A WISE MOVE. Now tbat (be campaign it coming on every subscriber of tbe Gazette should provide himself or herself with a news paper of more tbau local importance. Tbe Guzette shop is tbe place to subscribe for all periodicals. Don't fomet tbat the LU 1 11J. OFFICIAL PAPER NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. Oazette needs all arrearages, even The man who advertise, gets the cash. Notice it. though Christmas comes bnt oooe a, year. TWELFTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY. MAY 18, 1894. WEEKLY WO. 684.1 SEMI-WF.EKLY NO. 232. S LM 1 .vliEKLY VAUA I I' PUHUCHKD Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE .'ATTE11S0N PUBLISHING COMPANY ALVAH W. PATTERSON. OTIS PATTMtSON UlaiiHtffr. ,. Editor A' 9.5ii per year, $!.. for six months, 75 el-, for three mum lib. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "EAaLB," of Umg Creek, tiraut County. Oregon, 1b published by the name i-oiii-priuy every Friday morning, subscription nric, fiiber year. FuradvertiHiurates.addreKK bIir Xi. FATTESSOIT, Editor and UanaKer, Long Creek, Oregou, or "uaerte." Hcppuer, oi eyuu. TVHltS PAPKK is kt.pt on hie at E. (.. Itakw1 AiWerlisuiB Ayeuuy, ri4 und K5 Merelian ExcimnKM.tiHii iraiicisuu. Calitoniia, where eiiu racie for auvertisiiiB i;au be made for it. THE (HZKTTK'S &U '-NTS. Warner Arlinnton, Lou: reuk, Echo. Ctimiifs l'rairle, Nye, Or H11rd11iM.11, Or., Hamilton, Grant On., Or. lone Prairie City, Or., Dmivtiii Ctlv. Or . B. A. HuiiKaket ..i'hill llepniuM 'I he Lav le l'(iriiiiisl r . . OKcHr He Vaul ... ii. C. H right I'ob in hum I'ORtllLHhlW T. J. l.'iirl . .11. R. Mcdhilej . L. Parrish Pilot Koek, Ci. P. skeltoi. IJayville, Or., J. E. imiuh John Day, Or., 1- MuOilliim Athena, Or John EdiiiKtoi. Pendleton, Or., I'ohtmiisier Mount Vernon. Grant Co.. Or IWiuawlur Shelby, or .Miss ritella Fletl Fox, Grant Co. , Or., J. F. Allen Mrs. Andrew AshLtauKh B. F. Hevhiinl PoBtniHHter K. M. Johnson J. K. K tel. Herbert HHlnti'ml Jhb. Leach Eiirht Mile. or... ... Upper RJiea Creek,. DoukIus, Or Lone Uuck, or Gooseberry Condon, Oregon UjiiiiKion.. AN AUKMT WANTKD IN KVEBY I'BKUINCT. Union Pacfic Railway-Local card N, 10. mixed leaves Heppmti 9:4" p. tii dai'j except Sunday iu. "4 ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. y, " lnavca " a m. " Vt, " ar. at Heppner 5iUu a. m. dnil) except IVlondny. East bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1: . m Went ' ' " leavHt " 1:2-1 a. m West bonnd lo al fr SrIi leaV b Arli gton 8 35 a. m., a rives t The 1)-Hf t:l p. m. Liual paKHeng r leavm Th Ualluaa. a:OJp. m.uinv s at Portland at 7:Up in. OmCX-A-X. DIBECTORT. Ht.itA.i j I Piesident Onmr C1.to1.ik1 Vioe-presuimit Ail ai 8'eviiwiu ttou-omry ot Slut Waller UrH-liMin tiecr-otary ol Treasury Join. (i. I rnl'- Snctelary of lulermr H'J " Becreiury of War Damt.1 B. Uiuunl Secretary of Navy ll'lfy V i 1-osluwBlBr-Unuoral ili-ou S-Biw"-!! AUoriiej-Ueuorul .Kicbi.nl S. Ou.ey Secretary of Aunuulturo J. Bterliug Jlorion State ot OrngoB. Governor S- rennoyer Soornuiryof Slam J. Vv . JlcUi iut Treaaurur H"'- 8aut. t'uUic lumrui tion k.. U. Mct.lro I J. II. Milulii. Hnnalore J. N.D,ilt.h l Hinger iifnuauii Consreasuien J w. u. bHi r BapremeJodao j Ki" Suvrutll Juilielal IMatrlel. Oirouit Jmlse Wv.L-h'w!"'?' I'rocatiuif Atlorney.. " " " Slmrow Dooutj Olttiial". ,mi Senator Henry Blackinai, KcoretwutatiTe i f' !,v"r','iW,1.' i ..nnty.ludKe s 11 !',''" .P1""1, (J iiiimisBionera beo. . Vincent J.U. bakar. Clerk J',-MrL'! Hherilf ;"" foble- Treasnrer W. J . L, wei ' AhHeBBor I- k;, ,m Wurveyor ...I Brow. aohool Bup't ...JJ. l- "lja - t'oronur I . W. yei-b. J UEPPNKa TOWN OFFIOKflS. jjvoi J- K. Simons Uouni'llmwi O. E. FamBWortl.. M Lichtelitlml, -ti Puttr8on, J.Ulus Keithly. W. A. loliuotou, J. L. Yoagar. ..... . Boor.lel Treaaurel , iu .. Marshal J- W. KuBiiia.. Piviiiict Oflli'e'f. Justice of the I'eace , CouBlaWe I" W.hjutiarJ. Uiilteil Mte l.m.d Otticem. TUB OALLES. ua. . W. Lewis J is ' T.B.Lang llKMi" ' LA OBAN. , Oa. B.F, Wi'son R-iti'te. l.a KobbinB lleiwiver SECHET SOCIETIES. Uorii lHige No. 20 R. of F. meetB h. t:. if- J their Can I Hall, National Hank liuil.l- llttf. WJJOUrniUK ori.iiir" .-.t ..ait. w vilwl In nil. .nil. J. N. BllOW.N. ('. W. V. ClIAWFOUD, h.. l II. dL a. tf KAWUNS l'OST, NJ. 81. G. A.B. Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of iRch month. All veterans are inviteri to ioi.i. C. U. Hoon, Aiiintont, tf Gko. W. Smith Coinraan.lpr. Caveats, Trade-marks, Design Fatenls, Copyrights And sll Patent business conducted fcr MODERATE FEES. Information and advice Iven to Inventors without thftrge. Addreia PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN WEDDRBURK, Uauaglns Attorney, ". O. Box 403, ASHIXCION, U. U ftTTIii. Com:.ai.y la managed by a com' '. nation ot th' l-p.t rnd m..ft Influential nt'w.tn' n la the. I .-; i 1! ct .Tcs, fur i ri'T' a purro3 of protect la thrlr u1rrlr. iln-t uMiTupi.loni 1 ..I . . ii u. tt:.t I"j.. 3t A-:ents, and ea: Ii panel (riLtip ' illii -lv. iM-oia: vonciiesfOftb. rt spor it VHItyan.l nisiindlasof ibe PiesaC'.alir.iConiwmr Rnro. the ieeler. is tbr :i,aD to fix nt vonr Htoh or flock. -e keels a full I took of every thing pertaining to bia Irons r. hi n A Year's Subscription to a Top ular Agricultural Paper GlYHNFKI;!-; IU OURREADERS tiy a special arrangement with tbe lnljilu.rs we are prepared to furnish I'T.KE to each of our readers a yenr's 'iilMOriptioD to tbe popular monthly HKriviillurul jouruiil, the American Faumeu. lublished at Sprinfiold and Clevelimd, Obio. Tlii" ntier i Piade to any of our sub Horibeis who will pay up all arrearages n siiliai-ription and one year in advunoe, hikI to nn new HnbHcribem wlio will pay mi' eni !u a.lvaiioe. The American p'ahmku etijoye a liire untional oircnla lmi, and raniiH among the leading 'Kriuiiltnnii papers. By this arraujre neiit it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re vive tbe Amkhioan Farmeb for one ear, II will be to your advantage to mil promptly. Sample copies can be . en at our orlii'e. oistioiw. puUiibiicrs, a e are aoie 10 ubtaiu a uuuibei uupy to uu.cn oi our suubcrxuers, me uictiotmrj in a neeebbity in every home, tichoul ai.U oubiLiebti houoe. it nils a vacancy, ami inruibheH knovvieuge which no one hun aieOuiuervoiuii.es ui me choicest books could supply, oiiitg and old, educated and ignorant, ricit anu poor, snouiu nave it vviiinu reach, aim reier lu ltis cunieiiis every uay iu the year. Ab some nae askeu ii uiib is really the Or Ik- mai vtubbiers L uabriuged Ifictiouary, we are ttijie lu siaie ve nave ltariied direct irom Uu pubiibtiuis me lael, thai this is the very work cum uie le on t Inch about torty ol the best yearb A'i t'l!itl&? "11" C'jl.iUlHo Wtf M MM) 1 WULUlU Ui abvMt lou.ouo w urda, including tne correct spell ing, Uerivatiou anu ueunllluu ol same, aim it .1. it.yiiuir Kiandard size, couiainiug about juo.uou B4uaie inciies oi panted sunace, and h OOUUU 111 ClUlll llttil LUU1UCCU H.I1U BUCCU. Until turtner notice we will furnish this valuaole Uictonary First lo any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third -To any subscriber now ;n arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at Lhe following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and a sumps marbled edges $1-00. Halt Mo occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marDied edges, $1.50. Full Sheep oouno leather la e I , marbled edges, $2.00 f-itty cents added in all cases for express dge to Heppner ,0T-B the publiBhers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low prices, we advise all who deBire to avail them selves of (his great opportunity to attend to fi it once. SILVKK'S CHiMPION TB R llocky-. Mountain-:-Ncws WE DAILY-BY MAIL SubBiTlption price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 Oil Thr- e Months " : 1 50 ine Month " : : SO (HE WEEKLY BY MAIL. One Year (in advance) : $1 00 The News is the only consistent c .airpion of silver in the West, and should be In every home iu the Went, and lu the hands of every miner 411.1 tMiNlueRB man In Colorado. Send in v.. or aubiicr.ptious at once. Addreas, THE NEWS, Denver. Colo LUMBER! .VE HAVE FDK HALE ALL KINDS OF CN it drensed Lumber, 16iuileoi Heppner, al .vhat la known aa the "SCOTT SAWMIIjIj P K 1,01)0 FEKT, Kol'OH, CLEAR, - 110 00 - 17 50 TF DEUVEKKD IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD L lo.uo per l.oou feet, wMitional. I.. HAMILTON, Prop. D. A. Humllton.Mon'ttf THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains Daily Between b't. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicapo Mlhiaukce and all points In Wisconsin making connection lo Chicago with all lines running East and South. Tickets sold and baeeagc checked through to all polnta in the United Stales and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest ' tteket eu.t or iki. C. POSD, tma. tut. s4Tkt. Aajt, Uilwaoks. Wui, The Orlgltial Webster's Write "As ol.i an the hills" anil never excell ed. " Trie.l anil proven" is the verdict o f millions. 8 i m m ous Liver Eegu lator is tho - . Lit' rnedicino to which you can pin your faith for a euro. A mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver and Kid Pills neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made intoa tea. The King of Liver Mi-illplnes. " T have usod yoursimmons Liver ftpsru Jator und i'uii cousi-it'iiciously suv ii is l lie kinu of nil livi'r medii'iues, l' eon'sider It a lnedi.-lno eliest In itscir. Geo. V. Jack Son, Tucoina, Wuslii nylon. 3-EVKUY I'ACKAOF,-C ilas the Z Stamp In red uu wrapper QUICK T -TO x. tvt: ta s SSran lranelseo Knd alt pointo in California, via the Mt, bhastt. route f the Southern Pacific Co. The Kriat hishway Ihrnup-h ('alifcn-nia to all pointe Last and Suttth. (J-rand iconic Houte of thn Pacific tmst. Pull man Huff at Bleppere, SttCond-idfisM Hlwtiers Attached to ezprpHB trains, afford1 nu pnporior 'ccotninodatious for seeond-clHss iwwHnnRnre. For Tdtcs, tiokotf., sloepinfr oar reservations, ite. oail npon or address i. KOEHLKK, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, AsHt en. F. it P. a gt. . Portland, Oregon. iaiiial li$ of Mm. WH. PEN LAND, KD. K lilKIlOP. Piviile.it. Tasliier. fUANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BL51XESS . UUIjTjKiUIIUINH Made on Favonible TorniB. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OKEOON Free Medicine ! k Golden Opportnuily for Suffering Hn inanity. Physicians Give their He medies to the People n1 VflU Cl'lrtril 1 Write im at once, explain PU llll Oil I LIS f I,,!- vnur trouble, mid wo u-lll von FIlKR (IP cilA I (,l: a lull Conine of BiiM'infly prepared veniedii-K ln-ht united to yOUr CK8C. Ve Waill yoill leuoiiiimn.uuuuu. We can cure the most nuKravateil 'llseasei oi both 8CXCB. Our treatment lor till dinciiHi'H and defi)nniliei.are modern and scieutilie. ni'iinred by many year'B experience, w Inch eiuibicH uh lo u'uftraiitee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B. We have tbe only positive cure for Ep ilepsy flits) and Catarrh, lieterenci's given. I'eriiianeniiy locaieu. uiu caitioimiicu. I.I.IAM8 MEDICAI. AND StlKliP AL TNBTI- tutr, 719 Market street, ban r riuiciHco, cai. ARE VOU ANY AT PUZZLES ? The (renins who invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, has in vented a brand new one, which is going to be the greatest on record. There is fun, instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old and learned will find as much mystery in it as the voting and unsophisticated. This great puzzle a the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, the ijreat puzzleist, to be Rold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newnpaper workers in New York. Generous friends have given $'J',00oin prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN EN I ts pent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you tho mystery by return mail. Made In all styles and Bites. Lightest, w strongest, easiest vrorkinff, safest, simplest, most accurate, most compact, and most modem. For sale by all dculeis In onus. Catalogues mailed free by Tho 1'arlia lira Arms Co., New Havtw, Cons., TJ. S. A. Z-MA lna-AWYLAPYcanccta TOlnnl.lesccretinrj.j Icoin si-',.w, anaaruupersuma iur.i.. Mrs. V. M. APP. CO. 1 PlfE STB F FT. ST. I ' f i :!h;"::o,.r,.lv'l;; 1 r, Hoprim ami rr v ' - a.l.l-i .11. -k . r lH... P.-i ffj- WORLD'S J- A I It DIKEC'lOltV CO., No. 147 Frankfort anrl Glrard Aves. Phllsdel phia, Pa. WWIWi ' WHAT VANDERILT LIKED. The Doughnuts and Indian rud.ltuss lie liiiil C'ooUed for Him tn Newport. Down in Newport the other tltiy this anecdote of the lato William K. Van dcrhilt was told: t'The husband of a woman, who for many years annually nelped the bousckoepor at the Vander built summer house pack the poods which it was intaudod to take back to the winter home, said he went down to tho Vandcrhilt place to meet his wife one day, and as he was coming away Mr. Vandcrhilt came out on the lawn and stopped him, sa.yingf: ' Do you know where 1 can fret a pood cook for four weeks? I am (rmno; to stay here u in mth longer, and the cook is tfoinp; to leave to-morrow. Can't you get me one?' "I said I didn't know. I would try, and then Mr. Vandcrhilt said: 'I don'I want any French, fancified cook. I'n poing to he here almost by myself, an, 1 want one who can make old-fnshiono Ihinps. I've been just lonine; fo some Indian pudding, some douprhnut and cheese, and some brown bread.' 1 knew whore tltcro was an old cook, am, although she had piven up the business I pot her to po for tho month. Shi said she pot orders to cook all old-style thinps. One day she told me Mr. Van dcrbilt sent for her, she went in, anil he said: 'Do you know how to mala' doughnuts?' r he said she did, and then he said he wished ho could have some such as his mother used to make. Then he said he wanted an old fashioned Indian pudding, with that amber-colored jelly all round the out side of it lie used to invite other elderly men to come to cine with him and would praise it all, and ask tlicmii' it didn't make them think of old times. "Said the Newport man: 'One day I met Mr. Vandcrhilt again, just as hi: was about to leave for New York f, r the winter, and ho said: 'I'm much obliged to you for sending me thateook. I have had a good time. I've hud the best thinps to eat that I have known iu many a year.'" N. V. Advertiser. Etiquette of a Practical Sort. A housewife of the East, end con cluded that the only solution of the servant-girl problem was to teach a green girl herself. Sho had experience with girls who thought they knew iy she engaged a girl from tht country I P, . , , J who pruiested to know nothing and! l,trlmu ,,y of 1,nte VCilrS kI''s an in commenced training her. One of tho I J" J lZ f.08?R I"'1 new servant's duties was to attend the door, and the lady of the house tried in many ways to impress upon her mind the necessity of taking a tray or salver with her when she answered the bell to receive cards, letters pto n..,.ir.ni .i afterward the servant appeared at her mistress' door, saying: "If you please, ma'am, the vegetable man is at the door and wants to know if you want any pood potatoes." Tho lady looked up from her sewing and then fell into a lit of laughter. The servant was stand ing, as she had been taught, holding the silver tray with three largo pota toes on it in the most proper manner. The servant's sense of tho fitness of things was evidently undeveloped. Pittsburgh Dispatch. ., ,i.i , , , ,. SUN AN J KrtlN SHADES. An Kngllsh Philanthropist the f irst Man to Habitually Carry sn Umbrella. About a hundred and forty or fifty years ago a bloodless revolution was brought about in London by a single man, says the New York Evening l'ost. He was Jonas Ilanway, a well known philanthropist and founder of the Magdalen hospital, who first had the courage habitually to carry and use an umbrella in public. Up to this time the umbrella had been considered as essentially an article of feminine equipment and luxury, and the innova tion . was naturally for a long time a subject of derision iu general, but. most especially, from the hackney coachmen and 'chairmen of the day, who considered the use of them an in vasion of their vested rights. Mae donald, a literary footman of that time, who wrote an autobiography, informed his readers that he had "a fine silk umbrella brought from Spain, but could not with any comfort to himself use it, the people calling out: 'Frenchman, why don't you pet a coach'.'' " So remarkable was the appearance of an umbrella in those days that the "debut" of one in many other English towns was quite a news item, like the monster gooseberrv or sea serpent of later days. So we read of a red le horn umbrella appearing in Uristoi about 1780 and creating quite a sensation. In Eilin- burgh a Dr. Spens was said to have been the first to carry one in public. Horace Walpole tells also how a Dr. Shebbeare, who was prosecuted for seditious writings in I'M, "stood in the pillory, having a footman holding an vvleru the ro-ids arc good, umbrella to keep oil the rain." For, jiihs i)OI), u,,. t,cst of English women permitting this indulgence to a male- tennis players, won the west of Eng factor, the undersherili was punished. : an,, ch;iml)im,ship when she was only Of the antiquity of the umbrella or u-fte(,n v,,ar!) 0)j 1 1 1... 1.,. J ' uuiasoi uieic cuil . uouo.. ... origin of it is wrapped in considerable obscurity Investigators of umbrella lore have supposed that large leaves, tied to the extremity of a bough, su iesLcu uie lust uica, uiu. in a..-j i. mui ?. ,,,,,, . ll was prouaoiv oeriveo inini u uiiii, the tradition existing in China is that the sau, which signilies a shade for sun or rain, originated in standards and banners waving in the air The humble mushroom can also modestly claim some share of the idea, and this ..t'.l.n ft,., .rlfri,,!,! T,:it,.nU i no- knowledge-! by the Parisians, who call their shelters, erected for equestrians in the Bois de Duulogne, "Champig nons." here? At AbraliBmsick'n. Iu addition to his tailoring businem. he has added a fine line of underwear of all kinds, negligee Hhirts, hosiery, etc. Also bap an band Vitus elegant patterns for suits. A. hrabanutick. .Wy ntn-et, Heppner, Or. Don't waste your time on doctors when font liver is diseased. Take hiui- mrroa Liver Regulator. Murder a Product of Lack of Civ- U;zj.tion. The Restraining Influence of Bellgloaa Sentiment-Countries Where th Moat Murders Are Committed. Murder, geographically considered is the product of lack of civilization, writes Prof. Oettinper in his "Moral statistics." Whenever a state of pov ernmcnt is in a state of disorganization Lhe people become demoralized, educa tional and religious progress is at a tandstill, and murder is bound to in crease. It is essential to lay preat tress on the religious feeling of a ommunity, because comparatively few nurdcrs occur in Turkey, a country Icranpcd and unsettled in its af iiirs. wherein a large proportion .f the people are lacking in civil iza ion and culture. Ilut the Islam faith i productive of a certain religious sentiment in these uneducated masses which prevents murder, the greatest erime against human and divine laws, -'ompaivd with Turkey, Greece, once the scat of civilization, but now de moralized and degraded by Turkish in liiience, without the prohibitive power of the Mohammedan religion.manifests the truth of this assertion by rolling up, in a population of less than 3.000,000 people, 310 murders, and 473 felonious assaults, an average of one killed or maimed for every :i,SO0 souls. This number overshadows demoralized Ire hind, where for a number of years the most terrible agrarian crimes, ruur ilers. arson, etc., have been committed, the outcome of the atrocious feeling between landowners and the peas antry Another country with a large per centage h Spain, and an increase in bloodshed goes hand in hand with its gradual decline. A glance at the crim inal statistics of the United States demonstrates that murder reaches its highest percentage among the unedu cated class, who can neither write nor read. In the state of Texas, for ex ample, one murder occurs to every eight thousand live hundred inhabi tants. In Illinois this percentage is I considerably lowered, one murder be- uurii out oi socialistic tcuiiencies. rue murder percentage of (Ireat llritain is comparatively small, with the excep tion of London and Ireland, and per sonal safety in England and Scotland is commended on all sides. Even few ll.mis. uLiuci:, .mcuuji, uetutTUrli., rei- pium, Holland and Switzerland record murder si atlsties similar to those of tier many. No substantial data can bo obtained about Russia, but the strik ing increase in political murders, sig nalized by the nihilistic and socialistic era, needs no comment. No state in the world rolls up more revolutionary attacks and crimes at the present time than rtni-.n.. During the year 1880-87, the last authentic report tnat could be obtained, three thousand persons were deported to Siberia or life. As with suicide and murder, it is with theft. geographically speaking. Lack of culture and civilization is synonymous with increased theft and dishonesty, not so much on ac onnt of the immoral and depraved condition of the people as because of hick of protection. Theft in Sweden and Norway, in Denmark and the extreme north is exceedingly rare. The oriental and southeastern states show an alarming amount of theft, nnd next to America Turkey, Russia, the ISalkan states and Hungary contain the most crooks. I-'raud'in all its-variousdenominations, ranging from high-grnde swindle in its manifold phases down to small shady transactions which hover be tween dishonest practices and techni j cal evasions of the law, has its bom. principally in the large cities of tin world. London is a perfect mecca foi swindlers, while throughout England with the exception of London, busi ness dealings are characterized by sound principles of honesty. Compar atively little fraud Is practiced in the northern and western states, as Swe den. Norway. Denmark and Finland Holland, Ilolgiutn. France, and Switzer land rank favorably in this respect. In (Jermany a striking decline is noticea ble in fr'iufluleiit transactions. The same conditions lack of civilization and education which prevail with other crimes pertain to fraud. Spain, Italy, (ireece. Turkey Russia lead the line. and, above all, SPOUTS AN J PoTIMES. Tut: patronage of bicycle riders is nowadays no inconsiderable part of the custom of country hotels iu districts . ............ fnn ,rl held several days ago over the remains of the crack race horse Prince Deceiver at Latonia, Ky., who was then burled in the center of a large field and a , , . , , . , handsome headstone erected over the grave. Monte Cahi.o seems to have pros pered this year more than it ever has done. The shares are now worth five limes their original value, and plans are being made for increasing opera tions. There were nine suicides last 'uuroD t,,e V- Tiilhk is a movement in Canada for having a national park created in the Nepigon country in order that the trout fishing may be eternally perpetu ated. The movers hope to see five miles of the Nepigon river north of Lake Superior set apart and guarded and tbe river kept stocked with fhsb. "The rest nowhere," a vigorous bit of exaggeration in popular use at the race tracks tho world over, was first uttered by a i porting Irishman, Cupt. O Kelly, at Epsom. May 3, 17il'J, when Eclipse distanced the field. ''Eclipse first, the rest now here," was the cap tain's Urse description of the raoa. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOLUTELY PURE SECURING SILENCE. How a Nervous Lawyer Quieted a Nolai i Cornet rinyer. ' John Leech, whose humorous picturei made Punch, was driven out of Londor by the hand organs and street bands Their noise affected his nerves and pro vented him from drawing, and thougl he tried again and again, ho was unahlt to silence them. Mr. Montague Wil liams tells, in his "Later Leaves," of a lawyer who did silence a cornet player who spent most of the day in playing bis instrument. The lawyer, poor, old and eccentric, lived in two attic rooms beneath which resided the cornet player. Annoyed at the man's persistent playing, the law yer remonstrated repeatedly, but in vain. One afternoon, the man in an swer to the lawyer's protest remarked I that an Englishman's house was his 1 castle, and that he should play when and as long as he pleased. That night, just as the musician had fallen to sleep, he was awakened by an unearthly din. A terrible pounding was going on in the room overhead, lie flung a blanket about his shivering body, and ran upstairs. There was a light in tho lawyer's room, the door stood open, and in be rushed. 3 What he saw took away his breath. The old lawyer was sitting on the floor singing a lugubrious ditty, and driving large nails into the boards with a mas on's hammer. The cornet player en treated him to desist. Tho answer was another nail driven into the lloor, another and yet another. Then the lawyer paused and said: "You make my life a misery to me all day long, and now that tho night has come it's my turn." Down again came the heavy hnmmer, and another nail was driven home. The cornet player, seeing that the .awyer was master of the situation, agreed not to play during the day if the lawyer was at home. The truce was UUWAKUIUi Ui- UKUWUS, Courage la Not the Thing Lacking, bat Presence of Mind. The Spectator has a paper called tho "Cowardice of Crowds." Tho writer is deeply Impressed with the very strange story of the poor woman who had a lamp thrown at her and was burned to death, while a little crowd of ownle loouea ou anu ma uouung, writes Walter Ilesant. One poor woman alono attempted to put out the flames. It is a horrible story, but I should not have, made it the peg for a paper on coward .ce, because I think that cowardice had nothing whatever to do with it. Why cowardice? There was no courage wanted to tear off your coat and wrap It around tho burning drapery of the unfortunate woman, l'resence of mind was lacking, if you please, but not courage. Presence of mind, which means readiness to act for the best in a sudden emergency, will prove to be wanting more and more as wo do- j part more and more from tho primi- ' tive condition of man, wh ich is one of being always hunted for food by wild beasts, always hunting for food, and al- ! vays fighting. In that condition man is full of resource; contrives a thousand stratagems, and meets a thousand dan gers. Hemove from him the habit of hunting and tho necessity of fighting. Make his life assured and easy, and ho will infallibly lose the readiness and the resource in other words, tho presence of mind of tho savage. This, in fact, we have done. In moments of unu sual, unexpected dangers, we are par alyzed. This is ray reading of the con duct of the crowd which looked on while a woman's clothes flamed up and burned her to death. . . .. . INITIO. i." who had learned th 'i t the boxes and barrels 1 1 m ui oe k, (ia crawled i'e and bored auger holes. P ier into tho eotfeo and , ami then, by holding a Some sly i exact lo.-.in in a sime ii t undi-r I in- - i ttll'OU'h Ihl' sugar b.-.rn i Back under 1 1 'in, succeeded in gettiuir a supply of thl-so lil-i u:li Oliver Woiiilnll IIoIiiii-.i Pen. Oliver Wendell Holmes has written with the same pen for twenty-live yeun lliscdil i.nd in p. -rial condition. CanltiK on thu llitnil. A father sued an English school master for assault becaime ho had caned his boy on the hand. The magistrate before whom it was first tried thought that tho father was right, for tho rea son that caning on tho hand was at tended by a risk of injury, anl thore were "methods of corporal punishment quite as available, efficacious and not necessarily attended with any risk which tho defondant might have used." The higher court, though, decided tbat It was not actionable. Awarded llinIieBt The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. CITY FIRE SERVICE. Boston's Department Costs the Most and I ouror.'ri 1 sp I.prvit. The central Cre l..-i;;adc of Chicago las ro.-caily been f :i ,hc..l with two f the largest a id r.vst powerful land Ire engines i.i the world. They are con itructqd to wcr'.; sir: seta i f luso throw eg 10 t-jDS of water pjr minute. Paris has a very c-tensive fire estab ishraent, tha larj.xit in the world 203 mgincs and 1,53) iireia .Ti. London has l.",l engine", r.f all descrip tions, and trnph ys 1L7 fu crs nnd men. Tho number f j i.rriya made by the 5ro engines and hi re vans of the Mctri politan brigade l;:i.t year was 32,795. and the total distance run Ci.SCO miles, these figures net inch.i'.irg hosccarU 3r tho escapes, v. hi h ere run by hand. Tho London brigade uses 17,000,00C jallons of water yearly, that i3, 4) gal lons nor inhabitant, or 8,000 gal'oni for each fire. The Kcw York brigade consumes 82, )00,00p gallons yearly, that is, 5 gal lons per inhabitant, or 18,000 per fire. The most expensive brigado is that ol Boston, which cost Os. 7d. per hcadol xrpulatioD to maintain; that of Lon Ion costs tbo least, 6d. per bead. Cold Crccnhoiisra. A German horticultural journal says that one of tho latest inventions "in medieino is tho use of coll greenhouses in tropijal countries as a means of com bating; yellow fever. This disease, it states, can bo conquered if one rcmovef to those elevated regions in which oaks will grow. This fact, say3 Garden and Forest, recently inspired a celebrated Cuban physician with the idea of reduc ing the temperature of sick rooms by artificial means, and wonderful cures resulted. Now it is proposed that, in districts liable to the epidemic, each town shall erect a great glass house in which plants of cold and temperate regions may be frroivn. the. tomno...t.w shall be devoted to the treatment of patients sullering from the fevor. TUB WLMKHN IKllAb'OUtJE. We are in rereipi of the Mny number of our stale school pnpi r. It exceed any of tbe former numb rs ir. value. The paper thin mi nib Contains many uew htid valuable fentuita. Tbe illus trated scrips ou the rcLniils of Ibe state ia introduced by a paper ou Ibe Friends Polytechnic Institute al Sulem, Oregon. These papers cannot fail to be of great value bulb to the schools au I to tbe pu"..':o. There are also apvend fine srticles by our In pi riteip i nu il.p d. puimintR 'Cut rent KveiiiH.""Snliirdii '1 hoUKhts," Eduortlioinil Neas" "Ibe Orsole AiiHweiH, CiirrehpnuilHiilp," no, each it in I ..in much valuable reading for leiicbeis or Hients. The tnniinzine Iihm a I. on i 50 pnpea of mailer, well printed nnd Hrrauned. We prououuoe the Western I'tdtiyoyiiH Ibe best educa tional monthly on the cn-sl. Everyone of our remleis clionld bVB the paper if ti.ev are nt all ililereated in ediicMlinn No teacher srliool direo 'nr or Mud' tit Chh itei id. t p p with- ut it. Wh u i Ii riceive pnlperipi.ons t thin i fliee I'riee i.iny SI till a ear. When il Hired e will n-nd the Western l'i dniii i-ue in it I o zeiie i re j mr to oue id.lreHM for JfU.tH) C"ll und ixiimine ainple Oopii-H. TenolieiH, directors and puietils, how le the lime In .ubhCllbe. tf G. A. It. NUIII E. We take Ibis i ppoituinly of informing uur subscribers that ibe new commis sioner of pensions bus been npoointed lie isau old soldier, and we lelievo Hint soldiers sod their heirs will re ceive jtmnce at his hands. We do not anticipate thai there will be any radical clinUKt-B iu lhe HiliniiiiHtrhtiou of pension htlnirs under ibe new r.nitne. W e would mlvii-e, however, tbat U. 9, soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take Hti-pn to make hpplicHtmu at ouoe, if Ihi-y have not Hlreml) done io, iu order to .ecure tbe benerit of Ibe early filing ol Ibeir claims in ci.se there should ba any Inline piin-ien 1. uislnlion. Suoh leiiislHtiou is seldom retroactive. 'J here tote it is ol treat iu pom, ice that llp pltOHtiona be filed in tbe di purtnieut at the earliest possible date. If tbe U S soldiere, sailors, or their wMowh, t-L i Id i ii or parents desire in foiuiHtion iu regtird to pennum matters, they hhonld write to the Piesp, Cluima Company, nt WhPlilngtoti, 1). C, and the) will piepare and ppnd the uecesssry application, if thp.v find them entitled nndei the numerous laws enacted for their benefit. Address PItFSS CLAIMS COMPANY, John V ehiieiim kn, Miuistrine Attor ney, Washiualoti, U. V., P. O. Box 885 If. Houors, World's Fair. Baking PowdeK