J 9 4 fvis jforis.; ! Now that tbe campaign ia ooming on : every subscriber of the Gazette should provide himself or herself with a Lews paper of more than local importance. ; Tbe Gazette shoo is the Dlace to subscribe OFFICIAL PAPER NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. ftemrae for all periodicals. Don't forget that the Gazette seeds all arrearages, even though Christmas comes bat oooe a vear. Themau who advertises, gets the cash. Notice it. V, TWKLFTIi YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1894. I vVF.FKLY WO. 578.1 SEMI-WEEKLY NO.M). 4 V SEMI AliEKLY (.AZliTTk. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY HIE I'ATTEBSON 1TBLISIUXG (MPAM ALVA II V. PATTERSON Bub. Manager. OTIS PATmtSON Editor A1 2.5 t por year, $1.25 fur six months, 75 ctB. fur throe minium. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "EAGLE," of Long ('reek, Grant County, Oregon, is published by the same coju piuiy every Friday morning. sliibuwription price. iper year. JMirftflvertisiiiKrates.atldress CBI1T Xj. I-A.'X"X,33SOiT, Editor and Manager, Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette," Hi'pner. Oregon. rPHI8 PAPKH is kept ou nle at K. C. lake's 1 Advertising Agency, tit and 65 tYlprehaiiU Kxuluingtt, lSau Francibcu, ('alifurnia, whore cou ik'.ciM for advertising can be made fur it. THE OAZKTTK'S Mi fiNTS. Wagner B. A. Hnnsaker Arlington Pliill Heppner Lung i-reeK, me nagie Echo, 1'optinanti r Camas Prairie Oeear IH1 Vitul Nye, Or,, H. O. right Uuidintui, nr., 1'ob in. ater fliunilton, Grunt Co., Or., Postmaster nine T. J. Carl PrairloCIty, Or R. K. Mc Haley I'linyoii City, Or H. L. ParriMn i'liot iUn-.k, G. P. Hkelton OayviJle, Or., J. E. rinovv Mm Day, Or., F. I. MeC'allnin Athena, Or John Edlngton l .'fiiiU'tiiu, Or., PoHtmuBier Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., PostinaMter iSUeibv, or., Miss Stella Klett Vox, Grant Co., Or., J. F. Allen Eight Mile, or., Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh I'l'I'tT khea Creek, B. F. Hevland L'nilua, Or Postmaster hiUM lUick, Or U. M. Johnson (io.:.st herry J. ft. E teb i oiido n, i Jregun Herbert Halrttcatl L'.ixfii'.'ton., Jab, Leach AK .U;itNT WANTED IN EVERY PRKLiM CT. Umoh Pag fig Railway-Local card. S ', 10, mixed leaves Heppuer 9:4 p. m. daily oxoapt Sunday :u, ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. y, ' leaves " a m. " W, " ur. at Heppner 5:Uu a. no. dail I'xeept Monday. Eaut bound, mam tins ar. at Arlington 1 :?tt . m. W'put " ' ' leavet 1:21 a. m. West hoand lo 'al fr -igli leaV'a Arlington 8115 a. m., a-nves t The L lies 1:1 1 p. in. Local paHHeitg r leaver Th-' Daliunac . :UJp. ui. arnv s at Portland, at 7:0u p w. United States Oitfefals. Picpident Vire-l'i'Mident iarfnfl'feury.... Kot.iftary of Interior,.. tvertMitry of War Swi-retari' ot Navy PosLLiiutiter-Ueuoral Altul'-ttti-Geueral Briroiary id Agnoulturo ..Grnver Cleveland .. . . A(i ai BievfUBun tloae Biuiih ... Daniel H. Lmnoiit ...Hilary A. Herbert ...Wil-ou tt. Htsaell liieharti ti. Omey ..J. oLHiiliig ionoi. State ot Oiuguu. (jovei-Dir Beriiary of biate Treasurer Sapt. Public iiwlnifUon... 8. Pennoyei- ...,G. V . MoH.me Phil. MtiLai;nau E. 11. Mcu-iroj i J. 11. MitolLuii (J. N. UolpU Hinger Henuann W. u. Ellia Benators Congressmen Printer.-.. Bnpnune Judges., rrana v. nauei b. A. J W. P. t Li. B. t A. iloore iiurd llean Seventh Judicial District. Cironit Judge 'SZ Prodmmung Auurney VV.H. VVils n Morrow Cuantj OfHrial'. join- Bonutur... -. KeprHeutative...i t oouty Judge UoumiiBsionerw. Henry Blaokmaii J.N. Brown .. . Julius Keilhij Geo. V. Viueeut J.AI. Hatter. Clerk : J-,Mi'r Bheritf ;if'' (,tile I'miiHiirer W. J. L ezei AwseBHor., Burveyor esehool Bup't.. t'orouur luaHrowa W. L.Balinn T. VV. Ayeio, Ji HBPPNBH TOWN omOKRS. ji,,,,,, J. H. Simons Uiniui'ilViiViV FarnsworUi, M liichuathai. Oti FattMi'son, J.iliua Keitlilj. W. A. luuuotou, J. L. Yeur. Kecwruvt A- A- Korieru.. K, ....... E G. rtlocum Marshal W. Kasuiu. PrrcmctOffli'erp, Justice of the Peace Constable ..F. J. Helloes, C. W. Hycuurd United States Uurt Officers. THE DALLES, OR. 1. W. Lewis T. S. Lang LA QRVN0B, OR. B.F. Wi'snn J. U Kobbins It' rib" r Ht-ceiv r . hVjriter . Uecuivet Doric Lodge No. 2U K. of V. meet ey- arv '1'nu.iluv aVMliilltf t 7. SO o'clock II! their Castle Hull, Nutiouai Hank build- nig. tjujouimuK brmhH onr.naiiv u vitert to Hltonil. J. N. bROWN, C. I W. V. Crawford, a. t It. & a. tf HAWL1NS POST, NJ. SI, O. A. li. s! U at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of ici. month. All veterans are invited to join. , 0. Iloo". MTH. Adjatant, tf Commander, A. ROBERTS, Ral Estate, loeur- Bnce and Oollectious. Office i ouuoil CbambtrB, Hi-ppner. Or. ew tf. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCK RAISER ! HKPPSEK. OKKOON. Cattle branded and ar marked as shown abov-. donas t on right shimlder. Mr cattle range in Morrow and Umatilla conn use. 1 will pay (103.(0 for the arreet and eon fiction of any peraoa etaauac mr mod. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE I'O OURREADERS iiy a Bpecin! arrangement with tbe publishera we are prepared to furuieb FREE to each of out readers a year's mibficription to tbe popular monthly agricultural juurual, the American Farmer, pnbliehod at Springfield and Cleveland, Obio. Thifl offw 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 Fahmkh oDjoys a large national circula tion, and ratiKs among the leading Hgricuttnrnl papers. By this arrange meut it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re ceive tbe Amkrican Farmer for oiip year, It will be to yonr advantage to oail promptly. Sample copies can be seen at our oflice. Ttie Original Webster's Unabridged OIGTIOHRRY. Bi SHiCClAl. aKKANuKMUNT WITH THE publishers, e are able to obtain a number ol U1 above bonk, and propose lo furnish a copy to each of our subscribers. 1 he dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house, it tills a vacancy, and lumishes kuowledge which no one hun dred other volumes ol the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, should nave it within reach, and reler to its coutenls every day in the year. As some have asked ll this is really the Orig inal Webster's Cuauridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this is the vorv wnrlt couiulete on which about forty of the best years ut wic ruuiui b ine were, o well employed in writing. It contains the entire vnrRhnlurv nf about 100,1X10 words, including the correct P"' tntf resliinl" mnuua'iu' in.e,- containing abOUl jou.oou square inches of printed surface, and U bound lu elotn nan inorucuo aim busbu. Until turtner notice we will furnish this valuaBle Dictionary First lo any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at ihe following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bad stamps marbled edges $i-oo. Halt Mo occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00 fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner, Ej-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 it once. SILVER'S CHAMPION Locky-. Mountain-:-Ncm THE DAILY BY MAIL. Subscription price reduced as follows: Uiie Year (by viuil) : : $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.iairpion of silver in the West, and should be in every home in the West, and in the hand, of every miner and business man in Colorado. w8end in your subscriptions at once. Address, tub Nn-vsra, Dollxrcr, Colo LUMBER! 1TE HAVE FOR 8AI.E ALL KINDS OF UN v t dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner. at .vhat is known as the ) SCOTT SA-XHT-IVIIXjIj. HER 1.000 FEET, KKt'OH, CLEAR, - $10 00 - 17 60 IF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, 1 lo.uu per l.uxi feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop. O. A. Ilamlitoa. Man'itr THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL .INES Run Two Fast Trains Daily Between St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicago, Milwaukee and all polnti In Wisconsin making connection in Chicago with all lines running East and South. Tickets sold and baggage checked through to ill noinU in the United Rtatea aud Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest tieket agent or J A3. C. POND, Ben. Past. andTkt Agt., MUwaakee, Wis. "As old aa the hills" and never excell ed. "Tried and proven" is the verdict o f millions. Simmons Liver Eegu- A?J?Ponly Liver medicine to which you can pin your faith for a cure.; A mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver and Kid an Pills neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder t o be taken dry or made into a tea. ' The King or Liver Medicines. " I have used yourSlrnmons Liver Regu lator and can coiiscienciously sav It is the king of all liver medicines, i consider it a medicine chest in itself. Geo. W. Jack son, Tacoma, Washington. WEVERI PACKAGE'S tiaa the Z Stamp in red on wrapper C? UICK TX JVC m t TO San Francisco And all point in California, via the Mt. Hhaata route of the Southern Pacific Co. The groat highway through California to ftl points East and South. Grand Hoenic Route of the Pacific Coast. Pullman Buffet Hleepers, Second-claw Sleepers Attached to express trains, affording supeno locommodations for second-class passengers. For rates, tickets, Bleeping oar reeervationH tc.. call upon or address . KOKHLKR, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst Sen F & P. Aj?t.. Portland. Oregon. National Bank ol Mw. WM. PEN LA NO, Kl. President. K BISHOP, Cashier. rRANSACTSTGEXEIUL BANKING BGSINES. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & S0LP HEPPNEli. tf ORJSUUr Free Medicine Golden Opportunity for Snffenti, Humanity. Physician (Jive their Kemeilies to the Peoph DO YOU SUFFER ? plS3w will send yon FREE OF QHAKOE a full course of specially prepared remedies best guitea to your case, vte wain youi fCTuwuicimnwu. We can cure the most aRRravated diseases 01 both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and deformities are modern and scientinc, acquire" by many year's experience, which enables us U guarantee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B. - We have the only positive cure for Ep ilepsv (fits) and Catarrh. References given I'eriuanently located. Old established. Dr. Williams Medical and suroical Insti tute, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. ARL YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ? The genius who invented the "Fifteen" pn le, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, has in ented a brand new one, which is going to bi the greatest on record. There is fnn, instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old an learned will Ond as much mystery in it as th young and unsophisticated. This great puzzh s the property of the New York Press Club, foi whom It was Invented by Bamuel Loyd, the great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newspapet workers in New York. Generous friends have elven J'25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "Press. Clul Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court New York City, will get you the mystery dj return mail. - H Hade in all styles and sizes. Lightest, I m rnncnst. easiest working, safett, simplest. EJ . ...H. mnat rnmnact. and most modem. For sale hy all dealer la arm,. Catalogues mailed free of The Harlin Fira Arms Co., New Haves, Cork., U. 8. A. SPILES! , t.nd Id one PAINLESS trtahrtent witnoul kuif.. iom or .im. i buuBMfl. riftult, nice -, t 11 tc, slo curM. .w yer. 7H' Qantloa Blank nd Bok Int. C.llorwrlu. K BR. H. B. BCTTS, I 833 pine Street. 8t. Louis, Mo. 'Sft'H'l rftal:RQFMAlI', till ar www . ". i v ali- furl 111 1-UIRI SIAflni' xf lO'-KUlai prlcH your hi " wiiii uiroi ir -vtfAvft witiufi .ft 7... - Ai. 1! I .rZ ' . "L-.j,. IJfai I uaya will ue lur i ytr uwiuiy KyLUx. printed n Kouiuie. laiel. Only lilrM-tot;. ; AjV guaranteeing l5Ml Z-7 T uuHtomers ; from iu.' jllaheni and manual- m-rTTi';. uirsrs yyu'il re,i-iv u,s' "1. VHliiuhn l.iokH. turners anipleM.rnaga.in-."!. I free and each ea"-- i tli one of your au-d thereon, i print and pi ur label addr willi one ofvourprlnted addrnw. ImIi-pasb-d thereon. EXTB.4 ! We w. alwi print and prepay postage on . your label addrew"- V) yon; wl.li. prevent tbeir being lost. J. A. VI Sof lleldavllle. N. :, writes : ; ' JmvijcTit adaresKln vrrtir f ltrli'i tl' k no your envelopes, oo.k v llfei l.ry i 'e "'rv ' ' 137.1f:iil. Mr addre you .-!.. . .;!. ....tit- .-l. -''s'of lii"i' fr.-m uII'iw'Ih ol I'..- V. - r WORLD'S KAIK DIRECTOR) CO., Ho. 147 Frankford and uirara ave. riiuaw phla, Pa. ca HORSE MEAT. tt I, Not Very Palatable Even to Han- gry Soldier. "You never ate horse flesh, I sup pose?" said Lieut Russell, of the Seventh United States cavalry, to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat man. "I have seen the t ime when I ate it with genuine relish, and that, too, without rany salt. It was in 1877, during Gen. Miles' Nez Perees campaign. Vve had followed the renegades up the Missouri to its con fluence with the Yellowstone, and the chase was so fast and exciting that we didn't realize how low our larder was getting until it was drained, and we were getting too far away from the base of supplies to replenish it. The game had all been driven out of the country ahead of us by the fleeing In dians, and when we finally caught up witn the reusltms anil forced them to fight we had almost nothing to cat for several days. We captured about seven hundred ponies from the Indians, some of them so round and sleelc and fat as to appear to us the finest meat in the world. Our butchers killed the youngest and fattest of the ponies that night af ter the battle, and as soon as they were skinned and dressed we had a feast that would have made Lucullus turn green with envy. We lived on ithis pony meat several days. It was cooked without salt and roasted over a spit, like a barbecued beef. The meat had a pe culiar, sweet taste, not at all palatable when I think of it now, and it was so fibrous that we could pull it apart in great strings. But it kept us from i starving, and I, therefore, can heartily recommend pony meat to people in dire straits." ORIGIN OF WHITECAPS. How This Noted ltand or Outlaw, Gained Its Name. "I suppose there are fewer people in this country who know the origin of the term 'whitecaps' than there are those who have fallen under the ban of the scoundrels in Indiana and other western states," said Hiram Berry, of New York, in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, "The term did not originate in this country, but its origin dates back nearly a century to County Kerry, Ire land. Nearly one hundred years ago, when Ireland was more populous than at present, and when the people were not so harassed by British misrule, there lived in County Kerry a large and influential family named Whitecap, who, whenever any of their neigh bors became too obstreperous or immoral, waited on them in the night, took them from their houses and gave them a sound thrashing with a cat-o'-ninc-tails as a warning to desist from their wrong i0i2;?intf RTilfilrvCere SfVne'envrltte caps, not white caps, two words, as they are written in this country. The pop ular impression is that the appellation comes from the form and color of the headdress that the Indiana regulators wear when perpetrating one of their outrages, but this is a mistake, as the history of the movement proves. The Whitecaps in Ireland were a terror to evil doers, and were of value to the good order of the society of their day, but I don't know that there is need for them in any part of America.' EXTINCT MAMMOTHS. Huge Bird, Which Have Disappeared from the Earth. Those who have read the story of "Sinbad, the Sailor," will bo interested to know that there is some foundation for the supposed-to-be fabulous stories he told of the roe and its monster eggs. Ornithologists have figured that it was a monster specimen of the cpinoris family of birds, which are known to have formerly lived in Madagascar. The prize-takers among the cpinoi-is stood (according to skeletons which have been found in guano beds) within a fraction of twelve feet high, and laid eggs, specimens of which arc now in existence, which were as large as a two gallon jug and had a holding capacity as great as one hundred and forty-eight good-sized hen's eggs! The giant moa, which did not become extinct until after Capt. Cook's visit to New Zealand, was larger, in point of weight and bulk at least, than Sinbad's roe. The moa was but nine feet high, but he weighed over a thousand pounds. It was so clumsy that Cook's sailors had no difficulty in killing several of them with hand spikes which were used about the ship. The great auk, an other species of birds now extinct, was not so remarkable for its size as for the fabulous sum of money now asked and given for specimens of its eggs. In the year 1889 an egg of the great auk sold in London for 11,225. A Woman's Paradise. The ideal spot, in the opinion of many of our American women, is the oasis of Ghardaia, in the Sahara desert. There the women have succeeded in emanci pating themselves to a remarkable de gree. When they marry they draw up their own marriage contract, and if the man in any way breaks it the woman is immediately free and will have no more to say to him. The Ghardaians are Mohammedans, and by the law of the prophet a man may have four wives The women, however, do not allow more than one, and polygamy is prac tically banished. They have also a pe culiar objection to drinking and smok- ing, and in many contracts the hus- band is told that if he falls into the fculf , ..,. habit of "consuming liquors or using tobacco" he will be divorced. Coincident Affliction. The people of Oottenburg, Sweden, will long remember old Gust Swansen on account of the curious ease of coincident affliction which followed him and his family through life. Old Gust, bis wife and their three children were all born August 13. Gust had his eyes put out by a powder explosion August 13, 1879. Dirkje and Altze, the two daughters, both became insane simul taneously on August 13, 18h0, nnd have both since died. Peter, the son, was killed by a pile driver August 13, 1633, and at last old Gust and his wife were both killed while crossing a railroad bridge near their home on August 13, EXILES FflOJI RUSSIA. Eemarkabla Success of the Men. nonites in Kansas. A Self-Sustaining and Independent Peopl ft'ho Have Nothing to Do With the Outside World Save In a Commercial Way. ljuick as are Americans to criticise the manners and customs of Russia, and inferior as the "subjects of the czar are frequently considered, the settlers on the western prairies might well learn a lesson of the Russians who have their unique settlements among them, The Mennonites, exiled from southern Russia because" of their religion, made as systematic an exodus as did the Is raelites of old, says a Kansas corre spondent of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. They sent out their agents to :;py out the land, and purchased one hundred thousand acres of the Santa Fe and Kansas Pneili,. rniKvnv f.,- homes. Then the people packed up visitea I!aron von Tresel, a poor noblo tlieir household goods and came to m.an of Mnnheim. in the grand duchy America. On the depot platforms they landed, wearing sheepskin coats, the woolly side out, and black kerchiefs "n10"? whieli was the bicycle, over their heads. They carried iron "The baron was a gi-eat person for in tealtettles and regarded the gazing Tentln- He spent all he had on his Americans with as much curiosity as ProJects' Bnd was in T reduced eir tliev themselves attracted. They built uum9tances- Still, he kept on with their villages of yellow limestone, the th.em' hvln on but ver3' little- IIiB houses having queer hip roofs, green mlduay meal consisted of a piece of blinds and double doors like those seen bread Bnd a sma11 bit of sausage. Peo in a mill. Curious ovens in which P)e called him the crazy baron. Among prairie hay or straw could be burned llis invcntion8 "as a contrivance for. overcame the lack of fuel, and a street snuninfe" out a candle when it burned looked for all the world as though it down the danger line, had dropped out of an illustration in a '"I'hls was 'or the benefit of folks Siberian sketch. Such names as "Cuth- wno read in bed. But the bicycle was erine stadl," "Lcberthal" and "Pfeif- tne Principal thing. The wheels were fer" grace, their towns, and no man not ot equal size' but nad n0 pedals. The of Memiouite peiwuasion is allowed in- seat TOSe UP from the mil'l'e and could side the limits as a resident, though be re?uIatt'd like a piano stool. You visitors are cordially welcomed. sat on that seat and propelled the ma The Menonnites' number several chine' b7 striking the feet against the thousand, but they are never heard of B'r,ounu' He invited me to take a ride in polities. They are busy tilling their with nim- IIe roao heside me on one one hundred thousand acres, raising andkoPt me from falling off the other stock, planting orchards and piling- up until 1 lparnd how to get along, wealth. The wide-awnke westerner, "It was Pretty awkward, and I re standing on the street corner explain- memopr that I scraped the toes of my ingtlie "contraction of the currency" shoes off i" the course of the journey, to a knot of listeners, sees a half-dozen We ro,le ab""t two English miles. The odd-looking wagons come toiling up faron never made anything out of his the road. They tire loaded with wheat inventions, but the government, I be am! solenin-i'aced Jleiinonniles. who Uve, gave him a little pension to keep guide the soberer teams, pocket the payment and trudge homeward. The orators hold forth in the country schoolhouse. and the eager real estate agent plats additions to the towns, but the Mennonites nnv no ji.ttiriti.,i, I either. They keen on li:.,.. i 1 .- wwi eiuier nsn or rah probably, their number considered, bit. A writer in the Rocky Mountain that Kansas affords. They take few News has known soino very ludicrous papers, they do not vote, they care things to happen when meanly mis nothing whether the government is re- ehievous Americans deluded Navajos publican or democratic in its manage- into eating either of those forbidden ment. They are as isolated as though dishes, and sometimes there have been they were upon a sea Island, except bb very serious retaliations for the 111 they bring their produce to the station, mannered joke. Rabbits are wonderful It is noticeable that nearly all the ly numerous in the Navajo country, be lauds are in the much discussed "arid ing molested only by feathered and h"lt." yet the .Mennonites never ask four-footed enemies; but the Indian aid or seed wheat. They prosper every who would tight to death sooner than vear. aud tlieir Homes are vernaoio storehouses of garden and held prod ucts. To step into them is like a visit to the. hind of Volga. Curious furni ture, strange garb nnif peculiar hab its impress one with the feeling that lie is in another land and another age. T!ie houses are for the most part sur rounded by stone walls and old coun try fashions in fencing burns, and im plements are everywhere apparent. They have their own minister, their own church and their own schools. When a "higher" education is desired (and some of the young people are as dony tipped arrow through him, pin forward in their ambition for learning ning him to the ground so that ho can as American youth) there is plenty of not tumble back into his home, as he money in the village bank to send has a wonderful faculty for doing even them to Europe or to some eastern col- n death, or a dark hand darts from be lege to acquire it. During the. hist hind like lightning, seizes his chunky year, when common complaint oi imru times went up from the dwellers on the plains, when seed wheat has been sent by the thousand bushels to Amer ican settlers, the Russians have con tinued to thrive. Their old-fashioned vehicles have come regularly to the railroads, and car load after car-load of wheat has been sent east. Lumber dealers in the towns where they do tlieir buying t ay that there has been no diminution in their purchases, and that by far the larger portion of their yards' sales have gone to their Itussian customers, 'i here is an important les son iu their success. They have shown by tlieir works what industry and fru gality can accomplish upon the prai ries, and what can be done with the right kind of effort. Still it is doubt ful if the American settler could bring himself aud his family to the grinding economy of European peasant life which the Mennonites have trans planted in their settlements. A Remarkable Cactus. A flower has been discovered in South America which is only visible when the wind blows. The shrub belongs to the eiietus family, and is about three feet high. The stem is covered with deud. watery-looking lumps In culm weather: then! lumps, however, need but a slip-lil breeze to make them un fold large flowers of a creamy white, which close and appear dead as soon as the windsnlisidcH . TZZ Negative. And said: Oo asv arp.r-B narar A Harp of Wood. Two Frenchmen, the brothers Torre, have invented a new kind of harp, madt entirely of wood. Instead of strings, the inventors use strips of American fir. The sound is produced, as in the ordi nary harp, hv the contact of the fingers, but the pla'yrs "ear leather gloves covered with' re:,i:i. The tone of the in strument is ot remarkable purity. The general mprcnndise establish ment formerly owned by Coffin 4 Mr Far land, has lately changed hands, now be ini? nnder tbe control and mansa'meir d Mercantile Compsnv, wbiob continues business at tbe old stand with a larger stook than ever. a Highest of all in Leavening ABSOLUTELY PURE BICYCLES.SIXTY YEARS AGO. luey Were Invented by a German Baron Who Called Theui "Treslnns." Cyclers will be interested in this talk from the Baltimore Sun: "It wa about the year 1S37," said William Boucher, Jr., one of our oKlest and hest-known citizens, recently, "that I of Baden, my native place, and he snowea me a number of inventions, him from want. lie called his bicycle invention the 'tresina. HUNTING THE PRAIRIE DOG. Navajo Indians Lure Them from Harrows with Uf It-m,... Their toucn a ueucious ruumu ti;w i niwr lly fond of the fat and querulous prairie , dog. That whole region abounds in "dog towns, ano uiey are ii-equeuuy -besieged by their swarthy foes. A Company, at Washington, U. 0., and Navajo will stick a bit of mirror in the j 'hey will prepare and send tbe neoessary entrance of a burrow and lie behind application, it Ibey find them entitled the little mound all day if need be to under the numerous laws enacted for secure the coveted prize. When Mr. I tuejr benefit. Address J usa ventures irom ins miuwiu uccp underground he sees a familiar image mocking him at the front door; and when he hurries out to confront the im nudent intruder, whizz! goes a chalce- neeic safely beyond tne reacn oi ins chisel-shaped tcet, and breaks his spine rith one swift snap. NOT ALWAYS PRETTY. Idolizing Notorious Women Fault ol ltcportera. When a woman becomes Involved in any escapade t hut renders her suddenly notorious she is invariably referred tc as beautiful, and generally a descrip tion more or less fanciful of her various charms is given. That enterprise on the part of correspondents, says the Chica go Herald, is entirely unnecessary, be cause it is not ahvj-ys the handsome woman who proves r.xt attractive to the opposite sex or is .-.I'-able of doing the most, mischief in Uvi world. This truth is well illustrated in the ease, of Mrs. Iletherington. She wan variously described as "ravishingly beautiful," as having a "doll face wit h a baby's complexion," and ns vainly conscious of her own charms. She passed through Chicago the other day, nnd a truthful reporter of the Herald describes her a plain. She is short and slightly built and has a sallow complexion and dark rings around the eyes. Perhaps such a description accords with the popular notions of beauty in Japan, that land of sallow complexions and little wom en, but we have different ideas here. Deeds, mortgages, the Gazette, office. etc , executed nl Awarded Highest U2 The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, .No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report akin THE WESTERN PEDAGOtilllfi. We are in receipt uf tbe May number of our state school paper. It exceed any of the former numb ts it value. Tbe paper this month contains innoy uew and valuable features. Tbe illus trated series on tbe schools of the state introduced by a paper on tbe Friends Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon. I'hese papers cannot fail to be of great value both to the sohools an 1 to tbe public. There are also seveml fiue articles liy our best writers mid the departments "Current Eveuts'-'Snturdiiy Thuughta," 'Educational News" "The Oracle Answers', Correspondents," etc., eaoh ooutnin much valuable reading for teacbers or parents. The niogazine bus about 60 pages of mutter, well printed aud arranged. We pronouuoe the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa tional monthly on tbe const. Everyone of onr readers ebould have the paper if tbey are at all interested in education. No teaoher school direc tor or student can get along well with out it. We will reoeive subscript. ons nt this office. Price only 81.00 a year. Wheu desired we will send the Western PedHiiniiue and Oszetie one jear lo one nddress for $300 Call and exnmine sniple copies. TeBOhers, direotors and parents, now jp the time mbscribe. tf . A. It. NOT1CK. We take this opportunity of informing onr subscribers that tbe new oommis "iouer of pensions lins been apooinled lie isun old soldier, aud we telievo ihnt soldiers and their heirs will re oeive justice at his hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radioal changes in the dmiuiatrntinn nt soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take ateps to make application at onoe, if ibey have not already done bo, in order to secure tbe benefit of the early filing uf tbeir olsiins in onse there should be any future pension legislation. Snob, legislation is seldom retroactive. Ihere fore it is of (.rent importance that ap plications be filed iu the department at I he earliest possible date. If the U. S soldiers, sailors, or their widows, ohildren or pare tits desire ta urmation in regard to pension matters, t,iev Bhoaj write to the Press Claims PRVHtl Of if Mil rnMPANV - v .... .... . ..w ... .... , John Weddkbiiurn, Msnsiting Attor ney, Washington, D. O., P. O. Box 885 tf. SPANISH PLEASURES. ems to He Uiithcr a Holemu and Mournful Tiling. lender of the oi-'liestra began to in the piano a brief, monotonous Th play air, and the 111:111 looking out be tween her hall-shut eyes began the Mahigiiena. It was a strange, piercing, Moorish chant, snys a writer in the Sat urday Iteview, sung in a high falsetto voice, in long, acute, trembling phrases a wail rut her than a song with pauses, as if to gain breath, between. A few words seemed to be repeated over and over again, with tremulous, inar ticulate eries that wavered ill time to a regularly beating rhythm. The sound was like nothing 1 have ever heard. It pierced the brain, i'. tortured one with a sort of delicious spasm. The next song had more of a regular melody, though still in this extraordi nary, strained voice, andstill with some thing of u lament in its monotony. I could not understand the words, but the woman's gestures left no doubt as to the character of the song. It was as sertively indecent, but with that curi ous kind of indi uc.v an almost reli gious solemnity wn performer and audi ienec which the Spaniards share with the eastern ra-es. Another song fol lowed, given with the same serious and collected indecency, and re-eived with the same serious and collected atten tion. H had a refrain of "Alleluia!" and tbe woman, I know not why, bor rowed a man's soft felt hat, turned down the brim, anil put it on before be ginning the R-in-r. When the applause was over she returned the hat, came back to the t:ible at. w hh-h she had been sitting, dismally enough, and yawned nore desperately than ever. lIonorH, World's Fair. Baking Powder. der