4 rVSJ? MOVE. Now that tbe campaign ia ooming on every lubeoriber of the Gazette should provide himself or herself with a newa-r paper uf more than local importance. The Gazette shop is tbe plaoe to subscribe for all periodicals. Don't forget tbat the Oazette Deeds all arrearages, even though Christmas oomea but ODOe a year. OFFICIAL PAPEK NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. The man who advertises, gets the ca(h. Notice it. TWELFTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1894. WEEKLY WO. 578.1 6EMI-WEEKLY NO. 219.1 7 , SEMI'.VEEKLY GAZETTE. rUB!.I8HKD Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAfl W. PATTERSON Baa. Manager. OTIS PATTERSON Editor At f 5.50 per year, 11.25 for six montha, 75 ot. lor three moucoB. Advertising Rates Made Known On Application. The "EiUJLS," of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, ia published by the same com pany every Friduy morning. Subscription price, Super year. Foradvortisingratcs, address OEIH Xi. PATTEEBOIT, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "(iazette, Heppner, Oregon. THIS PAPKR is kept on tile at E. C. Dske's Advertising Agency, IH and 65 Merchants raots for advertising uan be made for it. THE GAZETTE'S AG SNTS. Wagner B. A. HunBaker Arlington Puill Heppner Lour Creek, The Kagle Echo Postmuster Cunas Iralrle Oscar Le Vaill Nye, Or H. C. Wright Hiirdmau, Or Posiuwster Humiltou, Grant Co., Or PoHtinacter lone T. J. Carl Prairie City, Or., R. R. Mcllaley Canyon City, Or S. L. Parrish Pilot Rock G. P. Skelton OayvUlc, Or J. E. Suow John Iay, Or .'.F. I. McCallum Athena. Or John Edington Pendleton, Or., Postmaster Mount Vernon, urantco., or rosuuasier Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Flett Fox, Grant Co., Or., J. F. Allen Eight Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugll Upper Rhea Creek B. F. Hovland Douglas, Or. Postmaster Lone Rock, Or R. M. Johnson Gooseberry J. R. Ei-teb Condon, Oregon Herbert HalBtcad Lexington Jas. Leach AN AUBNT WANTED IN EVERY PRECINCT. Union Pag fig Railway-Local card. No. 10, mized leaves Heppner 9:45 p. m. daily except Sunday ' 10, ' ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. l, " leaves " a. m. " 9, " ar. at Heppner 500 a. m. daily except Monday. EaBt bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :26 a. m. West leaves " 1:M a. m. West bound loral freiglr leaves Arlington 8:S5 a. m., arrives at The Dalles 1:15 p. in. Local passenger leaves The Dalles at 2:00 p. m. arrivts at porilaua at v:uu p- m. Inited States Officials. Pieaident Grover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Hrf.cren-.rv of Hiatal Walter Q Ureshani Secretury of Treasury Jouu G. tlarliBle Secretary or Anterior none oiuiiu Beoretary of War Daniel S. Laniont Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert PoBtmaster-General Wilson B. Bissell Attorney-General lliohard 8. Olney Becretaryof Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Gfivemnr S. Pennoyer Seoretaryof State G. W. JlcBrlde Treasurer Phil. Metsclian Supt. Public Instruction E. B. MoElroy . ( J. H. Mitchell Senators jj. N.Uolph I Binger Hermann Congressmen j W. ti. Ellis Printer Frank C Baker !V. A. Moore W,r,1,Lorl1 R, S. Bean Seventh Judicial District. Cii cnit .1 udgo W. L. Bradshaw Proaeouting Attorney , ..W. H. Wlis .n Morrow County Officials. Joint Senator Henry Blackman Representative J- N-Brown I lounty Judge Julms Keithly ' Commissioners Geo. W, Vincent J.M.Baker. fllork J. W. Morrow Sheriff Geo. Noble. Treasurer W. J . U ezer " Assessor B. L. haw " Snrveyor Isa Brown School Sup't.; W.USaling " Coroner T. W.Ayers, Jr HEPPNER TOWN OFFICERS. Mayor J. R.Simons Councilman O. E. Farnsworth. M-. Lichtenthal, Otis Patterson, Julius Keithly, W.A. JohnBton, J. L. Yeager. Recorder A- A. Roberta. Treasurer E. G. Blocum Marshal J. W. Rasmus. Precinct Officers. Justice of the Peace F. J. Hallock Constable C. W. Rycuard United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OR. J. W. LewiB Register T.S.Lang Receiver LA ORANDK, OB. ' B.F, Wilson Register J.H. Bobbins Receiver OEOEET GOOIETIE3. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.30 o'clock iu their Castle Hall, National Bank build ing. Sojourning brothers cordially in vited to attend. J. N. Brown, C. C. W. V. Crawpobd, K. of R. 4 S. tf RAWLINS POST, NO. 81. G. A. R. Aleets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of ach month. All veterans are invited to Join. (,. C. Boon, Adiatant, Geo. W. Smith. tt Commander, rP.OFESSIOlT.- A A. ROBERTS, Keal Estate, Inenr anoe and ColIeotioDS. Office in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER HEPPNER. OREGON. Cattle branded and edt marked as shown above. Bone t on right shoulder. M, mttle nuute in Morrow and Umatilla eoaa- tiae. I will pay (100.00 for the arreM and oon notion oi any parson staaiinc my etook. ! VALUABLE PRESENT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS By a special arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FEEE to each of our readers a year's subscription to tbe popular monthly agricultural journal, the Ambbican Farmer, published at Springfield and Clevelund, 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 any new subscribers who will pay one year in advance. The Amkrioan Farmer enjoys a large national circula tion, and ranks among tbe leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re- eeive tbe American Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oail promptly, Sample oepies oan be seen at our office. Tlie Oriu;liitil DICT1DNHRY . 1V BfKUlAu Ait K A Mail. 41 Jli NT WITH THE 1j publishers, -ve are able to obtain a number of tf" above book, and propose to furnish a copy to eacn 01 our BUDscnuerB. The dictionary is a neoeBaity in every home, (JUUOOi ttliU I1UUBB. XL U11B ft VtLCaDCy, and furniBheB knowledge which no one hun dred other volufieB of tiie choicest books could supply. Youngfrind old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, tynuld have it within reach, and reier 10 us conienm every aay in me year. As some have asked if this is really the Oritr 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 coniDlete on which about forty of the best years of 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 awl definition of same, an-i is tne regular standard size, containing about 300,000 Bquare inches of printed surface, and is douuu in ciotn nan morocco ana SLeeo. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To anv renewal subsrr!hr. Third To fiy 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 $i-oo. Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt skie and bach stamps, marbled edges, $i -io. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00. Fifty cents added in al! cases for express age to Heppner, PAb the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low prices, we advise all who desire to avail thm. selves of this great opportunity to attend to It SILVER'S CHA.MPION Ah 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 cjampton of silver in the West, and should be in every home in the West, and in the hands of every miuer and business man in Colorado. Bend in your subscriptions at once. Address, THE JVE-TO-S, Douvor, Colo. LUMBER! WE HAVE FOR BALE ALL KINDS OF ON ' dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what Is known as the SOOTT SAWIVIIIjIj. PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, " " " CLEAR, - 10 00 - 17 60 F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD 16.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. L HAMILTON, Prop. r. A. Hamlitosi, Man'Br TIIE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains Daily Between St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicago, Milwaukee and all points in Wisconsin making connection in Chlcngro with all lines running East and South. Tickets sold and baggage checked through to all points in the United States and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest tieket agent or J A3. C. POND, Geo. Pass. aadTkt Art, Mllwaake. Wis, Msters Unabridged ' rvm "As old as the hills" and never excell ed. "Tried and'proven " is the verdict o f millions. Simmons Liver Eegu r lator is the r0T fpfonly Liver JLJOffO and Kidney. medicine to which you can pin your t I yi faith for a mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act jT '77 iQg directly f-Jf C on the Liver J. tttJ and Kid neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. The Kins; of Liver Medicines. 41 1 have used yourSimmons Liver Regu lator and cau conscienclously say it is the king of all liver medicines. I coDsidr it a medicine chest in Itself. Obo. W. Jack son, Tacoma, Washington. M-KVEKY PACKAGE'S. ilas the Z Stamp in red on wrapper. QTJIOK TX3V3IE1 I San lranolsoo And all points In California, via the Mt, Hhasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. Chs great highway through California to all points Bust and South. Grand Hoenio Boute of tho Pacifie Coast. Pullman Bnffot Sleepers. Seoond-olass Sleepers Attached to express trains, affording superior accommodations for Beoond-class passengers. For rates, tickets, sleeping oar reservations, to.. call upon or address X. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst. Hen. F. & P. Agt, Portland. Oregon. l Bank oi WM. PENLAND, President. ED. B. BISHOP. Cashier. transacts;a;general banking business COLLECTIONS Made on Favoruble Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Free Medicine ! A Golden Opportunity or Suffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Remedies te the People do you sumR?Kptfrb7eeax,idain. will send vou FREE OF CHARGE a full course of specially prepared remedies beit suited to your caBe. we want your recommendation. We can cure the most aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment ior all diseases and deformities are modern and scientific, acauired by many year's experience, which enables us to uuarauiee a t;ure. uo not aespair. N. B. We have the onlv nnsltlve cure for Ed- Ilepsy (fttB) and Catarrh. References given. Permanently located. Old established. Dr. Williams Medical and surgical Imsti- tutk, 719 Market Street, Ban Francisco, Cal, ARE YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ? The geniuB who invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, haB 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 8 the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzleiat, 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 Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. Jt" Made Is all styles and sizes. Lightest, 9 strongest, easiost working, safest, simplest, I most accurate, most compact, and most I modern. For sale by all dealers in arms. I Catp.logues moiled free by The llarlin Fire Arms Co., New Havek, Cokk., IT, S. A. SPILES; qtmI la one PA.uri.S8t trwtmeat without knife, tfi Iom of lirat from bailnsM. Flttula, UImm, etc.. lo curod. 30 TUn' M r; QoMtioo Blank ind Bosk fra. Call or writ. 833 Pine atreafa. ar. Locu.Uo. s. I I t'OR 10 1-CtHT STAIVl. Jri i vl 1 .regular i)nc ac-J tun- ad' It Jt SVWiff )dJ'S wiU be ibr 1 -er b.iaiy guaraisteelng lUCS.OOti customers; from uiib UaHen and nnwinfiic turcrs you'll rwflvt, protmbh'. tbousatide o! valuabi? hooks, ph;h ra BamDleft.miurB7.ine .et c Afl fr and each nam' with oneofyourpiinteti address Ll elf pAeira tnerenn. m n m , c n also print and prepay po1 on i your hbel addrtes to you; ltk: click on vour on velopM, books, i prevsnt thftr being lost. J. A. H aui of Keldfivillo. '. C. writes : " Fr- -n my 25 cent address in vuur Llrlitr-i.: Dirertorv I'e received my V' uddre l.rioli nrirt nunr 3iMMft sraIti al ''am.mtr niih!(fc..r nr1 m.innfi.,1 rv. ?H:Lfc'"X? arerrf ins OnUv, on vtUu:thn- r.ro;' y xi- " if mail irom all ;rts n il " '' WORLD'S J1 AIR DIRKCTORY CO., No.M7 Frankiord and Girard Ave. Philadel phia, Pa. AT AN IRISH WAKE.' Unique Featirc i i.f '. Fi-norul Ob servance o.i Uia Old iiod. Bow Celtic Mounii " . rjM the De:d Chatting uiul L. ur: Tt-Ill;i(r Arouad the Corpse Tint I. iiMlltous llp and Siivk ..itlu. The oustom ef "wakinrr" the dead in Ireland, Hays the London Spectator, though by no means cxist inff in its anoient glory and vigor, still obtains in a modified and shorn form in many oountry district. Jiripf.y A 'w.ribed, it amounts to this thr.t tbo neighbors of the deceased assemble and spend th' night in tho room wiih the oorpsc. chatting and telling ntor'.Pt'.; in th". meanwhile, of cr:i'p, t:i!;'.:ij: "a hla:;t av the pipe," and a drop :t "the crav thure" to sustain tlinn during their vigil. The conversation on saoh oc casions naturally turrif., to a la.-g-e ex tent, to the virtues of tho departed, which are duly cmbollihed with all tho natural eloquence of the speakers . Ko one unfamiliar with Ireland oan at all realize what a scer.o a "wal:o" pr esents' and we propose to givo a sort of speci men of the conversation which prevail? on such an occasion. "An ould follyer" is generally in a seat of honor, closo by tho head of the bed; she has been a nurse, perhaps, in the family, and as she rocks hei: aged body backward and forward she pour forth with a mellifluous Southern brogue, in a sad, wailing tone, a long pieoe of delightfully discursive domes tio history. "Ah, wisha, wishii. lave me alone, the maslher was a grand man: Thade Regan was the grand man; he milked np to forty cows." (This implies that he was a dairy-farmer whose stock amounted to that number.) "Whore it's meself remlmbers the day av his wed din'; Lard Edward was at hotab at tho time by the samo token, an' us he wint by our cabin I heerd me mother to say: 'By gar, there's th i lard up!' , An! uhure enough he was, for he was on this way to Tim Hoolahan's, who was min iing thir ty hogs for him. 'Turn thim c ut, Tim, says the lard, 'turn thim out,' says he, 'for I want to choose out two av thim,' says he. 'To bo shure, and why not, your honor's glory, mo lard?' says Tim; and, whin ho had thim out, the lard makes chice av wan widout a tail, an' a anoder widout an ear An' thl.n he say.s to Tim, says he: 'Have thim two bastet kilt,' says he, 'an' give thim to the people that's comin' to Thade Eegan.'s weddin',' says he, 'for their dinner,' says he. Ah, wisha, deeling, bu1; the lard was mighty fond av poor Thade; may God be wid thim bothl An' don't I well remimber the time that poor Thade, rest his sowl, bought a farm near the red bog an' how I attinded at the d inner that same day." At this juncture, another speaker, thinking he should have an innings, of fers the nurse a drink; and while she is occupied with it he observes: "Wisha, wenoch, it was the poor maiither that wasfandav his marning drop; many's the time he'd take mo wid him into Judy Molan's little public, an' he'd say: 'Judy,' he'd say, 'give Nicholas some thing to warm him, and take the could out av his stumick this frasthy morning.' An' by and by he'd say: 'Nicholas, man, ron'tyehave a glass?' an' I 'd tell him I had wan; but he'd say: 'Don't tell me; you had not;' an' av coorse I 'd say: 'It isn't for the likes av me to oontradict a gintleman like your honor,' an' Judy would All it up again." ,t A driver cf a hoarse who was present would add reflections whicli seemed to him suitable to the occasion: "I tell ye's all that I have been a driviing a hearse man an' boy these twinty years an' more. 1 have druv' rich an' poor; fin' whin the wind was an me back, the smell av them both was just alike; an' I didn't like it nather. And whin I comes across a man who has two or three hundred pounds, an' sees all his capers an' antics, I says to meself: 'What agladiathuryeare;but wait, mo boy, until I have ye in the hearse, an' then yo'll be qu iet an' aisy enough.' Shure I wanst dru-v a jedge to the graveyard; an' I saw the yalla clay shoveled down on him as wehl as another an' he rotting wid money. God save as!" This observation called forth a general exclamation: "Well, Ned, ye're i terror." The old nurse "a charred tnd wrinkled piece of womanhood" leing now refreshed, would ta ce up her jarable again, and offer hersn. tff-box, or ather her snutf, to every one present, .'t was done in this way: holdin t the box .n her right baud, she poured out some )f its contents on tho palm of her left. Whether you used the snuff r not, it vas considered unlucky and uncivil to efuse to take a pinch of it. Among the lower classes "wal es" are itill very prevalent; beggars hav 3 their wn "wakes," and even little cl ildren ire "waked." A wako is quite s n ex pensive ceremony to a poor, struj. gling vorking-man or tradesman; but ht feels ;hat be would loss caste without hold jig it, and he has not tho moral cm rage a break through the custom. Thi ex penses of a wake in the "strong" fr.rm .ng class are a very serious item, indeed. The Roman Catholic clergy nowadays generally or universally discourag 9 this justom; but it is so deeply rootea that ts eradication must be a question of iime. Interesting Exhibits. Philadelphia will draw on Indepen dence hall for some of the exhibits which are to represent the state at the world's fair. It has been decided by the committee in charge that the art icles that were used by the continental congress, and which are now in the east room of the hall, including the dealt, chairs and pictures of the sign ers of the declaration of independence, shall be sent to Chicago. The commit tee also wants to borrow the statue of William Penn, in order to set it up in front of the state building. Citizens oi Philadelphia are offering some of their pictures for the art gallery. Among these are Giaeomelli's fine painting, "ine festival of the Brides of Venice." and the mosaic picture known as "The Discovery of the Remains of St. Mar cus. It contains over one million pieces, and seven years were spent in the composition. ui.ii.j-1. 1 riiOXiJUIiA FIl Y. A Picture of Mont Blano Taken from a Distance of Eight Miles. Tha Marvelous Outcome of Four Months' Experimenting of a Noted Swiss scientist A Delicate and Dif ficult Process. A truly marvelous development m camera work is what has been termed telephotography, whereby pictures of distant objects can be made with the same clearness and sharpness of detail as if they were close at hand. But to secure a successful picture by this process many difficulties have usu ally to be contended with, and accord ing to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat it is comparatively seldom that the most favorable conditions occur. The main difficulty is the presence in the air of minute particles of dust. In large towns, and even in their neighbor hood, the air is filled with an incon ceivable quantity of such particles, and the result is a grayness of the at mosphere, which, on the photographic negative, blurs the outline of remote objects. Where these conditions ob tain it is possible to procure a good proof only in the morning after a noc turnal shower has cleared the air. Such is the nbeorlient power of dusty air that all attempts at taking long distance photographs in the vicinity of Paris, where much experiment ing was done, resulted unsatisfac torily beyond a range of thirty-two hundred yards, even when the occasion was apparently propitious. In the neighborhood of the sea and of the mountains, where the air is much purer, photographs can be made at much greater distances; but here a single obstacle presents itself in the unequal density of the various strata of air. Especially in hot weather, cer tain beds of air, heated by the rays of the sun, will be actuated by an up ward movement and this imparts a trembling appearance to the land scape. The presence of rivers or marshes, or land much exposed to the solar rays, is likely to give rise to ver tical currents of vapor of great absorp tive power. Again the humid vapors of the atmosphere clothe far distance with a bluish haze, which confuses the lines of tiie picture nnd obscures the effects of light und shade. This is rem edied by employing orthochromatic lenses and a yellow glass to neutralize the blue tint. The camera must be absolutely still, the mostminute vibra tion being multiplied indefinitely and causing hopeless confusion in the neg ative. It will thus be seen that telephotog raphy is both a difficult and a deli cate process. A most remarkable illus tration of its possibilities has been achieved by M. Kois'onnas. of Geneva, in a photograph of Mont Blanc, taken at a distance of eight and one-half miles. The proof has been published by M. Fourtier, who also shows, in order to suggest more strongly the wonderful nature of the achievement, the size the picture would be if taken by an ordinary object glass. The latter measures nine and one sixteenth inches by three-eighths inches, and the telephotograph is five and three-fourths inches by three and three-fourth inches. The lines of the massive, far-off mountain stand out in bold relief, and the details of the in terviewing country are distinctly shown. Such a picture, however, is not made without almost unlimited pains and perseverance. It cost M. Boissounas four months of experi menting before he could determine on the best place and the best time at which to take it. For the benefit of those who may have to tread wearily over the same ground, he tells the condition that obtained at the event ful moment. It was six o'clock in the evening, about twenty minutes before the sun sank beliind the mountains. From experience he found that this was the most favorable moment to ob tain a linrmonioufl proof, and the dis tinctness of outline and details in the clouds was greatly increased from the fact that they were tinged first with a pale yellow and then with orange. RICH AMERICAN BONDHOLDERS. The Names of These Favorites of Fortune Kept Secret by the Treasury. The millionaire is commonly repre sented as engaged in clipping coupons from bonds. This is an egregious error, says the Washington Star. Rich men, as a rule, do not hold coupon bonds. The reason is quite obvious. Such bbnds are not safe property. They are always payable tobearer.like treas ury notes. If lost the government will not replace them. Accordingly, for the sake of security, people are con stantly exchanging them for regis tered bonds. Thus the sum total of coupon bonds outstanding, which is now about 870,000,000, is all the time diminishing. They are mostly in the hands of small holders. With the reg istered bonds it is quite different. They are rich men's property par ex cellence. At present about i'JOO,000,000 worth of them are held by pVivate in dividuals. Of this great sum 887,000, 000, or not far from one-half, are owned by 1,000 persons. whose holdings average 880,000. The names of these fortunate individuals are kept secret by the treasury. Some of the fortunes possessed in this shape are enormous. Some of the greatest belong to the Vanderbilts. Old William H. Vanderbilt had 845,000, 000 in registered bonds at one time. New Granada ink Plant. r There is a plant in New Granadi known as the "ink plant," the juice o which serves, without the least prepara tion, as ink. The writing at first appearf red, but in a few hours assumes a deep black hue. Several sheets of manuscript written with this natural ink, becamr soaked with sea water on their journey to Europe, but when dried the writing was found to be still perfectly clear. Produoe $2 50 and get the Oazette for one year. Nice family paper, and bul ly to paper eabins. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. mm ABSOLUTELY PURE "A FRIDAY BAUtL. When the English Fishmonger Begins to Bawl Language Lovers Take a Day Oft". There is considerable slang and good oatured charting among the buyers and sellers in the London Billingsgate, but une is not overwhelmed by that torrent of foul language he has been taught to expect from his associations with the word. The best time to visit the mar ket is on Friday morning. The wooden, barn-looking square where the fish is sold is crowded soon after six o'clock with shiny cord jackets and greasy caps. Everybody comes to Billingsgate in his worst clothes, and nobody knows the length of time a coat can be worn until he has been to a fish sale. Over the hum of voices are heard the shouts j of salesmen, who, with white aprons, peering above the heads of tne moo, stand on the tables roaring out their prices. All are bawling together talciimen and hucksters of provisions, hardware and newspapers till the place becomes a perfect Babel of com petition. St. Winifred's WelL One of the most copious springs in Sreat Britain is the famed St. Wini fred's well, near the town of Holywell, in Flintshire. The well is an oblong square, about twelve feet by seven, and its water, say the people of the district, lias never been known to freeze. This latter assertion may be true, as, be sides containing a fair percentage of mineral matters that lowers its frees iug point, the well is inside a beautiful jhapel, which was erected over it by Sueen Margaret, the mother of Henry VII. The water thrown up is not less than eighty-four hogsheads every min ute, and the quantity appears to vary very little either in drought or after the heaviest rain, showing doubtless that its primitive sources are numerous and widely distributed. St. Winifred's' has been the object of many pilgrimages. Interesting Experiments." An uptown man having nothing else to do thought he would try an experi ment, t"ys the Philadelphia Record, so he turned the hands of a clock in his room the full twenty-four hours of a lay and found it took, with moderate movement, one minute of time to ac complish that task. He then made a jaleulation of how long it would take him to turn off the full measure of a man's life, which, according to the Scriptures, is "three score years and ten," and found that it would take sev enteen and one-half days to turn the hands of the clock to represent seventy THE GREAT OCEAN CURRENTS Singular Facts About These Llttlt r Understood Streams. All the superficial parts of the west ern Atlantic, except the portion of itf area next the coast of America, are per vaded by a slow movement which setf the water toward the poles, says Prof. N. S. Shaler in Scribner's. This current is due to the Gulf stream, which, emerg ing from the tropics as a deep, narrow, wift moving tide, skirts the southern coast of the United States, grad uallj widens like an opened fan, dimini shin'r, in depth and losing its velocity as i comes toward the Arctic circle. Al though the speed of its northward going is here slight, it has sufficient en ergy to push back the floe-ice which may be driven southwardly by the winds, and thus limit its excursions to the American shore. Setting out into the Atlantic from Davis strait there is I however, a strong stream of Arctic I water, which, in part, slips under th Gulf stream tide, and in part flows on the surface of the sea next the Labra dor coast. In the southward-setting current the floe-ice drifts with a speed of about a mile an hour down the Amer ican shore until it attains the mouth of the St. Lawrence. The Labrador cur rent, as this southward-moving water is called, would, but for certain accidents of geography, send this floe-ice much farther to the southward than it now does. If Newfoundland and Nova Scotia should disappear, so that there I could be a nearly straight shore from I Greenland to Massachusetts bay, it is likely that these floes would in large quantities attain to the coast of New England, and give to the shore lands of that part of the continent the subarctic and inhospitable climate of the islands of the eastern St. Lawrence. This shore-current bears few true icebergs with the floe-ice, for the reason that these greater ice-islands are formed to . gether on the Greenland shores, and. pressed to the eastward by the prevail ing winds, do not come into that super facial, shore-skirting. Labrador current. Deeds mnrtcncrpfl tttn atwini. Bt tbe Gazette otfioe. Awarded Highest The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Sudani. Baking Powder THE WESTERN PEDAGOOirii. We are in receipt of the May Dumber of our state school paper. It exceed any of the former numbers ic valua. Tbe paper tbis month oontaius many new and valuable features. The illus trated series on tbe schools of the Btate is introduced by a paper on tbe Friends Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon. These papers oannot fail to be of great value both to the sohools nu 1 to the public. There are also several fine articles by our beet writers and tbe departments "Current Evenls,""Saturday Thoughts," "Educational News" "The Oracle Answers, Correspondents," etc, eaoh oontain much valuable reading for teachers or parents. The magazine haB abont 50 pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounoe tbe Western Pedagogue the best educa tional monthly on the eosst. Everyone of our readers should have the paper it they are at all interested in education. No teacher school direc tor or stndent can get along well with out it. We will receive eubsoript.ons at this office. Price only $1.00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and Gazette one year to one address for 83.00. Call and examine sample oopies. Teaohers, directors and parents, now is tbe time to subscribe, tf G. A. R. NOTICE. We take tbis opportunity of informing our subscribers that the new commis sioner of pensions has been apoointed He isan old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and their heirs will re oeive justice at his hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radical changes in the administration of pension affairs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that V. 8, soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application at once, if they have not already done so, in order to seoure the benefit of the early filing ot their claims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Buoh legislation is seldom retroactive. There fore it is of great importance that ap plications be filed in tbe department at the earliest possible date. If tbe U. S. soldiers, sailors, or their widows, children or parents desire in formation iu regard to pension matters, they should write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, D. 0., and they will prepare and send tbe necessary application, if they find tbem entitled under the numerous laws enacted for their benefit. Address PKESS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Weddebbubn, Managing Attor ney, Washington, D. C, P. O. Box 386 tf. HIS FATHER WAITED. "Wr Bat He Finally Succeeded 111 Reaching the Presence of His Son. The boat was pulled by a couple ot boys and was headed for the White Squadron, says the New York Com mercial Advertiser. It was about the hour when the gentle gurgle from a five-gallon milk can, as its contents are scooped out into pails, resembles the melody of "The Old Oaken Bucket." In the sternsheets sat a living picture of "your Uncle Reuben." The swasb from his coat tails hid a clean-cut trail through the blue waters, and his whiskers were filled with salt. Swiftly the boat swept by the Chica go, Newark and Boston, but was almost swamped by the old man's efforts to "gee" alongside the Concord. The marine on duty ordered the boat to keep away, giving as his authority the general order that no visitors were to be allowed aboard. The old man carefully laid a big piece of tobacco on the gangway grating and said: "Young man, you want to make bee line for that big fellow in the white panties with a sword on his port quar ter. You tell him his father is getting his constitution ruined waiting to see him, and if there are any fences in the way I advise you to climb them un less you want to hear from old New Hampshire." In less than fifteen minutes the old man took possession of the entire ward room, and the officers were proud of their guest. A ffood thin? for vou to do is tn anh. scribe for tbe Gazette. Honors, World's Fair. Bakin Powder: