adjutant, tf Commander. PEOPESSIOlTAii. A A. BOBERTS, Real Estate, Insur- Bnoe and Collections. Offioe in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. S, P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER ! HKFPNEK. OKKQON. Cattle branded and Bar marked as shown abov . dorses F on right shoulder. Mv cattle range in Morrow and Umatilla conn lis. I will par $100.00 for Uw arrest and con notion of any person tealiae my stocK. VALUABLE FREW. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS liy a special arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FREE to each of oar readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the Amebic an Farmer, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Ohio. . This offer is made to any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advance, and to ony new subscribers who will pay one yeai la advnuce. The American Kahmku eujnys a large national oiroula tmu, and rutins among the leading Hgrioultttral papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the American Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oail promptly. Sample copies can be S'en at our office. Ttie Original Webster's Unabridged DIGTIOH HRY. BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE bubllshurB, rve are able to obtain a number of th above book, and propone to furutsh a copy to each of our subscribers. i tie nicuonary is a necessity in every norae, school and business bouBe. It tills a vacancy. ami furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumeB of the choicest books could Siipply. Vouugand old, educated and ignorant. non ana poor, snouiu nave it wunin reacn, ana refer to its coutenlB every day in the year. As Bonie have aBked if this is really the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this is the very work comnlete on which about forty of the best years ot the author's life were so well employed in writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of about 100,000 words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and delinitiou of same, and is the regular standard size, containing about auu.mw aqnare incnes 01 pnntea surrace, ana is bound in cloth half morocco and sheeo. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dict:onary 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 bad stamps marbled edges $100. 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 alt cases for express age to Heppner. f"As the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to It at once. SILVKK'S OH A.MPION iTHEE locky-. Mountain News THE DAILY- BY MAIL. SiibHcriptlon price reduced aB follows: One Year (by m dl) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Three Months " : 1 50 One Month " : : 50 THE WEEKLY BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) : fl 00 The Neivn in the only consistent c.iarrplon 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. 8end In your subscriptions at once. Address, THE NEWS, XSoil-creX-. Colo LUMBER! ITTE HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF ON VV dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at wnat is Known as tne SCOTT sawmz:dzj. PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, - - - 10 00 " " CLEAR, - - 17 60 F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, W1XA APD I IMHl per l.uuo Teet. aoninonai. HAMILTON. Prop. O. A.. HamlltoniMan'sr WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES (Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.) LATEST TIME CARD Two Through Trains Daily. V l.ipm ft i.'inm'l.v.MinneflpnllsAr's.'Wam )'-).5pm7 ISnmlLv...?!. Paul. ..ArlKOi'iim 1 4(l;,nmil.v...milnth...Arlll in" 7 0,'ipniXv.. Ashland.. Arls.lfMm 7 Knm in fmmlAr. ..thieaifo. ..Lv S.OUp" kWpm 13,40pm 0.40" 1 I Tickets sold and haernre chei'ked through to all nolnts in thp 1'ntteit xtates and Canada. Close connection mwte In Chicago wltn all trains Bnln East and South. For lull information apply to your neares! Hnbet nirent or JAS. C. rOrl, GePass and Tkt At, Milwaukee, WU. "As old aa tho hills" and never excell ed. "Tried and proven " is the verdict o f millions. Simmons Liver E,e;n- Tr-y . lator ia the lc TT V o n 1 y Liver Mf w w I anfi a m m. m . m . and Kidncv medicine to which y.o u can pin your C7l ttiVa. for a l747 cure. A J. fJUl mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, aet J ' ' ing directly Puis rtfe noys. Trv it. Sold by" all Irj"ioist3 in Liquid, or in Powder it i'tj uikondry or made into a tea. Thu King: of Liver Mediclnog. " T have usi.'ii yoursimmons IivT Ht'srii ' i;. t mill fun c!iii',U'in,l(msly way it is the in-.' of' :ii 1 1 ivi't nu'flirlnps, I conshlcr u it W-iii" ,'lH-st in Itxelt. W. JAt'K- . ', T.K'ittua. Wurthluutou. vr.i: v r a c k a g k-te . i Sfciinj iii rt-tl on M-rappr quick rxivci3 I TO iSf i r Francisco And all points in California, via the Mt. Bhasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. The great hivhway through California to all points Kant and South. . Grand Boenio Route of the Pacific Coaat. Pullman Buffet Sleepers. Beoond-ulauB Sleepers Attachedito ezpresa traina, aitording Buperior acconnnodationa for aeoond-olaBs paBsengere, For rates, tickets, sleeping oar reservations, tc,. call npon or address ti KOEHLER, Manager. E. P. KOGKRS, Asst. 'ieu. F. A P. Agt. Portland, Oregon. national eai oi Heppner. W. PENLAND. ED. R. BISHOP, Prettident. Cashier. fRASSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS 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 ? TZtlXl will send yon FREE OF CHANGE a full conrne of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case. We want your recommendation. We can cure the most aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and deformities are modern and scientific, acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B. - We have the only positive cure for Ep ilepsy fits) and Catarrh. References given. Permanently located. Old established. Dr. Williams Medical and Boroical Tnbti totk, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. ARE VOU ANY AT. PUZZLES ? The genius who invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "Pigs In Clover." and many others, has in vented a brand new one, which 1b going to he 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 s the property of the New York PreeB 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 to the "Press Club Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mail. ? 8000 PARCELS OP MAIL" FREE FOB 10 1-CEriT STAIV-Pt Jffl Vm l(renlur price 2 e .Fffili : dress If Veoslvi jim; uni uu received within ft will be for 1 yettr toid Erf nted on gummei ibels. Only Diret 'ton guaranteeing inhere and manutkr vf. nrohablv. thouftandH n: valuable hooks, pJipern saraDlea.maday.lneh.tlr All fVee and each narr-f Wltn one orvourpnmea annress n.w pasted thereon. EXTRA! We wi, also print and prepay postage on oif o your label addrenees to ymi ; whirl stlrk on vour envelopes, bo"k. v p re vent their being lost. J. A. Vi mm of Iteidsville, writes: " Kkhj my2S cent a(1res In your f.(f;biii:i.; pfrertcry I'-e recflvM myoOn mi :.ti or luwlfl ann over siuu rarri' ! v'SJ-'Sf Wiill. My mI(wi y-. n"':rf "Cj firHiirrlvh'K tl-iiy. ert v. 'In. i.lv ' . of Ul.Vi 1r: ill' !'HJ In nf 1 1..' V,',i , gXf WORLD'S fAltt DIRECTORY CO., No. M7 Frankford and Girard Aves. Philadel phia, Pa. QCMDOOCMDOOOO( O Simple ailments 8 neglected may grow deadly. A handy f remedy is Beecham's Pills. O-iy (Tasteless) in all cases where Liver and Stomach trouble is suspected. sj cents a box. ICUINEAI LEGENDS 0 HAUNTED HILL. Traditions of F.nva his.l Duto Tint Are Flouting Arnun-l A'.n nir Iho ludians. Haunted hill, iu Frazior, on tho road from Spriagvillo tor Fottcrville, is an odd-looking mnnnd wliicli is wrapped up in the myt.l"rk'8 of several Indian legends, nayx tlic Tulare (Cal.) Times. Some of the traditions were told to us in 1874, wheu we first visited this re gion, and ever since we have endeav ored to learn the true btories. Tho In dians are scattered and their legends are difficult to ohtain; those possessed of intelligence will not or do not care to talk. Hut from white men living here many years ago, and who learned to speak in the ludian language, we have gathered the partial narrative of the legends of Haunted hill, known in the Indian tongue as "Wailing moun tain." Two legends are told one a tale of Indian love and jr-alousy, the other the story of a dreadful omj fatal battle be tween the Tule river Indians and their enemies, the Me deaus residing near San Diejro, in this state. Rer-urdinir trie first tradition but scanty details can be obtained. It is probable the older of the legends and the time of its origin i':i'. s lurk ages ago, and it !i:s Wn h-.mi!.-i il lv. n from parent to C'.i: I rstt-inp- the Tulare In dians for lnmihvi!'! of years. This much oiiiy eau l.1 i .inu-il: A tribe liv ing on the han't'- nf the Tele east of the hill g.ive ori. r.i ! tie.' l.'a'end. Among some uiem.i'is of the t.-ibe a bitter jealousy ai'""e, hnviii-f love for a source. A l.teiion havini; won the af- leetums 01 mx -..-o-a -a, lae rivals re solveii oi siirt ''tii.ir.' r. veiie. Abiding time and w.ihui r a;i uiitffi.mled hour, they pm-sited fiw w.nrten to the top of Wailiii,.' in mat ain and lae.rdored them. Every ni;'.;, the Indians aver, the ground on the Miminit opens and the six women up'ar. oy.I,v to vanish instantly. Since tliei; iuh Indian will visit the hill at ui-vht. The other le 'end is perhaps the more authentic; it h the one sadly told by the few surviving members of the once prosperous and numerous Tulare In dians. In brief, it is this: ' The Mexi cans from southern California were wont to make raids into this valley and drive away the ponies of the Indians. Armed with superior weapons, they could defy the Indians. Driven to des peration, the natives resolv ed to offer battle, and, if possible, drive the ma rauders from the valluy, otherwise to crush them. Lcaruin this, the Mexi cans came in larger numbers, prepared for the trial of strength. The opposing forces met in the valley at the base of the hill.- Tho-Indians,- terrified at the Mexican weapons and tho slaughter among their numbers, lied to tho top of the hill. Thorc, crouching behind the many rock ledges, they made a last des perate but ineffectual stand. Soon the Mexicans gained the crest, when disor der again prevailed among the Indians, large numbers falling at eaeh volley from their enemy. Only the more cow ardly escaped, the real warriors dying amid the rock piles, for no quarter was asked or given. It is told that five hun dred Indians perished that day at the base and on the summit of this hill, which ever since is known to the Indi ans as tho "Wailing mountain." Pass ing the hill at night the Indians say that the piteous wailing of the slain can be distinctly hoard, hence its name and its dread to all aborigines of the Tulare valley j NOT HEREDITARY. ' You May Get Consumption In Various Ways, Hut Not by Itlrth. The accumulation of evidence is be coming so great that every physician of experience is forced to share tho belief of the communieability of consumption. There are also few physicians who have not had one ormore cases that for years they had thought had been contracted In this way, writes Dr. Chappcll, in the North American Review. How else than by communication are we to ac count for the rapid spread of consump tion amongst savago nations, where this disease was unknown before civil ized people began to visit them? This is true of our own American Indians, the inhabitants of Central Africa and many other countries. Intermarrying or any other condition which might make hereditary transmission a possi ble cause certainly could not account for its rapid progress. Besides, some of the best observers and investigators be lieve that consumption is not heredita ry, and there is much positive evidence in favor of this view. With such evi dence of the possibility of inhaling the bacilli the question would naturally be asked: How do the bacilli get into the atmosphere when they are not found in the breath of sufferers of this disease? We know positively that in these cases bacilli are present in the mucus which is raised after coughing. In its moist condition it is impossible for it to be in haled, but when it dries and becomes lust it is blown about, and it is in this form that it becomes dangerous. Tbe Morullty of Athons. The city in Europe which makes the best showing, so far as morality is concerned, is Athens. Within tho memory of the present generation, there has been no single matrimonial scandal that has taken place in the so ciety of the Grecian metropolis, and the latter is about the only capital in the world which is absolutely without any chronique scandaleuse. The Athenians Awarded Highest "tllonors, World's Fair. The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard G. A. R. NOTICK. We take this opportunity of informing our subscribers that the new commis sioner of pensions has been apoointed He is an old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and their heirs will re ceive justice at bis hnods. We do not anticipate that there will be any radios! changes in the administration of ponsioi affairs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that U. 8 soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application at onae, if they have sot already done so, in order to seoure tbe benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Suob legislation is seldom retroaotive. There tore it is of great importauoe that Bp plications bo filed in the department a' he earliest possible date. If the U. 8. soldiers, sailors, or thei widows, ohildren or parents desire iu formation iu regard to pension mttern i,C bUUUlU .HID lu 1UD i'lcea UlUid,- Jumpauy, at Washington, D. 0., am hey will prepare oud send the necessary ipplication, if they find them entitlee indei the numerous laws enacted foi beir benefit. Address PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY, Iohn Weddkhbubn, Managing Attoi uey, Washington, D. O., P. O. Box 38i If. THE WKSTEKN PEDAGOGUE. We are iu receipt of tbe May numbei f our state school paper. It ncesj iny of the former numbers ir. valu . Tbe paper this month oontains main lew and valuable features. Tbe illus rated series ou tbe sohools of the stati h introduced by a paper od tbe Friend Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon I'hese papers cannot fail to be of gren value both to tbe sohools bdI to tb public There are also several fine article) by our best writers and the department! "Current Events,""Satnrdny Thoughts,' "Educational News" "The Orach ADSwei'3, Correspondents," etc., eaob oouthin much valuable reading fi" teachers or parents. The nmenzim tins about 60 pages of mutter, well printed and arranged. We pronounor tbe Western I'edntiozue the best erluoa tional monthly on the ooasl. Everyooe of our readers should hav; the pBTjef if they are at all ihterenterl in eduoation. No teacher Bchool direc tor or student can get along well witi out it. We will receive BubBOript.ou it this office. Price only $1.00 a yea When desired we will send the Wester Pedagogue mid Onzefte one year to on address for 83.00. Call and examni ample oopies. Teachers, directors am parents, now is tbe time to subscribe, tt FIKST AWARD AT CHICAGO. Sheepmen will be interested to knon that there is no longer any question at to the relative marits of the difforei l sheep dips upon tbe market. Christy A Wise take pleasure in announcing til Bayward's Dips (paste and liquid) f' wbioh they are sole P. U. agents, bai secured the first award at the Wor'd' Fnir, and last year these dips receivt-i the silver medal at Cnlifornia Htnt Fair ud gold mednl nt Mechanic Fan 8an Franoipco. Every practical" beepme that ever used Hay ward's Dips, pr nonuoed them the very best dips for th eurfl ot sonb, the general health of shei aod conditions of wool. 181 188-bw. marry young ana remain laitnfui to their marriage vows. This is not alone on account of principle, but is also at tributable in a measure to the almost entire absence of the deini monde. What little there is of the lat'.er in Athens is exelte.ively of I'orei.rii origin. VISION'S A QUa THING. Kuthintr I'vi.r Api.u-m Kuim to An; Two 1 e.-airiH. "I do not suppose this world look: alike to any two persons," said a St I.ouisan to a Olobo-ikimo-rat man. "A dozen of us w ere looking ut the moor tho other nijlit. To one it appearec the size of a live-cent pieee, to anotlici much larger than a cartwheel. To om it appeared a well-rounded globe, and to another a ilnt, circular pieee of brass. I noticed this diversity of human visior once in Galveston, Tex. I saw a mat named O'Dell shoot a fellow gamble! named Quin'.an to de.'ith. He fired foui shots from a large revolver. At the trial one man testified lljp.t (Juinlan had a knife in his hand at the time of the shooting. Another tlra'.' hlit was acme, while a third pxprcsw -1 the opinion thai it was a billiard ev.e. J was standing facing him v.l.en lie was i hot and wouh make oath that his hands wero opci and containi d notlipf. Thf;so who tes tilled were dininteiti.t-'d t-.pcutn.tors an told on the Maw! v. hat they honestl; thought they caw. h h:; shooting be gan in a saioen. v.inhin ran out, fol lowed by O'Dell. ho kept shooting Some thought one t.::it v.as fired in th saloon, others tStor.fc'ht three, yet al were looking ri .!:'. e.t the ;-.vo men. You Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. .ABSOLUTELY PURE olten near people fay that what they see they know: but they don't. They have no assurance that they saw right. A man who implicitly believes his eyes Is liable to fall into grievous error." CONCERNING DYNAMITE. Several Million Diillui-H luvo-.teil In Its Manufacture In the I'uited States. Very few people have a correct idea of what dynamite is, of what it is made, and the uses to which it is put. To the French belongs the honor of its discov ery ond its practical use. Jcitro-glycenne is the force of all high explosives. Dynamite is the name most usually given to these explosives, though other names are sometimes used. Dynamite, says the Detroit Free Press, is simply nitro-glycerine mixed with various ingredients. Kitro-glyccr- ine is made by mixing sulphuric and nitric acid with sweet glycerine, the same that is used by the ladies to pre vent chapped hands. Mixing the acids and glycerine is whero the great dan ger lies in the making of nitro-glycerine. The mixing-tank, or agitator, as it is called by dynamite makers, is a large steel tank, filled inside with many coils of lead pipe, through which, while the mixing is in progress, a constant flow of ice water is maintained. This flow of ice water is used to keep the temperature of the mix below eighty- five degrees, as above that point it would explode, and a hole in the ground would mark where the factory had been. The nitro-glycerine is stored in large earthenware tanks, which are usually sunk in the ground to guard against blows or severe concussion. The other ingredients for making dynamite are: N itrate of soda, which is found only in Chili, carbonate of magnesia and wood pulp. Dynamite is put in paper shells usually one and a quarter inches in diameter and eight inches in length, and weighs about one-half pound to each" shell or cartridge. " It has largely taken the place of black powder for blasting, as it is many hundreds of times stronger and consequently more economical. It is used chiefly in mining all kinds of ores, coal and rock and submarine blasting and railroad build ing. Without its aid many railroads, especially those crossing tho Rocky mountains, could not have been con structed; without it Hell Gate in New York harbor could not have been de stroyed, and without it the miner, at prices now paid for mining ores, could not earn his bread. Dynamite will not explode from any ordinary fall or jar; it will burn with out explosion and freezes at forty-two degrees, ten degrees above ordinary freezing point. The bomb of the an archist is made of metal or glass and filled with pure nitro-glycerino ar ranged so as to explodo by severe con tact with any hard object. These bombs are, of course, never made by a reputable dynamite factory. Five or six millions of dollars are in vested in the manufacture of dynamite in the United States, and its use is con stantly on the increase. The fumes of mtro-glyeerine produce intense head ache, which can be cured by taking a very small dose of it internally. EXCHANGE IS NO ROBBERY. A. Thtef and a Vuorrant Traded Identities for Mutual Advantage. Here is a bald statement of facts, says the Pall Mall Gazette, and it reads like an ingenious bit of fiction. It only happened recently, and tho authority is the report of the police oiliee. A poor man wandering iu the Paris streets came up to a constable and entreated to be arrested. He said he was penniless and hungry, and tliat at the lockup he would at least r-et a bed and a break fast. The c able took him at his word took h. . in fact, into custody and he was loi . 1 up for the night. In the lockup he in t a thief, whose ante cedents were rather troubled, but who had great hopes for the future if he could ouly escape. The one wanted lib erty, the other wanted money, and they had all the night to make their arrange ments. When the morning came a bar gain was struck. The thief was able either to produce or Ut guarantee fifty francs, and in consideration of that it came to a change of identities. When the roll was called over each of the two prisoners answered for tbe other. The thief came in for some pity, some sym pathetic advice and his liberty. lie ac cepted all three and made immediate and excellent use of the last. The other prisoner was "put back." Hut the fraud was discovered it was almost inevita ble that it should. He was brought up again and sentenced to fifteen days' im prisonment for conspiring to defeat the ends of just!ce. The report says he was delighted with the sentence and re turned to his cell in triumph. The story would have seemed improbable in a novel; but fancy the satisfaction of th bona-fide thief when he read the report. LIGHT OF COMING DAYS. A Scientist Thinks I'liosphoreseent Glow j. Will Supersede Electricity. It seems hard to believe that in a very few years the incandescent lamp, which we now regard as in many respects an almost perfect light, will be regarded as a crude makeshift, which mankind availed itself of while science stood on the threshold of the discovery of the perfect luminant. Mr. Tesla hus shown iu his experiments an ideal form of electric lighting which would transcend in luxury and convenience our present system of electric liirhting hv incan- aescent lamps so tar as tne latter tran scends the oil lamps and tallow dips used by our near ancestors. Every drawing room would become an electric field in a continual stntcof rapidly alter nating stress, in which the occupants would live, experiencing no unpleasant effect whatever, while vacuous tubes or phosphorescent globes and tubes, without care or attention, would shed a soft, diffuse light of color and intensi ty arranged to suit tho most luxurious fancy. Mr. Tesla's watchword is that the phosphorescent glow is the light oi of the future: he hints at artificial au roras spreading from the summit oi towers of hitherto'undreamt hcight,and he has, at all events, got as far as pro ducing in the air at atmospheric pres sure a glowing plane bounded by twe rings about a foot and thirty inches in diameter respectively. Whether all hit visions will be realized remains to be proved; there is no doubt that they are guiding him aright. APOLLO IN DISGUISE. (he Man V, ho I). In Posing: Refers russeegera in Hoi-ko Curs. ; "Do you see that man standing in the center of the car?" said a conductor on the Columbus avenue line to a lioston Herald reporter the other day while on a down-town trip about ten o'clock in the morning. "Yes; anything usual about him?" "Only that he is stuck on himself." , "How does he show it?" -1 "By declining to take a seat when a passenger leaves. I have been watch ing him now for three or four weeks. If there are a number of ladies in the car when he enters he insists on standing, notwithstanding the amount of vacant space at his disposal. From his actions one would believe he did not see it, and frequently it happens that some kind hearted old gentleman who never loses an opportunity to be of service to his fellow man will poke Mr. Vanity in the back with his cune and direct his atten tion to a seat. He always meets a solici tation of this nature with 'No, thank you; I prefer standing, as I intend get ting out shortly.' "If there is a pretty girl in the car he manages to get as near her as possible, so that when the car sways in taking a curve he can jostle against her and go through the street-ear etiquette of lift ing his hut and begging her pardon, "If he enters a car that is sparsely occupied, and no ladies are present, he takes a scat as close to the door as he can, in order to be the first one to rise when a lady does come in. The 'thank you' he receives for his disguised coui tesy he interprets as a recognition of his personal attractiveness, and his actions during the remainder of the trip are base ', on this presumption. If the iiuty should by chance happen to look toward him it adds strength to his false supposition and additional height to his 'mountain of conceit. When she leaves the ear ho follows her with 1 his eyes until she is out of sight, with the hope that she will turn and give him some sign of recognition. : "It makes little difference to men of this character how often they are made to feel the sting of their own conceit, as it is without apparent effect." SUED FOR STOLEN TIME. How an Old Proverb Lrd to an Innoeent Man's Conviction. A rather striking case has just been brought before a Vicksburg justice of the peace, says the Arkansaw Traveler. A man named Hath hone sued one Jack son for time. "Well," said the justice, when the case was called, "you have brought an action here for time, brt you do not specify. Did you give this man Jackson so much of your time and has he refused to pay you for it?" "Your honor, this man has had my time and does refuse to pay me. I will explain. I live on the floor just above him, and some time ago bought a flue clock on the installment plan. The other day the fellow came around to collect the installment, and it occurred to me that, ns Jackson could hear the clock strike, he ought to help me pay for it. I looked into tho matter and found Unit he had no clock and I also learned that his hours wens regulated by my timepiece. Tln n 1 told him that he owed me for my time and ex plained to him, but he refused to enter tain my eluhn." "Mr. Jackson," said the judge, "have you no timepiece of your own?" "I have not, your honor." "And have you been telling the time of day by listening to the striking of Mr. Uathbone's cluck?' ' "Well, yes, but 1 did not think that it was wearing on the clock. 1 thought thut while the clock was striking for him it could jet as v.'eil itrikc ior me, especially as i..r : ... . of si rikos would do for both fainili ,. ' "But hud j'ii.1 i u. m led to get a clock before Mr. li;it'.i .night his'."' the justice asked. "Well, yes. The justice reflected a moment and then said: "Your delay in buying a clock makes you tho victim of lids ac tion, for the law plainly nays, as every schoolboy ought to know: 'i'roerastina tion is the thief of time.' You have, therefore, stolen thi:i man's time and will have to pay for it or in-.flcr more serious consequences. I assess the dam ages at ten dollars." Produce 2 60 and get tbe Gazette for one year. Nice family paper, and bul ly to paper cabins.