1 i MR GAZETTE. OFFICIAL PAPER Now that the campaign ia coming on every subscriber of the Gazette shonld provide himself or herself with a news paper uf more than local importance. The Gazette shop is the place to subscribe for all periodicals. Don't forget that the Ouzette needs all arrearages, even though Christmas comes bat once a vear. NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. Till-mull who advents, (rein the rush. Notice It. ELKVKNTH YEAR I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1894. WKKKLY tfO. 577. 1 SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 218. S EMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE l'TTERSON PL'BLISHING 0 ,1? M ALVAH W. I'ATTKttdON Bus. Maiiagor. OTIH PATTKRSON Editor A i s2.rn por yojir, $1.25 for bix months, 75 cte. fu threo minims. Aduertising Rates Made Known on Application. The ".H-A-d-XiS, " of Long Creek, Grant County, Orcein i, is published by the mime com pany every Friday mornhiK. Subscription prii'c, filler yeiir. Kr KdverttHlitR niies, aMrt'in CX2x3Sr Xi. ZjJT"r32j3,&z2X; Kiiitor and MtiimKer, liOtiff Crtiyk, Oregon, or "Gazette," Heppner, Oreytm. THI8 PAPKH ia kfpt on tile at E. C. iakoB X AdvertiHiiiK Atftmny, tU him! 5 Alprctmnu KxclinnH, Han Kntiieiwco. California, where uou riuii.h for HdvisrliBing can be made for it. THE UAZKTTti'H AG SNTS. Whtrner, ArlHit;ton, Ureelt, Echo (Juntas Pniirie, Nye, Or., Hiinhmsn, Or Hamilton, Grant Co., Or,, . . . (one Pruiric City, Or. ttuivim Oily, Or.,..., i'ilot Kouk, ifayvillti, or., Join; Day, Or., Adieiia, Or ('ii'lk-loii, Or., Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or. Sltfilby, or., . . . .B. A. Hunsalrer Phill Heppner The Kittle 1'osl mast' T . . . , Ownr L)t: Vaill il. 0. rWrlit l'OB 111; ater i'ostinaeter T. J. Carl R. R. Mellaley 8. L. 1'arrisn G. P. Hltelton J. E. Snow F. I. McCallum Joint Ellington PoKtmuster , Pout master ...Miss Stella Kietl J. F, Allen Andrew AKhlmugli .... II, V. llevltiud Postmaster . . . . K. M. iloliusoii J. it. K teh .Herbert llalhtead Jhh. Leaeh ICKY IMIECINCT. Ki, (.ran: Co., or.,. IS i. Mill Mile, Or U pper Uhea Ci eeli,. Mru. UniKlaK, or Lnnu lloek, Or U(M-leiTy iinmloii, Oregon Ia x iiiiitoii AN AdKM WAKTKl) IN KV Union Pag fig Railway-Local card. N", 10, minor! leaveH Hoppner fl:4"i p. m. daily exisept tiumUy it), ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. y, " lciiveis " a. m. " 1), " ar. at lleppnor frXX) a. to, dailj ftzcept Momlny. KaHt b'iDQii, mam line ar. at Arlington 1:.6 i. m. Went " ' "leaven " &, m. Wost bo-fid lo'al fr 'i?h limvs Arlington 8 35 a. in., arrive- it Tlie U tiles 1;1 p. itt. Luuiii piisBeni? r b'iiva Tn U:illy.a z:Uj p. m. arnv at Portland at rMo p. m. United States OIHcials. I lemiient Gmvnr Clnvlnnd V ifr-1'iiiHideiit Ad ai b'uveiiHtm bue-'viury ot Suite, Walter Q ljrHnlinm HHcri'itiry of Trtuwniy loan G. Chruii Bm:ntlary of Inierior.. tiokeHmiili MiKMViury of VV ar Danud y. Cammit Heeretju-y of Navy Hilary A. Herbert PoHhiihHier-Ueiiural. VVilr-ou 8. Iiineil Au.iniHy-UeLientl lliclutrti t. Oiuey Hoorotary of At,'rn:ulU'ro J. Sterling Morion State of Orogou. Covenior. 9. Pennoyer Weiin tury of State G. W. MeHnde TreaHiiior Phil. Mclnehiui (Sunt. Public lnMlrut-Liou E. li. McKlruy , U. If. Mitchell ,, 1 Hinder ileruiaiiu tomrreBHinen VV. L. KI1U Printer Frank C. Haker !F. A. MtMire W, P. Liord it. U. bean SovontU Judicial Dhttrict. Circuit J udo W. L. Rradsbaw ProHoctiLiug Attorney W.H. WiIb u Morrow Comity OllfciaK j. .in; yenator Henry Blnckman UeprMsentativo J- N. Hiowi. County J ud(? J u line Keith iy ' CoDimisHionera Geo. W. Viuoeut J. M. Haker. Clerk J. W. Morrow Hheriff Geo. Noble. TreaHiirer W.J. L ezer " AHuescior K. C haw " burveyor luaBrtiwu .Sehttoi Sup't W. L. baling " Coroner T. W. Ayora, J i IlEPPNUlt TOWN OFFI0EU3. Mayor ....J. R.Simons Couneiimen O. E. Famsworth, Al Liehtenthal, UUh PattHrson, Julius Keithiy, W. A. ohiibtou, J. L. YeuKr. Keconier A. A. Roberta. TroaHiiier K- G. Slocum Marolial W. ItaauiuB. Pictun'tOIHeerp, Justice of the Peace F. J. Hallock Constable C. W. Kychard United States Land Officer THE DALLES, OB. J. W. Lewis R'ffiB'er T.S.LauK RoceiVtfr LA GRANDE, OB. B.F, Wilson .' U.i-ter J, H. KobbinB Receiver SECRET SOCIETIES. Doric LurtK No. 20 K. of P. meets ev ery Tnewlay evoniiiK at 7.30 o'clock in their Castle Mall, National Hank build ing. bojuurniiiK brothers Cordial I v in vited to attend. J. N. liliOWN. C. W. V. Cbawfobd, K. of H. A a. tf HAWUNS POST, NJ. 31. 0. A. 11. Meets at Lexington, Or., the lagt Saturday of each month. All veterans are invited to join. C. C. Hoon, Geo. W. Hmitu. Adjutant, tf Coinuiander. SiO FES SIC3".-tj. A A. ROBERTS, RhhI Escate, Insnr- Bnce Bnd Cullectioua, Office in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCK RAISER ! HEPPNKB, OREGON. Cattle branded and ar marked as shown above. Horses F on right shoulder. UiT T"' ?,rBnK",in Morrow and Umatilla coun. nctioB ni i mM ' f arrest and con. nion of any BtaaUl! stoct VALUABLE PRM. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO 0URREADERS liy a Bpecial arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FREE to each of our readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly atjriorjltnrHl journal, the American Fakmeb, 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 advanoe, and to Hny new subscribers who will pay one year in advance. The American b'AitMEH enjoys a large nutional circula tion, anil riinkB among the leading Hgriciiltunil papers. By this arrange merit it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re ceive the Amhmcan Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oail promptly. Sample copies oan be s jeu at our office. The Original Veto's Unabridjp DIOTIONHHY. 11 ai JiA.lAi. auiAuh,JiE.l VV i'l'H THE 13 publishers, a e are able to obtain a numbei oi th above book, and propose to furniah a copy to each oi our subscribers. 'i he dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house, ft tills a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes oi the choicest books coulu supply Vouugaiid old, educated and Ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reach, and reier to its contents 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 thiB 1b the very work coiuulcte on which about forty of the best yearb oi the autlior'B life were so well employed in writing. It contains the entire vocabulary oi about 100,000 words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and dentation of same, and it the regular standard size, containing aboui .Wu.ouu square inches of printed surface, and is bound in cloth half morocco and sheeo. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dictonary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. ThirdTo any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bact stamps marbled edges $t-oo. Halt Mo-occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00 Mty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. tfl-AB 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 thiB great opportunity to attend to it at once. SILVER'S CHAMPION :TUEi ociy-. -Mountaifl-:-News THE DAILY-BY MAIL Subscription price reduced as followa: One Year (by mail) : $g 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Three Months " l 50 One Month " : ; 50 WE WEEKLY BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The NewH is the only consistent c jairpion 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, Donvcr, Colo. L UMBER ! VE HAVE FOR 8AI.E ALL KINDS OF CN dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Hep'pner, at .vhat is known as the SCOTT SAWMIIjIj. PEK 1,0110 FEET, KOI'tiH, ' CLEAR, - 10 00 - 17 60 r F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD L 5.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. L. HAMILTON', Prop. D. A Hamllton.Miui'Ki1 THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains. Daily Bet.veen St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicago, Milwaukee and all points In Wisconsin making connection in Chicago with all lines running Enst and South. Tickets 8"ld and bnage checked through to all points In the United States and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest tieket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pass. andTkt. Ant, Milwaukee, Wis. Jews 4 f S, I "As old as thehills"and never excell ed. "Tried and proven " is the verdict o f millions. Simmons Liver Resm- lator is the hCfT0 P"o nlv Liver and Kidney medicine t o which you can pin your faith for a, cure. A mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act T '77 directly r-f 7 C on the Liver 3 and Kid neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. The King or Liver Medicines. " 1 have used yourBlmmons Liver Reen Jutor und can eonscienciously say it is ttie klii-i ol'ull liver medicines, I consider it a medicine chest in itself. Gko. W. Jack won, Tuooma, Washington. S-EVERY PACKAOE-E 4Xus the Z Stamp in red on wrapper. QaiOK TXIVII3 J TO Sjaix Francisco Knd all poinU in California, via the Mt. bhasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. The (Treat highway thrown California to all points East and South. Grand Hcenic Route of tho Pacific Coast. Pullman Buffet Sleepers, Second-class Sleepers Attached to express train b, affording superior iocommodations for second-class passengers. For rateB, tickets, Bleeping car reeervations, to.. call upon or address K. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Aest. len. F. & P. Agt., Portland, Oregon. 01 L WM. PENLANI), EI. R BISHOP. President. C&diier. ritANSACTSJAJGENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Free Medicine ! A Golden Opportunity for Suffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Kemeilieg to the People DO YOU SUFFER ? ZSSSL will Bend you FREE OF CHAKGE a full course of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case, we want your recommendation. We can cure the moat aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment ror all diseases and deformities are modern and scientific, acauired dv many year experience, wnicn enables us to guarantee a uure. uo not aespair. N. B. We have the only poBltlve cure for Ed- ilepBy (fits) and Catarrh. References given. reruiaueuiiy locarea. uia esiaousnea. Dr. Williams Medical and Surgical Insti tute, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. ARE i'OU ANT AT PUZZLES ? The genius who invented the "Fifteen" puz- ale, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, has In vented a brand new one, which Is going to be the greatest on record. There is fun, instruc tion and entertainment in It. The old and learned will find as much mystery in it as the young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle s the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzleist, to be Bold 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 Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. Made In all styles and sizes. Lightest, g strongest, easiest working, safest, simplest. most accurate, most compact, and mosi ! modern. For sale by all dealers in arms, i Catalogues mailed freo by Th.9 Marlin Fira Arms Co.j New Haven, Conw., V. S. A. SPILES I e'rcd tn on pakmlrbs treatment ithuut k u iff, K) ion of ilmg rom buiioeit. FlatulA, L'lce , ltd eurrd. :iO verr eJL 0, Queitloo Blank and Book free. OH or wriU. Ut My. Duns, 822 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo. ioo fAbCELS OT MAIL" IS3 FOR 10 KENT STAMPS (reKulitr price your ui Urews if received within ; days will tje tfr 1 year boldly urinten on Kuniriif;t; labels. Only IHrw-t'Ty guaranteeitiK 12.1.000 cuKtomers; fnirn pul linberH and iiiaiiufuc !: Drohahlv. IhoiiHiiiiiU n J I J A valuable hooks, iiajx i mmim rjamplftf.maifwine-.ct' J&yty- All fre and eudi pwr r with oneorvourprinien aaursft u-.uw pasted thereon. EXTRA! We il also print and nrejiay pointae on your lafl adoreww'S lo you; win-! st irk on vonr envelopes. books, en .. i JK;filr prevent their betriK lost. J. A. c i W Viof Kpidsville. N. ('., writes : "Kr-m T"''!3J my'i'i cent adrirewln vonr I l-zlm, n T Tf. Dfffctcrv I"-e rwefv'fJ inv.50ni'.'.n 'kViVJt x itiwm ana over whw ijjL iXj'fta2nHli, My adrlreswM you jm-r" ' .Sain-'og piibliKh-rrj mh naiitif.M ' . -. 'flS ai arrlvinu d;ilv, on VHluntiif i-tj - -A of mull from nil puns of H - y. ' .' WORLD'S AIR DIRECTORY CO., No, 147 Frankford and Girard Aves. Philadel phia, Pa. 5- xWSl'-'i mm LAUGHING GAS. CntereBtlng Information Given by a Dentist He Deacrtbea tlie rroce b Which the Queer Stuff Is Made It:, iiemark able Kn'prta 'mn Somr I Viplp. 'I iuhule about twonly rallons of lauirhinirffiis oviry day," Kiiil a suiycon dentist who, nrem-rii,ij' to tlie Xi".v York Mail and Kxpi'r. makii a business of pulling ti'c'.li. "Mo. I don't do it for pleasure, but for the purpose of show ing patients how to take it. The im portant thinj.r is to kinut-; the lungs with a few bijr breaths from tlie gas liaff; then complete r.nconseiousness supervenes anil r.o pain whatever is felt. On the contr:ny, the dreams of persons under tho i-,i.':uenee of nitrous oxide are usually :no;;i Irish --i rl who came t" n to have n tort,. w ': awakir,;;': 'Sere. I th. wake!" A li v:-.i '..i 1 dreamed l:e v. a:. ia a !.: A little bey saiil that 1 :i-e.'!ibl. An e : ln other day I : ' ::; h!'ined on :.t i wis at a h' iae that ho .i"-Kvr saloon. 1 'lliourrht he was v.p in the air, hohlinj,' on to the tall of a kite.' "That enormous bar like a balloon which you saw drajred into the offiee a few minutes aro is filled with laugh ing gas. . It is made of canvas coated with rubber and holds two hundred gallons. Tlie quantity suffices for only abou' twenty-live patients, because they waste a good deal from not know ing how to take it. The stull does not cost much to manufacture, however, i It is made from nitrate of ammonia, which is a salt obtained by boiling am monia in nitric acid. We buy it in gran ulated shape, and all that is necessary in order to get the eras from it is to boil it in water. In the laboratory we put five or six pounds of it into a long necked flask, beneath which is a lighted Bunsen burner. The llame is veiy hot, because atmospheric air is rapidly sup plied to it. "The nitrate of ammonia salt is melt ed in the flask, and the gas which it gives off by evaporation passes over through a tube into u sealed jar partly filled with water, liubbling up through the water it passes through another tube into a second water jar, and so through four jars successively, lleing thus passed through water several times it is perfectly purified. When first generated it contains a good deal 3f impurity, especially oxide of iron, which comes from the iron vessels in which the ammonia was boiled with nitrate acid. But all impurities are re moved 'n the manner 1 have described, and the nitrous oxide finally goes through a pipe into a great metal tank. The tank is composed of two big cylin ders, one partly filled with water and the other set upside down inside the first. If you will take a tall tumbler and invert it inside of another tall tumbler that is slightly bigger and which has some water in it, you will have the idea exactly. "The expansive power of the gas is so great that it lifts the inside cylinder steadily out of the outside one, the water meanwhile keeping the nitrous nxidc from escaping. When the tank s filled the operator knows it by the Height to which tlie cylinder is elevat ;d. To fill one of those huge rubber Dags with the gas he simply draws the fas off from the tank into the bag until :he latter is completely inflated andean lold no more. ALIVE IN HER GRAVE. V Yaqul Girl Falls into a Trancn and 1 Revived After a Mo:itli. "I noticed a suggestion some time ago ,hat science might yet make it possible 'or a man to go to sleep in the first juarter of one century and wake up in ;he last quarter of the next," said Col. left JlcLemore to a Globe-Democrat nan, as he pulled away at a big black jigar in the rotunda of the Laclede. 'The writer probably got his idea from ;he account given by Sir Claude Wade, who relates that while residing at the ;ourt of Loodhiana bo saw a fakir re luscitated after being walled up for six weeks in a brick vault without the pos libility of receiving a breath of air. "1 was inclined to doubt Sir Claude's story until I witnessed a feat fully as remarkable among the Y'aqui Indians ;n Mexico a few weeks ago. An Did widowed squaw had a daugh ter, a rather comely girl of four teen, who had an unpleasant habit Df going into trances whenever she iounted her beads, inothorand daughter oeing devout Catholics. The girl would lie like one dead until her mother mut tered some cabalistic words over her ind applied the envifix to her lips, when she would revive on the instant, ipparently none the worse for the lapse mto a state of coma. "The mother took service in a family luite a distance removed and left her laughter with the tribe. The latter ioon passed into a trance, and all efforts to resuscitate her were unavailing. A messenger was posted olf for the moth er, but returned with the answer that he had accompanied her mistress to Monterey. The girl lay for several lays motionless, and was at last pro nounced dead and consigned to the jrave. A month later the mother re turned, and, learning what had been lone, proceeded to dig her child up. The body had not changed in the least since being cons igned to the grave, and n,v,n thorn halistio wrds were repeated ind the crucifix applied to the lips the Sfirl started up, and, after partaking of cup of water, accompanied her mother wine." A Wonderful Flg Dr. Ilickman, of Ludlow, Shropshire, England, has an alcoholic specimen in his museum in the shape of a pig, the matomical structure of which is as ex traordinary as it is unaccountc'ile. The minute anatomy is not given, but -he external appearances are: One lead, two eyes, four ears, eight legs ind two tails. The internal structure s: One tongue, one windpipe and one tieart,-the latter having two sets of cir ;ulations, viz.: Two aortas to supply the body and two to supply the lungs; two livers, four kidneys, two bladilera, two spleens and two sets of intestines. THE INDISPENSABLE NAPKIN. It Va First I nrtl ):!. Iir rhlldrrn and it r e.i ij . :;:u-r-. Curiously enotvrh that article now considered almost, i-yiispensable, the table napkin, was drst used only by children, says the Youth's Companion, and was only adopt'.nl by elder members of the family about the middle of the fifteenth century. In etiquette books of an earlier date than this, among other sage pieces of advice for children, are instructions about wiping their lingers and lips with their napkins. It seems that the tablecloth was long enough to reach tlie lloor and served the. growoi people in place of napkins. When they did begin to use napkins they placed them first on the shoulder, then on the left arm, and finally tied them about the neck. A French writer, who evidently was conservative and did not welcome the napkin kindly, records, with scorn: "The napkin is placed wider the chin and fastened in the back, as if one were going to be shaved. A person told me that he wore his that way that he might not soil his beautiful frills." It was a dilihult matter to tie the two corners in the ba de, and it is said that thence originated our expression for straitened circumstances: "Hard to make both ends meet." This custom led to the habit of the table waiters of carrying a napkin on the left arm. Napkins became popular in France sooner than in England. At one time it was customary at groat French din ners to change the napkins at every coarse, to perfume them with rose water and to have them folded a differ ent way for each guest. About lO.iO Pierre David published the "Maistre d'Hostel," "which teaches how to wait on a table proper ly and how to fold all kinds of table napkins in all kinds of shapes." The shapes were: "Square, twisted, folded in bands and in the forms of a double and twisted shell, single shell, double melon, single melon, cock, hen and chickens, two chickens, pigeon in a basket, partridge, pueasaiit, two capons in a pie, hare, two rabbits, suck ing pig, dog with a collar, pike, carp, turbot, miter, turkey, tortoise. 1 he holy cross and the Lorraine cross." WONDERS OF PHOTOGRAPHY. Soup Itubblcn Photoffruplied i i I h Art of Jliir-stni!;. Electricity has been doing mine pret ty work in the pliot.i.Tiiiphinjf of drops of water, and I'r .f. ('. V. Hoys in a recent lecture gave illustrations of what had been accomplished, says the Detroit Free Press. He first showed photographs taken by the electric spark of soap bubbles in tli.oi"t of bursting, and explained the process by which it is possible to as-erlain the respective speed at which dilfeivnt soap bubbles burst. One photograph showed an issue of liquid from a very small pipe, which to the naked eye appeared to be a per fect stream, but which, on an elctric photograph being taken, was resolved into a beautiful and regular series of drops. In connection with this I'rof. Boys remarked that the science of liquids and of the forces involved in the phenomena of the surface of liquids was one of the most interesting branch es of physical science. The elrei't mi a fountain of playing or singing was to change its appearance into one, t.ro or three apparently separate, clear streams of liquid, but a plnt.rri'uph talc.'! as a tuning fork was stii-!c dem in ;lr;:U'd thai the wafer was dispose:! in lr ;p ; in perfect regularity. A picture of a ri c bullet, passing thron;-li t lie air si ihe rate of twu thousand feet a s"enml. v. as also exhibited. Pruf. Boys, however, showed that if it were wished fs i' ves tigate wdiat was really happenis-;- w'vn a rifle bullet was being p.- j fed through the air at the ma::ii:nr i 'e js i- ble speed, it would be ii"eess::ry f ; h ve recourse to a method nf illuminsii " ' i finitely more rapid then the e! ! eie. spark. I or this purpese a rilr:- v ' f steel, ubmit 1h(! size nf a twenty .. ; cent piece, is now used. Jt is s i moiist cd as to revolve with ease w ith -a', t tirig hot at t he enorsi e.s : ;v I - f e th'Misand 1 imes a se n:il. an ! i" : ' , I. the b a iii i,f light iv.e. ,:'' lr- , .1 s'.'s miiT'ir pa. scs across the sere::! ;;l.,uh a ru le that, it enables photographs to be taken in about one ten-millionth of a second. UTILITY OF SAWDUST. A New Substance !H:i:lc I'rnui It by till (.criiiaus. For several years certain Merman: have been experimenting, with a vicv, to utilizing sawdust as a material foi mechanical purposes. It wa.s discov ered, years a'.'o. that vegetable fiber after being subjected to certain ehem ical action, and afterward to a pressure siillicient to expel all liquids from it. could be made into a substance almost indestructible by the elements, and of great utility in the mechanical anc ornamental arts. The diflieulty has been that but few kinds of fiber were capable of the trans formation by any known process. It might almost lie said that the fiber of cotton alone produced satisfactory re sults. Scientists are aware, however, that all vegetable liber is, to a certain ex tent, identical; that is, it is cellulose more or less mixed with other sub stances; and they have believed thut there must lie some means by which the coarser kinds can b" made useful for the purpose as well as cotton, which is nearly pure cedulovs A (ierman scientific journal gives the results of experiments in that country. A substance has been made from com mon sawdust by means of tin acid process, that promises (o be of great value. It is describ'-d as being exceed ingly firm of texture and of great hard ness, incapable of being bored by a common gimlet, more impervious to the action of tl lean nts than the ordi nary metals, and pra ticaily indestruc tible by fire. It is said to tie stronger than timber, and but a fraction of the weight of iron or steel. The cost of manufacture is asserted to be so low as to bring it into competition with both wood and iron. If ...II .1...L.. ..l..;,u .-,. 1., ...... I., rr.ul '.he result will be a great change ia j many important industries Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking ABSOLOTEOf PURE FISHING CORMORANTS. A. Pleasant and Profitable Paitlme In Which the Disciples of Confucius X Are Always Willing to En - gage. ( "The Americans love to go fishing for sport," said an educated Chinaman to a New York Commercial Advertiser reporter. "I wonder that some of the sports of Long Island and its waters have not thought of adopting the Chi nese idea, which is not a sport but a thrifty industry in the great rivers and canals of China. It is valued at mil lions a year." The Chinese fishermen who live in houseboats in the harbor of Hong Kong and along the great canals utilize the cormorant and train him just as a setter dog is trained to "stand" game birds. The cormorant is a voracious fisher man, and the gullet of the bird is of a character that permits it to swallow fish of considerable size headforemost. He pursues his prey beneath tho water like the ottcr.and the address with which he dives and the pertinacity with which he hunts his quarry is only equaled by the rapidity of his evolutions under the surface. In his wild state when he catches a fish transversely he rises to the surface and jerks the fish into the air, ca tching it in the right position for swallowing when it descends. Ravenous as the cormorant is, it is easily tamed, and be comes as attached and familiar with its friends as a chicken who scratches in the bread-tray. Col. Selby, an English of ficer who captured a youngster and reared him in his bungalow, writes in a private letter that his bird, which was a handsome cock, had got "trouble somely tame." It would waddle after him with its uncouth, inturned feet and sometimes would surprise him by alighting at his heels, after a flight of a mile and paddle aftcthim to a meeting of the officers' association of the regi ment with the most absolute assur ance that he had a right to go wherever his master went. He cared nothing for the dogs and cats around the bungalow, and would walk in and out along the passages, a monarch of all he surveyed. The Chinese train and order the cor morant as the falcon was trained in medieval ages, not for sport, but for profit. They are kept in a dark room on the junk, and are started to work be fore sunrise. A small leather thong is tied around the neck so that they can not swallow the fish that they catch. The birds are then thrown into the river and presently dive after their prey. Soon a bird will come to the surface struggling with a big fellow probably twice his weight. At the call af his master he will come to the junk, bringing his booty, and is as eager to go after another as is a retriever to fetch a chip. ,; The use of the cormorant as a fisher man dates back almost to Confucius' empire. They were imported by the Hollanders in the sixteenth century for use in the dikes, where they made noble sport for the royal hunters of those lays. William of Orange carried them with hiin to England and furnished great sport at Hampton court. Even before they had been known in Eng land, Whiteloek says he had a cast of them manned like hawks which would soma to hand. These were presented to him by Master Wood, who was the trainer of cormorants to Charles I. At the present day the bird is bred and trained to fish and bring its prey even without a ligature around its neck. The boats and rafts built for this especial kind of fishery have in coops ten or a dozen trained birds, and it is astonishing to see the size of the fish which they bring back in their beaks. "Mark you," said the Chinaman, "these birds may bo thoroughly ac climated in America. They are very summon in the waters south of the Chesapeake bay. I should think the swells who go trolling for bliiciish or lasting swivel chains for Statcn island sharks would have lots of fun if they would only import a cage or two of Chinese cormorants, and dropping down on their yachts into the waters where the weaktish and the sheepshead abound, lake their fish in this way, I'igeon flying is nothing to H." The general merchandise estnlilu-b-niBiit formerly owned by Ooflin & M Far land, hut) lately changed hands, now he Ini under the control and mHiiiigenieni of The McFarland Mercantile Conqimiv, which continues business at the uld stand with a larger stock than ever. s Deeds, murtgnges, etc., the Gazette nltioe. executed at Awarded Highest j Hii rffft 2HlBakin The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard THE WESTERN PEDAG0GUK. We are in receipt of the May Dumber of our state school pBper. It exceed any of the former numbers ic value. The paper this month contains many new and valuable features. The illus trated series on the schools of the state ia introduced by a paper on the Friends Polytechnic Institute at Sulem, Oregon. These papers cannot fail to be of great value both to the schools an 1 to the public. There are also severol fine articles by our best writers and the departments "Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts," "Eduoatiouul News" "The Oracle Answers, Correspondents," eto., eaoh ooutiiin much valuable reading for teachers or parents. The magazine has about 60 pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounce the Western Pedagogue the best educa tional monthly on the const. Everyone of our readers should have the ptiper if they are at all interested in education. No teacher school direc tor or student can gel aleiig well with out it. We will receive subsoripl.ons at this office. Price only SI. 00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and Uszette cme year to one address for S3. 00. Call and examine sample copies, 'i'enobers, direotors and parents, now is the time tn subscribe, tt li. A. It. NOTlliK. We take this opportunity otiutormiag our subscribers that the new commis sioner of pensions has been opooinled. He isun old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and their heirs will re ceive justice at his hauds. We do not anticipate that there will be any radioal changes in the admiuiatrution of pension affairs under the new regime. : We would advise, however, that ID. 8. soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application at onoe, if they have not already dune so, in order to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should be any futuie pension legislation. Snoh legislation is seldom retrouotive. There fore it is uf reat imporltitioo that ap plications be filed in the department at the earliest possible dute. It the U. 8 soldiers, sailors, or their widows, children or parents desire in formation in regard to pension matters, they should write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, D. 0., and they will prepare aud Bend the necessary application, if they find them entitled under the numerous laws enacted for their benefit. Address MESS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Weddekhi;rn, Managing Attor ney, Washington, D. C, P, O. Box 885 tf. The Fate of the BulTalo. Twenty years ago there roamed over the plains and mountains of tho far West nearly 8,000,000 buffaloes. To-day there are less than BOO head of the animals in existence. Thero are but eighty-five head of wild buffaloes, 804 alive in cap tivity, and about lino under tho protec tion of tho Government in Yellowstone Park. Thero is also sail! to be about 5.')0 head in tho British possessions, north of Montana, but this is rumor. Of the eighty-five head of wild buffaloes which are known to exist, twenty-five urn in Texas, twenty in Colorado, twenty-six In Wyoming, ten in Mon tana and four in Dakota. Tho statistics have been carefully ffathored by the officials of tho Smithsonian Institution, and it is absolutely known that the number stated compriso all the wild buffaloes of the wo.-ld. The skeletons of tho numerous herds of a score of years ago are bleaching on tho Western plains, a tribute to tho powers of tki American Js'inirod. New I'se fur Old Huge. While dredging on the oyster beds near New London, Conn., recently on oysterman brought up something, which at first sight looked like a life less sea serpent covered with immense scales, hut on examination it turned out to be a strip of hose seven 'eet long and three Inches in diameter, complete ly hidden by the bivalves, which had become fastened to it. liy actual count there was over 1100 oysters on that piece of hose. Papers for sale at the Gazette office at two-bits a hun ired. A good thing for you to do is to sub scribe tor the Uuzette. Honors, World's Fair. vomer.