OFFICIAL XjV P A P E K Now that the campaign ie coming oq every subscriber of the Gazette should provide himself or herself with a news paper uf more than local importance. TbeUazettesbop is the place to subscribe for all periodicals. Dim't forget that the Gazette needs all arrearages, even though Christmas comes but once a year. NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. Thulium who RdvertiHffl, jfct the otHh. Notice it. ELEVENTH YEAR I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1894. WEEKLY rIO. 5T3.I SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 21(1. 1 S EMI .VEliKLY GAZliTTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. AI-VAH W. PATTERSON Bub. Manager. LITIS PATTKUHON Editor Al per year, $1.25 fur biz months, 75 cts. for tUrvM mom rib. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The " E-A-Q-XjE!, " of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, in published hy the mime com pany every Friday morning. Hiihseription price. $'2 per veitr. For tulvi'rtisinraicH, arid row Xi. PJi.TT.-EBS01T, lfiditor and MaiiitKer, Lung Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette," lluppuer, Oregon. rpiUS PAPKK is kept on tile at K. C. Dnkn'a 1 Adv;ilinii.tf Aciicy, til ami tr Merchants ttiehitnLje, Sun I'mneihco, California, whore cou n;eiM for atlvortiHiiiK can bo made for it. THK GAZETTE'S AG'iNTS. Waiter Aiiu!-;tun, Lot i 4 Cicek, Kchii Civn.it-. I'mirki, Nye. Or., Htirdniiiu. ()'., iittiiijJton, Urant Co., Or.,. . . (one, Prairie City, Or., i'aityo:i i.'itv, Or., ;-iio; Knelt, i'nw:I.e. Or., Julin ))av, or., Allien.!, Or i'entilctou. Or., Mum. I Vi'fi.ou, CrantCo.,Or. dhelhy, Or., .B. A. Himsaker Heppner The tingle Post master . . Oscur De Vn.nl It. 0. Wriulit Postmaster PostniaMter T. J. Carl . . It. i MeHaley S. L. Parrish ,...G. P. Skelton J. E. .Snow 1. MeOallmn . .John Kdington Postmaster Postmaster .Mim Sletia Flett box. Omit Co., Or., KiKiit Mile, Or Upper Ultra Creek, Uuunliirf, Or Lone 'v i'.-lt, Or i.iiii'schevr;' (,'oinl'in, (treyoii. . . U'xL:.:;lon J. F. Allen iMrs. Andrew AHhhaii;h ii. F. Hevland PoKtimtster K. M. Johnson J. li. FMeb Herbert Halstead .Jus. Leach AN AUENT WANTL.JV IN 1CVKUY l'KBUNCT. Union Paqfic Railway-Local card. N't.' U. mixnil leaves Heppuer 9:1") p. m. daily exoept Sunday ill, " ar. at Willowa Jc. p.m. I), " leaves k a. ru. " W, M ar. at Heppner TuOU a. m. daily exeopt RTondfiy. Ehmi ixnuid, main lino nr. at Arlington 1 a. m. West " "leaven a. m. Wtv.it bound lo'al fivi'hf UnvflH Arlington &:8"t a. m., arrives nt. Tho Utiles 1:10 p. in. Local paHHcnger leavm Th Dall-wat '& tfrJ p. in. arrivtn at Ptnibttid at 7:Uu p. m. Ml lU..- .1! J I I' T"-' iiniieil States OlllcialH. Pien'ient Vtee-Prcsiiieni .- tioorotai y of Stale bsci clary of Treasury. Becimary of Intohor Beoiulary of War bwrulary of Navy PoaliuhBter-Genurnl Attoniey-lieueral Beer-itaiy o Agriculture. , . ..Grover Cleveland Walter (j. tiroHhain joini u. (- anime Hoke timith Daniel H. Laiuont Hilary A. Herbert Witttun B. UiBBell Uieliard S. Oluey J. BterliiiK iHorLon State of Oregon. Governor Secretary oil Btate Treasurer Bupt. Public Instruction Senators Congressmen Printer Bnpmmft .1 uJkou .Seventh Jndieial Cirrmt Judge B- Pennoyer O. W. Moliride l'liil. MeLsnhau li. H. McKlroy t J. II. Mitchell J, N.lulph J linger Hermann V. li. Kilis Frank C. Haker t F. A. Motjre S. P. Lord U. B. iieau DHtriet. . ....W. 1j. Brndhaw Pt'oti-iciiung Auorney Itlorrow Comity juint Senator .- Keproaeiitativo County Judge ' Commissioners J. HI. Jiakor. Clerk Sheriff Treasurer " AriseHsor " Hnrveyor School Bup't W. Jl. VViisun OIHciul. ....Henry Hlackman J. N. Brown Julius Koithly ...Geo. W, Vincent J. W. Morrow Goo. Noble. W. J. Leezor K. L. 'haw " lea Brown " W. J j. Baling ....T.W. Ayers, Jr UEPPNKK TOWN OFFI0ER8. J. R. SiraonB Wayoi . Uchtentlml, Otis Patterson, Julms Keithly, Product OlHterp. United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OH. t w !,,! Krgister T.S.Lang . Receiver LA GRANDE, OR. B.F, Wilson J. II. Kubbins... , . Ri'Rister . Receiver SEOBST SOCIETIES. Doric Lodse No. 20 K. of P. meets ev ery Tnewlny ovoniiiK at 7.30 o clock in their t'nstle HhII, National Bank builil inu. Boionrnini! brother conliulll' in vited to attend. J, N. liltowx, -.. .. V. V. Crawfoud, K. of It. St fct. t life ItAWLINS POST, NO. 81. G. A. R. Mets at Lexington, Or., the lout Saturday of aich month. All veterans are yvim. "'"'" ' IU,r,n. Oko. W. Smith. Adintant, tt Commander. PEOFESSIWTi.u. A A. ROBERTS, Keal Estate, Insnr- ance and ColleotioDB. Offioe in Counoil Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER HKPPNER. OIIKGON. Cattle branded and ear marked as shown above. B orses P on right shoulder. i rtmnttlln pnnn. Mt catt e W '? r.Zrd n. ties. 1 Will pay lir.:.uo ui" id of any person steahag mf stuc. fiction A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS iiy a npecii.1 arrangemedt with the publishers we are prepared to furnish F.UEE to each of our readers n year's subscription to the popular mouthly urionlturttl journal, the American -Fakmeu, published at Springfield and Oh-velund, 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 any new subscribers who will pay one year in advance. The American Fahmi;i: eujoys a large national circula tion, ami ranks among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re ceive the Amkrican Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oh il promptly. Sample copies can be seen at our office. TJ.-& Original r's D DIGTIONRBY. BY HPKClAi. aHKANUEMENT WITH THE publishers, e are able to obtain a number of th- above book, and propone to furnish a cony to each of our subscribers. i ne dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and bui4ness house. It fills a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Youiigand old, educated and ignorant, rich ami poor, should have It within reach, and rei'itr to Hh contenls every day in the year. As some have asked 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 eoiutilete on which about forty of the best yearB oi tho author's life were so well employed in lug, derivation ana uenuuion oi same, ana ib the regular standard size, containing about ;iU0,000 square inches of printed surface, and is bound in cloth half morocco and sLeen. Until further 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 Morocco, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $i .50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00. Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. Ip-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. SILVKIS OI1A.MPION :THE Locky-- - Mountain News THE DAILY BY MAIL. Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Three Months " : 1 50 One Month " : : 50 THE WEEKLY BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The News Is the only consistent c.iampion 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. Address, NEWS, Denver, Colo LUMBER! nTE HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS O UN fV dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is unown as tue SCOTT SLW3VIXXiXj PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, " " CLEAR, no oo 17 60 fF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD L f.U0 per 1,000 leel, aeuiuonai. L. HAMILTON, Prop. D. A. HamlltoniMan'er - THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains Daily Hctween St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicago. Milwaukee and all points in Wisconsin making connection iu Chicago with all lines running East anil South. Tickets sold and baggage checked through to all points in the rutted States and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest tieket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pass. andTkt. Agt., Milwaukee, Wis, u "As old a3 tholulls"aiiil never excell ed. "Tried and proven " is the verdict o f millions. is l m m o n s Liver Regu-r-v lator is the hs.PTTPV0! Livei' XJCAG and Kidney medicine to which you can pin your g"-v-,7 faith for a fljfj cure. A JL fJUl raild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act jr 7 7 ing directly s-l I C on the Liver J. tlU and Kid neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to bo taken dry or made into a tea. The King of Liver Medicines. " 1 have used your Simmons Li ver Regu lator ami can consclenclously say it Is tho hinsr nl'all liver medicines, I consider It a nicdlclne chest in itself. Geo. W. Jack son, Tacoma, Washington. 3-EVEKY PACKAGE-B tias tile Z Stamp iii red on wrapper. C?tJIOIiZ TIME ! TO Sun Francisco And all points in California, via the Mt. Bhaata rnnte of the Southern Pacific Co. The sreat highway through California to all points East and .South. Brand Scenic Route of the Pacific Coast. Pullman Bnffet Uloepers. Second-class Sleepers AttachedAtn express trains, attordiug superior accommodations for aeoond-clatis passengers. For rates, tickets, sleeping car reservations, oto.. call upon or address K. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGliRH, Asst. Gen. F. & P. Agt., Portland, Oregon. ional ui. WH. PENLANI), ED, K. BISHOP, President. Cashier. 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 Ilfl Vflll vI'CTFD 1 Write us at once, explaln UU I UU oW ( til i ingvour trouble, and we will send vou FREE OF UHAKGE a full course of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case. We want your recommendation. We can cure the most aggravated diseases oi both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and deformiUesare modern and scientific, acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B.-Wc have the only positive cure for Ep- llepsv (tits) and Catarrh. References given. Permanently located. Old estubliBhed. DR. WlI.I.IiMS MKDICAL AND SURGICAL INSTI TUTE, 719 Market Street, San FranciBco, Cal. AKh YOU ANY AT PEZZL 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 inn, instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old and learned will find as much mystery In it as the i-nnnranit n nHnnhlfltlCRteit. This great DUZZle s the property of the New York Press Club, for whom It was invented by Samuel Lord, tne great puzzleist, to be sold for the benelit of the movement to erect a great home for newspaper workers in New York. Generous friends have given $2.5,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "Press Club HitilHmff and PhrHtv Fund." Temnle Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. oooooooooo World-wide, means world-tried. The high reputation and enormous sale of 'Beecham's' Pills (Worth a Guinea a Box.; (Tasteless) 8 reflect the wisdom of Q two rrenerations. O 825 cents a box. OOOOOOOCH 8 II o PARCELS OF MAIL" FREE 44, jXfeH!llln I' i-ocelmi within a i. . i days will be for 1 v.ur boldly '.'iUj'lj nrliited OH :ll!liIU('i! Slutiels. Oob- Dirprt'ity .liruamiitMiliif l.t.000 customers; froin pio UwherH and iiiaiuitiic tureni you'D receive probably, tli'MiHain; 'il valuable books. (i;i.fH 8auitileK,mii-iziii .en:. I rr and ewtli tn e, with one ofvourprlntHiwlitriiis iulieli al?o print and nreHy ueaue 'i " oi vour label tMlorHw- to you: whirl slick on vour envelope, biM,k.l. ej .. U prevent tliplr tielng loMt. J. A. 'Va o; if IteidHVtlle. N. 0., wrSf. : Kr- rf. inv cent adrfi'CKs tn v'ettl I. fit i In 'w Defet..rv I '-e m r.'ed n M. ji- b labels and over a4H !";ti'c ii .-l IBhII. Mv iidlr,-.e;i. 'i r ie .niiii puttlhers a::lio.' t -if- " ux ari-iiriivliii-ili.ily. en v.-l n. iI'M r V ot mull !'r,- ii nil -u -tf if . '- ri . WOHLD'S f'AIl; UIP.BCTOKY CO., No. 14" Frankford and GIrard Ave. Philidcl ' phla, Pa. m FAMOUS STAGE DRESSES. One of Thnn Was n Sealskin Costume, Which Proved a failure. Some of the stage dresses of the pres ent epoch remain celebrated in the an nals of Parisian toilet, such as the white ball dress, embroidered with sil ver, in which Mile. Crora'tte appeared in "The Sphinx," and tho pnvn in seal skin, which was one of her later dress sensations, and which, according to the Philadelphia Telegraph, proved a failure. For the lady, when she donned that cumbrous garb, hud reached the period when she was growing very stout, and her magnificent fur dress was in consequence by no means be coming. It would have suited the slim proportions of Sarah llernhardt far better than her own. Also nnforgotten is the gold-yellnw bell ib-'s-;, embroid ered with gold wV.'at ear . which was one of the scries pr spared for the "Di vine Sarah'' when .she lir '.t appeared in Paris in "La Dame aux Camellia's." It ought to be remembered if only on ac count of its price, for it cost six hun dred dollars. While Mile, liurtct was at the Vaudeville ' he appeared in the role oi! a young society girl in otic of Sardou's plays in an evening dress which used each evening to uivir.se a deep, longmurmnrof ap:nibat;oj from the audience. It had a ciriou.; u'idire ei'r'ect. being a combination of waler orcen .sill; and silvjr an.e and water lilies and aquatic gras .es, all most tastefully and art! Really arrangc l. The dresses of the IvAiaa oi the Come. lie Franeaise are always especial ly "petiieoated" (to translate literall;: the French word "jupannue-'') in view ot the exigencies of the scene, so Ci::t th 're can be no turning over the trains or unJl'raeeful prominence in the folds, no matter what vehemence of geshire or movement is required by the stage business. Anyone who lias seen Croi .ette in the fourth act of "La Demi Monde." half dragged by liaymond across the stage, half crawling after him, could only wonder tit the marvel ous way in which her train of black satin and jet followed her progress in serpentine convolutions and never be "ume ui:.arrunged in the slightest de gree. Mine, Favart, while she was the leading lady at La Comedie, used to order her dresses of Worl !i, and could then, on a Sunday, go down to his home at Snvesnes arrayed in her new eo.'-tvnne. and would recite her role1 be foi'e h:::i. so that he might jadg'e of the appropriateness of the cut and trim ming i'a' the nioveinents and gestures exacted by the part. She was a very handsome woman in her prime, and a very stylish and graceful one as well. She has now retired from the stage, having been swept intoohlivion by the volcanolikr.,v;s;1t!;-'-:-- " " ' ' WOMEN OF ALASKA. They Have n Hard Life In tile Arctic Por tion of Hit! Territory. ''The reader can scarcely conceive of greater hardships in life than the peo ple who inhabit the Arctic coast, of Alaska endure. Life is to them a seri ous struggle. Their faces tell it. Wot.ien twenty years old show that they have borne exposure and hardships which have already made them prematurely old. The farther south of the Arctic circle they live the less they have to ensure. n the btrng gle to maintain existence is less of a sl.rr.in and effort, and the cold is not so tlendiy in it work. "The urst, Alaskan Esquimau woman I met.'' says Herbert L. Aldrieh, in (lodoy's, "was at Port Claivr.ee, a line natural harbor about one hundred miles south of llehring straits. So far as cleanliness was concerned, she was a uedcl of her kind, and outside of her and her immediate family they were almost the only Esquimaux I encoun tered who appreciated the rudiments of cleanliness. I a.-.lced her to permit me to take a photograph of her and her family, but she shook her head, and, looking at her hands and c! ith ing, said: 'Smoky,' then, ufli r a pause. added, 'na-na-ho,' meaning sii:tie other time. Although her face and hands were comparatively clean, she was dressed in well-worn and somewhat tattered clothing, made of deerskins, on navt of which the hair was M"o ;ca and. won off, making her appear some what shabby; but na-na-ho." which frequently means the next day, as it did in this case, she, her husband, son and daughter came to the ship dressed in their best, and asked t ) be Vraphed. We used the top of lit house ar. a photograph gallery. ' results were unsati laetovy. tl sisted on facing av.ay from tl.; and clo',i:rr their -'yes tij;ht so to see the cai.iera." :iofo- .,!ie y in iglit , not His Slave e.uil Wile. The story sent to the lloslun Tran script from New Hampshire of the free r.egro. Amos Lortur .', who eaine to .latfecy riore than c.ie hiindred years ago, and, though u ai'n .d oil' as a possible pauper, setiljd there, leit one quaint bit of hisL.ry connected with him untold. This possible pan pi r left the estate which lie and his wife accu mulated to the town, anil part of it bought a communion service still in use. The wife herself is a pr-xif of his industry, since he acquired her by purchase. Her grave is in the Jalfrey burying ground, marked: ; Sacred to the Memory of : Vini.atk. : ' By Purchase, the Slave of Amos Fortune; : ; Hy Marriage, His Wife; ; : By Fidoliiv. His Companion and Solace; : ; Uy IJi.s Death, Ilia Widow. : Tlio Golden liose of Virtue. The "golden rose of virtue" presented by his holiness the pope each year to a female member of some of the ruling families of Europe, will be received this year, it is said, by Archduchess Mar garet of Austria, daughter of Archduke Charles Louis and niece of the emperor. The young princess was born in 1S70 and is abbess of the convent on the Hradsclini, near Prague, to which only members of noble families are admitted. The archduchess is exceedingly clever and is popular in Vienna. Last year the. "golden rose" was given to the queen of Portugal. The jewel is valued at fifty thousand dollars and is always made in Rome by a famous gol dsmith. G. A. K. NOTICE. We take this opportunity of intcrmiag our subscribers that the new commis sioner of pensions has been npoointed lie iB an old soldier, and we behove that soldiers and their heirs will re ceive justice at his bunds. We do not anticipate that there will be any rtidioal changes in the administration of ponsiol Bll'aira under the new regime. We would advise, however, that U. 8 soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application nt ouoe, if they have not already done so, in ordor I to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Such legislation is seldom retroactive. There fore it is of t,reat importance that ap plications be filed in the department at the earliest possible date. If the U. S soldiers, sailors, or their widows, children or parents desire in formation in regard to pension matters, they Bhonld write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, D. U, and they will prepare and send the necessary application, if they find them entitled undei the numerous laws euaetad for their benefit. Address 1'RHSS CLAIMS COMP.VN'Y. John Weduhkbi'bn, Managing Attor ney, Vanliiu8Um, D. 0., P. O. Uox 385 tf. THE WESTERN PEDAOOHI'E. We are in receipt of the May number of our utate school paper. It exceed any of the former numbers it vain.-. The paper this month contains many new and valuable features. Tlte illus trated series ou the schools of the state 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 schools an 1 to the public. ihere are also several fine articles by our best writers and the departments Current Eveuls,""Haturdtiy Thoughts," 'Educational News" "The Oracle Answers, Correspondents," etc., each contain much valuable reading for teachers or parents. The magazine litis about 60 pages of niatler, well printed and arranged. We pronounce the WeBteru Pediigogue the best educa tional monthly on the ooast. Everyone of our readers . should havu in education. No teacher school direc tor or student cat) get along well with out it, We will receive snbsoript.ons st this office. Pnco only $1.00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and (lazette one year to tme address for 83.00. Call nud examine sainnlo oonies. Teachers, directors and parents, now is t he time to subscribe. AROUND THE GLOBE. Tub great gold tieldsof South Africa were discovered in 18U0 by an elephant hunter named Hartley. The largest estates in Austria are those of Prince Schwai'zenbnrg, 510,000 acres; Prince Liehtenstein, 400,000, and Archduke Albert, 305,000. The greatest iish eaters in the world are the Japanese. The eating of meat is nearly entirely confined to the rich, and even they use it sparingly. The little island of Malta has a lan guage of its own, derived from the Carthagininn and Arabian tongues. The nobility of the island speak Ital ian. The Strom palace was a splendid palace in Florence, Italy, erected to wards the close of the fifteenth cen tury after designs by Cronaca (L 154 15011). At the beginning of the last war (in 1HSH) the population of Paraguay was reckoned 770.011(1; to-day it is less than ;!.")(). 000, and fully six-sevenths of that n u tuber are women. If.uat, in Afghanistan, is the city which lias been most often destroyed. I'ifty-six times have its walls been laid in ruins, and the same number of times have they been erected again. A I, Any physician attends the queen of Corea, and receives pay at the rate of 1 5,000 a year. When the queen is sicl; the salary stops; and of course the physician at such times foelsulinostas wretched as her noble patient. At beautiful Wensleydalo village the old custom of the blowing of a horn each night in winter is still carried out. Its purpose was to guide belated travelers in tin; forest, just as the fog horn guides the mariner who is Hear ing the coast. SAYINGS OF THE SAGES. EvEItY Hall. day is a little life. fiishop Pew love to hear the sins they love to act. Shakespeare. PuniK requires very costly food its keeper's happiness. CoKon. 11oi.no nothing for others is the un doing of one's self. H. Mann. Poi.lTi-:7;ss is the result of good sense and good nature. ( loldsmith. l)i;r.AV has always been injurious to those who are prepared. Liican. A(.L cruelty springs from hard-hcart-ednoss and weak character. Seneca. It is a barren kind of criticism that tells you what a thing is not. K. V. firiswolil. No asiiks are lighter than those of incense, and few thing's burn out sooner. Lnndor. Sll.EM i:is the safest course for any man to udopt who distrusts himself. Uocbel'oueailld. A clean mouth and an honest hand will take a man through any land. (ierman Proverb. L' character, in manners, in style, in all things, the supreme excellence is simplicity. Longfellow. Highest of all in Leavening Power.- n fir ABOUT EELS. Queer Facts Concerning a Myste rious Animal Why the Fish Commissioner Does Nat Give Away Their Kggs Some In teresting; Things Learned by Scientist. Every now and then some one applies to the fish commission at Washington for a consignment of eels' eggs where with to stock a pond or stream. The request is invariably refused, not be cause there is any intention to be diso bliging, but for the reason that nobody in this world knows whether eels lay eggs or not. If they do man has never beheld them, and to get hold of any is quite out of the question. In case you want to establish eels in your water preserves you can buy young ones by the pailful at a cheap rate, and they will grow big enough to eat or send to the market within three years. It may fairly be said that the eel, as to its breeding, is the most mysterious animal in existence. The New York Sun says its method of propagation has puzzled science for centuries, and has been a subject of more or less supersti tious speculation among many people for thousands of years. The ancient Egyptians had their own theories re specting the matter. Some authorities have contended that eels grow up from horse hair, which iu some strange man ner became vitalized. Others have held that they were generated sponta neously from slime, while others still have gravely advanced the belief that they came from the skins of old eels, or similar exuviiu of water snakes. That eels mate with water snakes is very generally accepted as truth. Most popular among people who get their liv ing from the water, however, is the theory that eels tire the progeny of va- rimi.- i,H... t!..u.w- ...a ro,.-i..wet ay a certain kind of water beetle, wliicil for this reason is called "mother of eels." The Greek poets, who fathered all children otherwise unaccounted for upon Jupiter, declared that this god was the progenitor of the eel. All this mystery about the eel, as science has learned in the last few years, is due to the fact that it lays its eggs or brings forth its young alive in the sea, where no one has a chance to observe the process. Other lishes, like the shad, leave the ocean to spawn iu fresh water .streams, but this curious and slippery customer does precisely the reverse. The young eels, newly born or hatched, leave the salt water and make their way in armies up the rivers inland. Obstacles apparently insur mountable they use the utmost ingenu ity in passing, even traveling consider able distances on dry land in order to get around an obstruction. In the spring and summer any visitor at Niag ara Pal Is who descends beneath the great sheet of water at the foot of the falls will see literally hundreds of cartloads of small eels wriggling over the rock and squirming in the whirlpools. Of course it is impossible for them to get over the falls, and thus it happens that although eels have always been plenti ful in Lake Ontario there were none in Lake lOrie until they were planted in the latter body of water artificially. Inasmuch as eels must go to the sea iu order to propagate their species they are found not to multiply at all .viien placed in ponds that are land locked, although in such places they will grow rapidly and be healthy. It costs so little to purchase young ones by the quantity that this is no obstacle to 1 lie usefulness of stocking inland waters with these fish. They have many very important advantages from the economic point of view, inasmuch as they will feed on anything dead or ilivo, will thrive in water clear or mild ly and at any temperature, and will re quire no looking out for. However, in rivers like the Susquehanna, where .fid-nets are. used, eels are very unde sirable. It is not unusual, upon hauling the nets in that stream and others farther south, to find that the catch has been entirely eaten up by myriads of the squirming robbers, which have left little beside heads and backbones. It has been found advantageous by the Iish commission to plant eels in the up per great lakes and the Mississippi. They have also been introduced very 'iuccessfully in California. In all probabilities eels lay eggs, just as do nearly all other fishes. The only difference is that they deposit them in the sea, instead of in fresh water. It is believed that the mother eel dies soon after she has spawned. For a couple nf centuries past efforts have been made by eminent scientific men to dis r,ver the organs of treneration in male Awarded IlilieHt The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. -Latest U. S. Gov't Report. aim lomalo eels. It is only possible now to discover the difference between the sexes by microscopic examination. A boot fifteen years ago the celebrated lb-. Yirchow, of Berlin, published an a h ertisement for a female eel bearing e. 'gs, offering a considerable pri2e for the specimen. Within a short tune the .idvertisemeut was copied all over Europe, and the Herr Dqctor received such enormous quantities of eels In packages that the affair became quite serious. So many thousand pounds of the very perishable article were con ified to him that it was an important question how to get rid of the material, and one of the most comical papers sug gesied that perhaps it would be well ihat he should make a retrUlation re pining an samples to De sent smoKea. the best way to cook eels is to cut th.'iu into sections, after they have been skinned properly, dip them in egg, roll !l;e pieces in crumbs, and fry them. Hut there is no point more important Hum that the backbone should be taken out before the attempt is made to bite them through, .rii.,. . THE HAWAIIAN'S " POV They F.at It with Their ringer Catch It on the Ply. In an article on the Sandwich island! a writer in Fnuik Leslie's Mo7itjhly says We saw the natives eating "poi Poi is something like cornstarch and is made from the "taro," the Ilawaiiar potato, wliieh is first mashed into a kind of Hour and then cooked until it is a thick paste. Their manner of eating it is peculiar, and I will describe it as 1 Four or five persons (natives) werf seated on the forward deck around an open earthen jar containing this poi. Putting their two forefingers togethei they would dip them into this jar; a little twist of the wrist would collect a fair mouthful, which was lifted rapidly to the mouth (no dripping allowed); tomary for several to eat from the same dish it rather went against my American prejudice. If I was very much in love, and "she" had very pretty lingers and was very particular about her hands, I might be willing to eat poi . with her. Throe Lotos Plants 1 Three lotos plants, set out three years ago in the small lake near tho north western corner of Central park, New York, have increased hundreds and pread over an area of many square yards. Scores of great pink blossoms are now tossing their heads in air and thousands of large cup-like leaves rise above the surface of the water. With in a year or two the lake itself is likely to be invisible beneath its mass oi think green leaves. The sight now, says the Sun, is one of the finest in the park. "Curiously enough the attempt to domesticate the lotos iu the lower lake has been almost a failure. The American lotos nourishes finely in the lily pond, just east of the so-called coll servatory lake." WILD HORSES. Why Tlioy Aro Tougher Than the Do- iiicstic liqulno. "Rest and fat are the greatest ene mies of the horse," is a saying of the Arabs, and, if every horse owner would embody its truth in his practice, there would be little need to write anything further on the subject, says the Kidci and Driver. Its observances would be potent to improve the. horse iu health, strength, vitality, endurance and lon gevity, and, by "holding up the glass to nature," correct the irrational treat ment and abnormal condition under which ho is often reared. Not that the. conditions .surrounding the horse in a state of nature should be wholly imitated, for they do not all tend to his improvement in the quantities adapted to man's use. Hut it is worthy to note that the wild horse is tough, sound and healthy; and, making due al lowance for the inlluence of natural se lection of the survival of the iittest, when it is observed that hu is seldom in a state of rest, that he lives unconfined in the open air, upon natural food, it may reasonably connect these as cause and effect, and safely consider exercise, pure air and simple diet the funda mental conditions upon which to build up, by skill in breeding and training, the highest and most perfect equiue t.voo. A ScicHtilic Problem. One of the greatest problems of tin future, is thought to be the transforma tion of carbon energy into light upon the same principle that the glow worm and lire-ily give their light, and when a single pound of combustible material will furnish as much light al is now obtained from a ton of coal. Honora, World's Fair.