I1TM GAZETTE. -rl WXS'J? MOVE. Now that tbe campaign is ooming on every subscriber of the Gazette should provide himself or herself with a news-1 paper ut more than looal importance. The Gazette shop is the place to subscribe for all periodicals. Don't forget that the Oazette needs all arrearages, even though Christmas comes but oDoe a year. OFFICIAL PAPER NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. The man who advertised, gets the ctisli. Notice It. TWELFTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1894. WEEKLY ih'O. 5S2.I SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 217.1 SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUULIHHKD I uesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. Al.VAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. LT1B PATTISltSO.N Editor A: per year, $1.25 for six montliB, 75 cts. for three niouuis. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "33ja.3-IjE, " of Long Crock, Grant County, Oregon, is published, by the same com pany every Friday morning. Kubseriptioii price, fciper year. For advertising rates, address CiaiiT Xj. FATIIiS01T, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette," Heppuer, Oregon. THIS PAPER is kept on hie at E. V. Duke's 1. Advertising Agency, tu and 65 Merchants Eiclmngs, Ban FranoiBeo, California, where oou. racle for advertising can be made for it. THE GAZETTE'S AG NTS. Whgner, Arlington, Long Creek, Echo Camas l'ruirie,. . Nye, Or., B. A. Hunsaker Phill Heppner The Kagle Postmaster Oscar i)e Vatil H. C. Wright l'ostmiistcr tiiimiimu, kit.,.. Hamilton, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster ionc r. J- can I'i'ilirlQ Citv, Or R. It. Mciialey Canyon City, Or., S. L. l'arrish l hot lloelt, G. P. Hkeltou iwyvillo, Or., J. E. Know John Day, Or., F. I. McCallum Athena, Or John Edingtou i'eiidlcton, Or Postmaster .Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Klett Cns, Grant Co., Or., J. F. Allen Kittbt 5111c, Or Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh Upper Rhea Creek, B. F. Uevland I.'o'.ij 'iis, Or Postmaster Lone Hock. Or R. M. Johnson Gooseberry ' J- K. E'teb Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead buxiniiton Jas. Leach At; A 0 15NT WANTBD IN KVBBY PRECINCT. Union Paofic Railway-Local card. N". 10. mixed leavos Heppner 9:4ri p. m. daily except Sunday ;o, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. S), " leaves u. m. " u, " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a. m. daily except Monday. East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :16 a. m. West " " "leaves " ISM a. m. West bound lo-al freigh leaves Arlington 8115 a. ra., arrives Ht The U tiles 1:15 p. in'. Local passenger leaves The Dalles at 2:00 p. in. ftrrmB at Portland at 7:110 p m. United States Officials. Plesident Grover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Becemry of Slate Walter Q. Groshara Seciclary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Secretary of Interior Hoke Smith Secretary of War Daniel S. Lenient fcttwretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert Posl master-General Wilson S. HiBsell Attorney-General Kichard S. Olney Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Murlou State of Oregon. Governor 8. Pennoyer Secretary of State G. W. llciinde Treasurer Phil. Metsclian Supl. Public Instruction E. 11. MoElroy u (J. H. Mitchell Henarore j j jg.Dulpb. VJinger Hermann ( ongressuien J w h Kuil) Printer Frank t Baker )F. A. Moore W. P. Lord It. S. bean Seventh Judicial District. Circuit. -ludge W. Li. Bradshaw l';-os')CUtilitf Attorney W. H. WilsH Jlorrow County Officials. J: in Bomitor Henry liluckman tleprwcnlaiive J. N- Drown i oiiLty Judge Julius Keilhly ' Commissioners Geo. W. Vincent J.M. IWker. Clark J. W.Morrow Bheriff Geo. Noble. Treasurer W. J. Liezer Assessor It. L. haw ' Surveyor Isa Brown ' School Sup't W.L. Baling " t'orouer T. W. Ayers, Jr BWM.K3 . OtHoi! Major.. J- R. Simons Couneilmon O. E. Farnsworth. nl-. Lichtenthal, Otiu PatterBon, Julius Keithly, W. A. lohnstou, J. L. Yeuger. Kecorder A. A. lloberte. Iroasurer E. G- Slocum Marshal J. W. Rasmus. Precinct Oflleerp. Justice of the Peace F. J. Hallock Constable C. W. Hyctiani United'States band Officers. THE DALLIES, OB. J. W. Lewis Register T.S.Lang Receiver LA OBANDE, OB. B.F, Wilson Register J. H. Kobbins Receiver SECBET SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meet ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in their Castle Hall, National Hank build ing. Bojourning brothers cordially in vited to attend. J.N.Brown. C. C. W. V. Crawford, K. of H. & 8. tf RAWLINS POST, NO. 81. G. A. li. Maets at Islington, Or., the last Saturday of tcV. month. All veterans are invited to join, c. C. Boon. Geo. W. Hmith. Adjutant, tf Commander. PSOFESSIOlTi-u. A A. EOBERTS, Real Estate, Insnr i ance and Collections. Office in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. 030 PARCELS OF MAIL" till FOR 10 1-CENT STAMPS (rviikir nrua- i vimr mi- ' i dress if received wiilifn uij days will be for 1 ytnr boid!y j labels. Only !irert(.n jfLiaran teeing riS.OOO customers; frmn uf Ushers and inarm lec turers you'll revi probably, tliiusaii)f o valuable books, i.-Hnrr eampiPs.mi.ii'iizNie.-i.eu' All free ami mi'-ii mti- with one of vuur printed sul'tre- 1 l !: Pted themn. i:TKi! .: alo print and tre,ui p-jtaire or. ' your larjet aiidn'es lu n ; wu.i -stick nn your en tloppa, bo"V. " j-rfvpnt tii. ir In iug loM. J. A. . .. of Hei-Nville, N. C'., write; " ',-. J my ii rt-tJt Hiirirptiin irr i ' i. 6. ;iou i hi-"' -i:t ,i : WORLDS r'AI K DIRECTORY CO., No. HT Frankfoni and Girard Ave. Philadel phia, Pa. VALUABLE PRESENT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop iilar Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO 0UKREADERS liy a special arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FIIEE to each of our readers a year's subeoription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the American Fabmer, published at Springfield and Clevolund, Ohio. This offer is made to any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advance, and to any new subscribers who will pay one year in advanoe. The American 1'akmkk enjoys a large national circula tion, and ran KB among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re ceive the Amkkican Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oall promptly. Sample oopies oan be seen at our office. Webster's Unabridg D1GTI0HHRT. (l- k'SsSr' ii.SH BY BFEClAu ARKANOKMKNT WITH THE nuhliKlusrs. tv are able to nbtaln a nuiiilifir of tn- above book, and propose to furnish a uujjy iu uiti'ii ui uui HuuH;iiueio. Tlie dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and busiuens house. It tills a vacancy, and furnisliee knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated aud Ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reach, and refer to its coutenls every day in the year. As Boine have asked if thiB is really the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to suite we have learned direct from the publishers the met, that oils is the very work eomnleLe on which about forty of the best yearB ol the author's life weresoweli employed in writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of about iw,uuu worus, including tne correct Bpeu ing, derivation and definition of same, and is the regular standard Bize, containing about 8UO,OUO square inches of printed surface, and is bound in cloth half morocco and sLeeu. Until further notice we will furnish Ihis valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bact stamps, marbled edges, $1-00, Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00. Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. atf-As the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low prioes, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of tills great opportunity to attend to It SILVER'S OIIA.MPION o :THEee WE DAILY BY MAIL Subscription price reduced rb follow: 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 1b the only consistent ciamplon of silver in the West, and should be in every home in the West, and in the hands of every miner and business man In Colorado. 8end in your subscriptions at once. Address, TUB NEWS, Doiivor, Colo. LUMBER! T7E HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN tf dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is known as the SCOTT SWSTIVCIXjIj. PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, " " " CLEAR, fF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD I VM per 1,(XX) feet, additional. I. HAMILTON, Prop, O. 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Thii great puzzle s the property of the New York Press Clut for whom it was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newspaper workers in New York. Generous friends have given 25,0O0 in prizes for the successful puzzle Bolvers. TEN CENTb sent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mail. Made In all style anil sizes. Lightest, strongest, easiest vorkuig, safest, simplest. most accurate, most compact, and most I modern. For sale by all dealers In arms. Catalogues mailed free by The Marlin Firs Arms Co., New Havew, Cora., 0. S. A. Caveats, Trade-marks, Design Patents, Copyrights, And all Patent buslocu conducted fcr MODERATE FEES. Information and advice given to la venters wlthool fibarge. Address ' PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN WEOOERBURN, AJanaglng Attorney, O. Box 463. WAsnmriTOir, D. C 7"Tijls Company Is managed by a combination of the Isrrt-ft and most influential newir.er In the I r.h- 'I Si.itsvfor the express purpoK of proteel ( n-j Ihrlr utM4.rlber aifslnit a'jaertaXFUlooa sn.i in. oirtpetent Patent Axent., and eas-a papes I rlctinif this a1 vertlwment Toadies for tbe responsU lAi'.v and blgb stand ag of tbe Press Clalina Compaoi. 1 1 -y- A THE HORSE. Why That Animal Whs Orlven Before It Was Hidden. Canon Taylor, in that most interest ing book, '"The Origin of the Aryans, " has raised once more a question which has often attracted the attention of scholars, especially those interested in the Homeric poems, says the Academy. Why is it that in the earliest records of the Greeks, Egyptians, Assyrians, Indians, and Celts we find the horse used for drawing chariots, but not yet for riding? Canon Taylor remarks: "It is curious to notice at how late a period men first ventured to mount 'the swift one;' " and he goes on to say that there is nothing in the "Kijj Veda" to show that the art of riding was practiced, and that our first notice of it is in the "Zend Avesta." The Homeric Greeks employed the horse almost exclusively for the chariot, riding being only alluded to in some two or three isolated passages, as when Odysseus and Dioinedes rode to the ships the horses of Rhesus which they had captured. This, however, shows that it was hardly from fear that the Greeks did not habitually ride instead of drive their steeds. The same remark applies to tho ancient Britons, who, according to the ancient accounts, performed wonderful feats of agility in runningout and standing upon the pole of the chariot. The true solution may probably be this: The primitive horse that ranged over the plains of Europe and Asia was too small when he was first domesti cated to carry a man for any great time or distance on his back. This, of course, would render him practically useless for warfare. There is ample evidence to prove that the primitive wild horse was of very diminutive size. Probably of all his descendants the Shetland pony is his best represent ative. Canon Taylor says (speaking ol the enormous deposit of their bones found at Solutre, near Maeon, which contains from twenty thousand to forty thousand skeletons) : "This primitive horse was a diminu tive animal, not much larger than an ass, standing about thirteen hands high, the largest specimens not exceed ing fourteen hands. (ut the head was of disproportionate size, and the teeth were very powerful. lie resembled the tarpan or wild horse of the Caspian eteppes." Even long; after he had been domesti cated he remained very small, as is proved by the bits made of bronze and staghorn which have been found at Mo ringen and Auvernier, which belong to the latest bronze age. "These bits are only three and one half inches wide, and could now be hardly used for a child's pony." Let us now turn to Herodotus, where, speaking of the unknown regions to tho north of the Danube, he sayN that the only people he can learn of ns inhab iting the region arc called Nijjyannae, who wear the costume of tbe .Modes, and whose horses are sliajro-y all over the body, being covered with hair to a depth of five lingers, and are small and flat nosed and incapable of. carrying men, but when yoked under chariots they are very swift, and that the na tives accordingly drive, chariots. This description of the external appearance of the little horses of the Sigyannae of central Europe agrees very well with that of the' (sketches found near Ma con. The sinions sh'ipe of the head tallies well with the ugly shaped skull and powerful jaws of the bone de posits. We can . hardly doubt that we have here primitive horses such as those whose diminutive bits have been found in the later lake dwellings of Switzer land. It seems to me then that the reason Herodotus here assigns for the fact that this tribe of central Europe drove their horses instead of riding them is the true explanation why all early peoples alike employed the horse for driving long before they ever habit ually practiced riding. It was only after generation ,f domestication that, under careful feeding und breeding, the horse became of f.uiik'ient ize to carry a man on his back with ease. That size was held to be ( f great importance by the Homeric ln-eks is proved by Iliad x.'-;"it. A I'letured Com. One of the strangest lnpirjarinn freaks that has ever come within the knowl edge of diamor.d experts is now on view at the Hums Hotel, ia Kimberly, South Africa. The :.t ine, says the Jeweler's Weekly, is in shape and size like a pigeon's egg. of a dark brown color ex ternally, mid at first i.ight opaque. If viewed in a dark place, with a candle pr other light m placed that the rays passthrr.-r-'h the :,Vme before fallingon the retina, however, one sees distinctly the image of a man from the waist up ward. Turning the pebble, he sees at another point a woman's face, partly concealed by lionvy tresses, and yet, again, on iMiother pnrtionof the surface being applied to tin: 03-0, a moonlit cloud sk'-l::li is dearly dilineated. The stone was found in a debris wash up, and 10 10s have been refused for it. A Mr. liergsmu, a debris washer, was the finder of the remark able Stop". Lynch Law Among Kmte. In the neighborhood of Hurley the other day, says the Leeds (Eng.) Post, a gentleman looking over a wall saw a dead hen in the field. Presently a ;at ran up, snuffed at the defunct fowl with much satisfaction and went away in some haste. The onlooker, who is a student of natural history, knew what that meant, and removed the hen from the spot. In a minute or two the rat came back with half a dozen friends, with the evident intention of removing the car cass for future use. Arriving at the spot where the fowl had Iain, the rat raised a loud squeak of astonishment at its absence. In a trice the other rats fell upon him so savagely that they left him dead on the field as a warning not to play practical jokes with his friends Heeds, mortgages, ele, executed at the Gazette office. LABOR BUREAU NEEDED. Men Ferlsh In Cities Where There Is Work, liecause They Caouot rind It. I have heard it said a thousand times that in this busy city of New York no one who really wants work need go idle long; but in the best season, when work and wages are most plentiful, that is only half true, says Jacob A. lliis in the Forum. The work may be there, aud at the same time thousands may be go ing around looking very hard for it, yet fail to find it. They do not know where to look and there is no one to tell them. Perhaps they do not know enough of our language to ask and be understood. Some agency is needed to bring the work and those who own it together un der auspices that would inspire confi dence on both sides. I remember being called a year or 'two ago, in my capac ity as police reporter, to a tenement on the West side I think it was in West Thirty-seventh street where a painter had that day cut his throat. Standing there by the eo e I learned from the sobbing widow t..at the man was des perate for want of work. He had been on the street for weeks and his children were starving. It happened that 1 had been for just the same length of time looking for a man to paint my house out in the country, where painters were scarce and very busy. Iliad just made up my mind to adver tise t'lat day. There lay this painter dead because lie could find no one tc give him work, while I would have been glad to pay him more than the wages of his trade to get him to work fur me. Had there been any means of bringing us together to which we would both naturally have resorted, he would have been alive aud his family self-supporting. Now it seemed certain to be come a burden upon the public. It was not the ouly instance of that sort by very many I had come across. I thought then, and I think now, that some great central labor bureau con ducted by a thoroughly responsible or ganization that could appeal to the community with the certainty, not only of enlisting tho aid of employers, but also of reaching the unemployed, would be one of the greatest boons that could be conferred upon the poor, HOW TO ROLL AN UMBRELLA. Almost Everybody loes It Wrone;, Al though tho lilKlit Way Is Simple. "No, not that wayl I never knew one man in a hundred to do it right," said the clerk in the umbrella store. His remarks were directed at a cus tomer who had proceeded to roll up a recently purchased umbrella to return it to its case, says the New York Sun. He had done what .. ninety-nine per cent, of persons who handle umbrellas do when they attempt to gather the folds of cloth in a neat roll around the stick. He had grasped the handle with his right hand and was twisting the silk through with his left hand. "That will spoil that umbrella when you have repeated the operation half a dozen times," the clerk continued, "and then you will be coming here and com plaining that that six dollar umbrella wasn't worth fifty aents. "Now, see what you were doing! You were making a pretty roll, but did you notice tliat you were twisting the ribs and braces in a spiral around that stick as well as the cloth? You may have noticed that your umbrella sticks and catches when you try to raise it. "That's because you don't know how to roll it. Y'ou twist the joints of the ribs and braces all out of shape. There, you see, you havo twisted the ends of those ribs all around in a bunch on one side of the handle. Now, let me show you how an umbrella should bo rolled." The clerk took the maltreated article, shook out the folds of silk and worked the spiral out of tho ribs and proceeded to demonstrate the proper methods of umbrella rolling. Grasping the handle iu his right hand, he encircled the silk at the tip with his left, which he slipped down about half-way of theeloth, press, ing tho ribs and braces firmly against the stick. The right hand was then shifted to the tips of the ribs, which were held firmly against the stick, while the left hand adjusted the roll of cloth around them. liy this method the ribs were kept straight along the stick and not partly twisted around it, as the custo mer's roll. By Pigeon Poat. Englishmen enjoy in France a curl ous privilege which is rigidly withheld from Germans and Belgians. It is that of flying carrier-pigeons, on the strict condition, however, that both birds and Benders are of lirilish nationality. In iielgium alone there are at the present moment six hundred thousand racing birds, which, in ease of a war, would be placed at the disposal of the govern ment. Every bird of this number is ad-1 mirably trained. In days gone by theii training used to take place in the south of France, but tliat is now interdicted, and no bird from Iielgium or Germany is allowed in France. The French gov ernment, of course, fears that in the event of a war, trained pigeons would be smuggled into the interior, thus ena bling information tf) be carried to th belligerent country. A Terns Woman's Ureal Itanrh. Richard Harding Davis thus writes ol lady who runs a Texas ranch: "When ladies go to call on Mrs. Richard King, after they have reached tho front gate they have to drive ten miles up the walk to the front door. Hut the baker, when he wants to get at the kitchen, must drive thirty miles from the back gate. Mrs. King lives on her ranch, forty-five miles south of Corpus Christi. Over her acres roam one hundred thou sand heail of cuttle. These are attend ed by three hundred cowboys and twelve hundred ponies. When there crimes an order from a Chicago butcher for one thousand head of cattle, it is but short work to round them up and. send them on their way. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob would find this life Weal ly patriarchal. And none tho less so by reason of the modem improve ments of the home and house parties of this lady of large acres and many cattle." Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABSOIlj A GREAT RABBIT HUNT. Otsc a Thousand Iluniiles Killed In One Day. Many of have engaged in coon hunts, fox hunts and wolf hunts; others have hunted bear, deer, chickens, quail, etc., and every one of us have, when there was a good heavy snow on the grdund, bundled up warm, taken the family guns from the corner, and with old "Spot" or old "Tige" sallied forth some sold winter morning to take ad vantage of any and every rabbit which might sally forth from its burrow in quest of food. Hut very few persons, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, have ever engaged in such a hunt for rabbits as a party of young men living near Homer, 111., participated in one day lately. In the absence of all large game and the prohibition as to shooting chickens and quails, the young farmers pass away the monotony of the winter days by or ganizing hunting parties, which enter into competition as to which party will bring in the mast game by a given time. Usually these competition hunts are be tween the young men of different neigh borhoods, and neighborhood "honor" is a big thing in this country. One day a very exciting hunt was made by two parties of farmers living near Homer, which on account of the number of men engaged and the amount of game bagged will be household lore in the neighborhood for many winters. There was one company of twenty-five men, and another of twenty-four men. All had to have their game in by seven o'clock in the evening and most of the men started in quest of "Brer Rabbit" before daylight. "And they gathered them in from highways and hedges," for when the count wns made in the evening one party had secured Olllt rab bits, while the other had slain 525, mak ing a total of 1,158. A sumptuous sup per was spread that night, for which tho defeated party had to pay Then the rabbits were sold and the money di vided into three purses which were pre sented to the men who killed the most rabbits. Probably so large a number of rabbits were never before killed by one party in Illinois in one day. . A CRAB-CATCHING DOG. The Queer Sport ludulujori hi by a Down Kttsl Canine. I have seen mention in the Forest and Stream, says a correspondent of that paper, of one dog that eauglitsuck ers and another with a preference lor catfish. I do not for a moment doubt either of these dog-fishing stories, for I once knew a dog that took great de light in catching crabs; not soft crabs', but histy, hard ones, capable of making a good fight. When about twelve years of age I used to spend my vacation at a large farm on a tributary of the Chesa peake bay. Besides myself there was another small boy and two dogs at his house. One of the dogs was a large Newfoundland and the other was one of those medium-sized, puzzling combina tions of short-hair and 1 j particular color probably an all-around dog, as concerned his breeding. Oik; day i no ticed the large dog wading about in tl.o shallow water at the foot of the yard and evidently searching for something. I found that ho was looking for crabs. When a crab was discovered hu would prance around it and, after making sev eral attempts, seize it iu his nioulh and bring it up on the beach and then play with it, much as a cat does with a mouse, until the poor crab was either dead or helplessly exhausted. lie seemed to do tins for the mere sport of the thing, barking all the time in a tone that denoted excitement rather than anger. He never ate the crabs after killing them. The crabs fought back to the best of their ability, and it was often diilicult to say which had the tightest grip, dog or crab, for the crab would fasten on to some portion of the dog's mouth with both of his powerful pinchers, and it would require much shaking before he would drop oil. Victoria's Throne. The English throne, used in the cor snation ceremonies of the kings and queens of Great Britain, is simply an old oaken chair of curious pattern ami great antiquity. Ages of use (it is known to have been used in its present capacity for more than seven hundred years) have made the old frame as hard and as tough as iron. The magic power attributed to the old relic lies in the seat, which is a large, rough sandstone, Ages before it was trimmed in velvets and gold for the use of the Stuarts and the Tudors it served as a seat for the early kings of Scotland; tradition even asserts that it is the identical stone upon which the patriarch Jacob rested his head the night he had his wonder ful dream. A warded IJilifiHt npM kM The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used In Millions of Homes 40 Years the Staudard alum bwder mix THE WESTERN rKIlAGOUUlS. We are in receipt of the May n amber of our state school paper. It eioeed my of the former numbers in value. The paper this month oontains many new and valuable features. The illua rated serieB on the sohools of the state s introduced by a paper on tbe Friends Polytechnic institute at Salem, Oregon, these papers oannot fail to be of great 'slnebothto the sohools an! to the public. There are also several fine articles y our best writers and the departments "Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts," "Eduoational News" "The Oraole Answers, Correspondents," etc, eaoh oontuin much valuable reading for teachers or parents. The magazine hBs about BO pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounoe the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa tional monthly on the const. Everyone of our readers should have the paper if tbey ore at all interested in education. No teacher school direc tor or student can get along well with out it. We will receive snbsoript.ona at this office. Price only $1.00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and (luzetle one year to one address for $3.00. Call and examine sample oopies. Teachers, directors and parents, nuw is tbe time tn subscribe, tf 0. A. U. NOTICE, We take this opportunity of iuformiug our subscribers that the new oommis iouer of pensions has been apoointed He iBan old soldier, and we believe hat Boldiera and their heirs will re wive juetioe at bis hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radioal ' changes in the administration of pension ..ffnirs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that U. S, soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application at once, if they have not already done so, in ordor to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in cuse there should be any future pension legislation. Suoh legislation is seldom retroactive. Ihere j fore it is of great importance that ap plications be filed in tbe department at the earliest possible date. If tbe U, 8. soldiers, sailors, or their vidowa, ohildren or parents desire in irmation iu regard to pension matters, 'iey should write to the Press Claims onipany, at Washington, D. 0., and tiey will prepare and send the neoessary pplication, if they find them entitled uder the numerous laws enacted for heir benefit. Address PKKHS CLAIMS COMPANY, J iiin VVf.ddkuhi UN, Managing Attor n y, Washington, D. 0., P. O. Box 8H5 tf. SEA CANARIES. 3uer Shellfish That Have lleen Provided with a Temporary Name. A peculiar kind of shellfish, the like )f which has never been seen ou tho iound, was fished out of two hundred feet of water near Five-Mile point tho ither muming by a rock cod fisherman, lays the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The man felt a tug at his line and began pulling in. Judging from the weight he concluded that he must have -aught the grandfather of all the rock xnl in the sound. When he had taken in all his line he was astonished to find that he hail not only landed a splendid Bve-and-a-half-pound cod, but also a rock full of porforatious, to which wero ittiu'hed six lively shellfish, each as big is one's list, and somewhat resembling gigantic mussels. The shells of tho llsh were imbedded in the rock, and as wion as the rock was taken out of the water the fish craned their lung necks mt of the shells, just as a turtle would. The necks of the fish were unlike nytling the fisherman had ever mcii; they resembled slightly the yellow mouth of the lamprey eel. Their mouths wore pointed and surmounted by a hard, brown colored beak, which they opened and shut precisely as a robin dues, The fish and their abode were held together by means of the stout roots if a sea weed which had grown around them, and the whole weighed eight and 1 half pounds. The fisherman took the siriosity to the Denver market, and there It was placed on exhibition anil ittraotoil considerable attention. Iu he ubsem-e of a more S"icntilU name, uie of the men connected with the narket named the shellfish "sea ca- Honors, World's1 Fair. Baking Powder PURE