Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, May 22, 1894, Image 1

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    mm GAZETTE.
A WISE MOVE.
Now that tbe campaign is ooming on
every subscriber of the Gazette should
provide himself or herself with a news
paper ut more than local importance.
Tbe Gazette shop is the place to subscribe
for all periodicals. Don't forget that the
Gazette needs all arrearages, even
though Cbristmas comes but onoe a
year.
OFFICIAL
PAPEK
NOTHING RISKED,
NOTHING MADE.
The limn who advertises, gets the cash.
Notice It.
e$$tw
TWELFTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. MAY 22, 1894.
i WEEKLY NO. 585.1
8EMI-WEEKLY N0.23J.)
OF .
S EMI WEEKLY GAZETTE.
PUBLISHED
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY.
ALVAH W. PATTERSON Baa. Manager.
OTIS PATl'EKSON Editor
At $2.50 per rear, $1.25 fur six months, 75 cte.
fur three muuuis.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The UEA3-LS," of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, iB published by the name com
pany every Friday morning, bubseription
Srice, $2 per year. For advertising rateB, address
Xi. PATTERSOIT, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek. Oregon, or "Gazette,"
Heppuer, uregon.
THI8 PAPKR is kept on tile at E. C. Dake'B
Advertising Agency, H4 and 65 Merchants
racte fur advertising can be made for it.
THE GAZETTE'S AG NTS.
Whgner, B, A. Hunaaker
Arlington,... Phill Heppner
Long creeK, me .agie
Echo, Postmaster
Camas Prairie .Oscar De Vaul
Nye, Or H. C. Wright
Hardman, Or., Postmnster
Hamilton, Grant Co., Or., PostmaHter
lone 1. J. CarJ
Prairie Citv, Or., K. K. McHale;
(:Liivon Citv. Or S. L. Parris
Pilot Ruck, G. P. Hkeltou
Dayville, Or., J. E. Snow
John lav, Or,, F. I. MeCallura
Athena. Or John Edington
Pendleton, Or., Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., PoBtinaster
Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Flett
Fox, Grant Co., Or,, J. F. Allen
Eight Mile, Or.,. Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh
Upper Khua Creek, B. F. Huvland
Douglas, Or Postmaster
Lune Hock, Or K. M. Johnson
Gooseberry J. K. E.-teb
Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead
Lexington Jaa. Leauh
AN AGENT WANTED IN EVERY FRKCINCT.
Union Pacfic Railway-Local card A
No. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 9:45 p. m. daily
except Sunday
iO, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m.
D, " leHves k a. m.
" W, " ar. at Heppner 5:0U a. m. dailj
. except Monday.
East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 n, m.
Weet " ' "leaves ' .lirfa. m.
West bound loral freigh leavB Arlington 8 85
a. m., arrives at The Dulles 1:15 p. m. Local
passenger leaves The Dalles at 2 :(W p. m. arrivt 8
at Portland at 7:00 p. m.
U it Ited States Officials.
Piesident Grover Cleveland
Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson
Secretary of State Walter Q Gresham
Secretary of Treasury John U. Carlisle
Secretary of Interior Hoke Smith
Secretary of War Daniel S. Lament
Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert
Postmaster-General ...Wilson B. Hissell
Attorney-General .Kichard S. Olney
Socrotary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
Governor 8. Pennoyer
Secretary of State G. W. McHnde
Treasurer -. Phil. Metsnhan
Bupt. Public Instruction E; B. McElroy
uflnof1H1 j J. H. Mitchell
Benatora J.N.Dolph
r n. m i Hmger Hermann
Congressmen S.L Ellis
Printer Frank C. Raker
). A, Moore
W. P. Lord
li. S. Bean
Soyenth Judicial District.
Circuit Judge W. L. Bradshaw
Prosecuting Attorney W. H. WUs u
Morrow County Oflleials.
joiir Senator Henry Blackmail
llopresentative J IN. Brown
( 'utility Judge Julius Keith ly
Commissioners Geo. W. Vincent
J. M. Baker.
Clerk J. W. Morrow
Sheriff Geo. Noble.
Treasurer W. J. Lx-ezer
' Assessor B. L. haw
Surveyor Isa Brown
- School Buo't W.L.Saiina
" Coroner T. W. Ayers, Jr
HEPPNEB TOWN OFFICERS.
Mayor J. R. Simons
Vrfiunr.ilinen u. li. l"arnsworth. M.
Lichtonthal, Otis Patterson, Julius Keithly,
W. A. Johnston, J. L. i eager.
Recorder A. A. Roberts.
Treasurer E. G. H locum
Marshal J. W. rlasmus.
Precinct Officer?.
Justice of the Peace F. J. Hallock
Constable C. W. Uychard
United States Land Officers.
THE DALLES, OB.
J. W. Lewis , Register
T. S.Laug Receiver
LA GRANDE, OB.
B.F, Wilson Register
J. H. Robbins Receiver
SECRET SOCIETIES.
Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev
ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in
their Castle Hall, National Bank build,
ing. Sojourning brothers cordially in
vited to attend. J. N. Brown. C. t
W. V. Cbawfokd, K. of R. & 8. tf
RAWLINS POST, NO. 81.
G. A. R.
Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of
each month. All veterans are invited to join.
C. C Boon, Geo. W. Smith.
Adjutant, tf Commander,
Caveats, Trade-marls, Design Patents, Copyrights.
And all Patent business conducted fcr
MODERATE FEES.
Information and advice given to Inventors wltboot
sL'&rge. Address
PRESS CLAIMS CO.,
JOHN WEOOERBURN,
Managing Attorney.
O. Box 463. Washihotost, D. G
etrTfclh Company Is managed by a comVnatton of
the !iis; r.d mc;t Influential newspa ert in the
1 n.r- ! S'ptf R. for t' " .xpresa pmposij of protect
StfS tli.'ir autwrriberfs aiinBt au-crutialom
sr.J l-..o:i'iK'Uiit Fo:cr;t Agents, and each paper
rluLnfr ll.U alvertliwrncm vonciiea for tbe response
biiity and Mgh standi.) of tbe Pres. Calms Company.
Where?
At AbrBhsmsick's. Id addition to Mb
tailoring business, be baa added a fine
line of underwear of all kinds, negligee
shirts, boaierv. etc. Also bas on baud
some elegant patterns for suits. A.
Abrabamsiok, May street, Heppner, Or.
I
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS
liy a special arrangement with tbe
publiflhere we are prepared to furnish
FREE to each of oar readers a year's
subscription to tbe popular monthly
agricultural journal, the Amebic an
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
This offer is made to any of our sub
scribers who will pay up all arrearages
on subscription and one year in advance,
and to any new subscribers who will pay
one year in advance. The American
Farmer enjoys a large national circula
tion, and ranfis among the leading
agricultural papers. By this arrange
meut it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re
ceive the American Farmer for one
year, It will be to your advantage to
call promptly. Sample copies can be
s;en at our office.
Original
Webster's MM
DIGTIONflB Y .
I)Y SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE
XJ nublishers. .ve are able to obtain a number
of th above book, and propose to furnish &
The dictionary is a necessity in every home,
school and business house. It tills a vacancv.
and furnishes knowledge which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant.
ncn ana poor, snouia nave it witmn reacn, ana
reier w its contems every aay in tne year.
As some have asked if this is really the Orig
inal VYebster'B Unabridged Dictionary, we are
able to state we have learned direct from the
publishers the fact, that this 1b the very work
cumulete on which about forty of the best years
ot the author's life were so well employed in
writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of
about 100,000 wordB, including the correct spell
ing, aerivaiiou ana ueuiuuon oi same, ana is
the regular standard size, containing about
.100,000 square inches of printed surface, and is
ouuua in ciom mui morocco ana SLeeo,
Until further notw:e we will furnish this
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 act-
stamps marbled edges $i-oo.
Halt Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back
stamps, marbled edges, $1.50.
hull bheep bouna leather lael, marbled
edges, $2.00
ritty cents added in all cases for express
age to Heppner.
fUBAfl the rjublishers limit the time and
number of books thev will furnish at the low
prices, we advise all who desire to avail them
selves of this great opportunity to attend to it
at once.
SILVER'S CHAMPION
0
;THE
Rocky-. Moiti-i-News
THE DAILY-BY MAIL
Subscription price reduced as follows:
One Year (by mail) : : $6 00
Six Months " : 3 00
Three Months " : 1 50
One Month " ; : 50
THE WEEKLY BY MAIL.
One Year (in Advance)
$1 00
The News is the only consistent c.iampion of
silver In the West, and should be in every home
In the West, and in the hands of every miner
and business man In Colorado,
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
the isruTrtrs,
Denver, Colo
LUMBER!
V7E HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OP UN
V dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at
what is known a. the
SCOTT BAWMIIjIj.
PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, - - - 10 00
" " CLEAR, - - 17 60
TF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD
A
Jo.oo per 1,000 feet, additional.
L. HAMILTON, Prop.
O. A.. Ramiiton.Man'er
THE
WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES
Run Two Fast Trains Daily
Between St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicaro
Milwaukee and all points in Wisconsin mak ng
connection In Chicago with all lines runn.Dg;
East and South.
Tickets sold and baggage checked through to
all points in the United Btates and Canadian
Provinces.
For fuil information apply to your nearest
tleket agent or JAS. C. POND,
a. Pass. stislTkt. Ait., Ullwauke. Wis.
n
"As old as
tbe hills" and
never excell
ed. "Tried
and proven "
is the verdict
o f millions.
Simmons
Liver Regu
ttj lator is the
-PT'f'P'yony Liver
and Kidney
medicine to
which you
can pin your
C yJ faith, for a
1 lOdfl ml U 'laxa
tive, and
purely veg
etable, act
ttv 7 7 ing directly
A-' C on the Liver
JL tttO and Kid
neys. Try it.
Sold hy all
Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder
to be taken dry ormadeintoa tea.
The King of Liver Medicines.
" I have used yourSirnmon.8 Liver Regu
lator aud can cunscleuciously say it is the
kinr of nil liver medicines. I consider it a
medicine chest in itself. uko. W. Jack
son, Tacoma, Washington.
S-EVERY FACKAGE-SX
tias tlie Z Stamp la red on wrapper.
Q0IOK TI2VTE !
TO
San Francisco
&.ud all points in California, via the Mt, Bhaeta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
The great hihwny through California to all
points East and South. Grand ISoenio Route
of tho Pacific Coast. Pullman Buffet
Sleepers, Seoond-class tileepers
Attached to express trains, affording superior
accommodations for second-olaes passengers.
For rates, tickets, sleeping car reservations,
eto.. call upon or address
K. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst.
Gen. F. tfr P. Agt., Portland, Oregon.
I U of BBDDner.
WM. PENLAND, ED. R BISHOP.
President. Cashier.
TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
HEPPNER. tf OREGON
Free Medicine !
A Golden Opportunity for Suffering
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Remedies to the People
DO YOU SlWER?L"rr.K
will Bend you FREE OF CHAKOE a full course
of specially prepared remedies bent suited to
your case, we wain your recommendation.
We can cure the most aggravated diseases of
both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and
deformities are modern and scientific, acquired
by many year's experience, which enables us to
uuarantee a (jure, uo not auspair.
N. B. We have the onlv noBltive cure for Ed-
Ilepsy (fitsj and Catarrh. References given.
rermaiienuy locaiea. uia estaoiiBnea.
Dr. Williams Medical and Surgical Insti
tute, 719 Market Street, Ban Francisco, Cal,
ARE FOn ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ?
The genius 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. ' Tbe old and
learned will And as much mystery in It as the
young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle
s the property of the New York Press Club, for
whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, the
great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the
movement to erect a great home for newspaper
workers in New York. Generous friends have
given $25,000 In prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "Press Club
Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mall.
Made In all stylet and sixes. Lightest,
strongest, easiest working, safest, simplest,
most accurate, most compact, and most g
modern. For sale by all dealers In arms.
Catalogues mailed free by
Tho Karlin Tiro .Arms Co.,
Nrw Haven, Cokw., V, S. A.
r-AWY LAD Yean getaTalnableaeeretthat
I cost ue kiuu, and a rubber shield for aocssita.
I Mrs. V. M. APP. CO.
fjQ9 PTIg BTBKFT. BT. I,OUIl, MO.
'BSCDPASSaSOfMAIL'TIE!
Fun 10 1-CtHT STAMP'.
, idruji Jf j-.-eive-l wiihin
imy wiu ib lor i yeitr r-.,i,
t- pr I n tea D Kimin: -Tjlalwls.
Only Illrece.r'
fiifltoiiterB : fro n
llHtiers ami n.ur.i il.-
U.SMr'' Prbly, II o'.-aii.l..- n'
" i ii m BHmplei.rriiiK i;.t: i i
JP-2.AU frrr and f. -l. i
with one.jfyitut jinnlf) ,iiUrn: I
jtjiHM! lliwm. KXTR1! Wi v
alvj print awl prj Diifajp "ii - i
yotir liiiel a'ldicv.i-' i j yu;
MU:k on your fiiveloiK K, Ivmi',.', ..
prcvunt th-ir Ix-lnu J. A.
of neUbvllle. N. " : r
my'Ei ctMit ailiirensln vciir 1 ! i
jDirei'Iry I' 'ii rw.'lvM !:ii J. Ii
Vfnil. My fwlilr4-i y.,-i " i'-
aii'.in' p ii.l'iin'rv ,;,n :m . i.
WORLD'S fAIB DIRECTORY CO.,
No. 147 Frankford and Glrard Aves. Phlladel
hia, Pa.
sVT' ffrm sm ' - --,
i mm
JOS
HOW VOICES ARE RUINED.
Loud Singing aud Slueing While Suffer
ing From a Cold Detrimental.
A musician tells a reporter of the
Utica Press "How Voicet Are Ruined."
It should be read and remembered by
all young singers. Among other things
he said. "The three principal sources
of damage to the voice are, first, forc
ing the voice; second, forcing the
voice; third, forcing the voice. Con
stant loud singing has certainly ruined
ninety per cent, of all the voices in the
world. The way to buiM up a voice is
not to use the full forca; of the tone;
nothing more than mediom at the out
side. ty this the powers are grad
ually developed and brought under
control. It is just as natural to ex
pect to build an armory in a month, as
it is to build a voice under three years'
constant application. . Sir Morrell
MacKenzie gives it a his delib
erate opinion, after a vast ex
perience, that a voice cannot be
built up in less than seven years,
but the musician said that, after
fifty years' experience, he had found
that three years' practice on the
lines indicated above will build
up a voice almost to its utmost artistic
capabilities. Singing when the pupil
has a cold of any hind affecting the
throat or chest is highly injurious.
Practice at such times can hardly do
good, and may do serious harm. The
speaker quoted many instances where
total loss of voice has resulted from
singing when the vocal organs have
been affected by cold, and he advised
students not to sing at all until all in
flammation had passed. He strongly
deprecated singing in chorus, an ex
cellent practice, but one attended
with serious dangers to the solo vocal
ist. If you can really restrain your
ardor and zeal, and only sing in the
most exciting passages with a moder
ate amount of vocal power, you may
do no harm, but the misfortune is that
in a chorus the members are carried
away with overzeal aud emulation of
their neighbors, and in very many in
stances do more harm to their voices
as solo singers in five minutes than
any teacher in the world can amend in
five years. He also called attention
to the danger of ruining the voice by
straining it while singing in the pub
lic schools. Hoys should not sing
while their voices are changing. Ilis
own voice had been a very good one
while young; but was ruined by
straining while he was singing in an
English cathedral.
SHE RUNS THE ELEVATOR.
And One Business Man Wants to Know
What (llrla Will Do Next.
"Weill welll What will the girls do
next?"
A business man asked this question
the other day of a New York World re
porter as he stepped aboard the ele
vator in a building on West Fourteenth
street. The door of the car was shut
with a bang by a vigorous, rosy
cheeked and muscular-looking young
woman of about twenty years a business-like
young woman she was, too.
"What floor, sir? Architect? Right
to the left, second door," she said, as
the car stopped at the third floor.
It quickly shot higher as the ele
vator girl gave the cable a steady pull.
Everyone wondered at her dexterity.
And she was the pink of propriety, po
lite and full of information as to the
tenants of the building. To say that she
was an improvement on a great many
surly elevator kings in down-town
office buildings would be putting it
mildly. A gentleman who had to call
at the office of a tenant in the building
asked the elevator girl the number of
his room, and here is what she said:
"Oh! yes, sir; Mr. is on the fourth
floor. No. , right near the stair
way. He went out an hour ago. His
assistant is out, too, but I am sure they
will be back soon. What time did you
say it was? One o'clock. Well, sir, if
you don't mind, just take this chair.
Sit right down. Mr. will be back
in ten minutes. Just out for lunch,
you know. A very pleasant man, isn't
he? All aboard!"'
And up shot the car.
The reporter couldn't ascertain
whether the rosy-cheeked elevator girl
was a fixture or not, as she refused
pointblank to answer any questions
about herself.
"Just call me Mary Jane," said she,
when asked her name. "I am here to
work, not to talk about myself."
One of the tenants in the building
says she can run an elevator car better
than any man in town. It looked that
way somewhat.
TRY THEM.
A short needle in sewing.
Tubpentine for grease on velvet or
cloth.
Removing ink from boards with
muriatic acid, afterward washed with
water.
A sheet of white paper on a dark ta
ble cover, if you must work at it at
night.
One ounce of borax, two ounces of
shellac, one pint of boiling water, for
a glue or cement.
Removi.no marking ink from linen
with a solution of cyanuret of potassi
um, applied with a camel's hair brush,
and rinsed in cold water.
SENTENCES BY "JUDGE.1
The last indulgence spoils the first.
It is the bird with fine feathers that
gets plucked.
When you make a feast for swine
you must provide troughs for them.
Heredity is announced in the curve
of an eyelash or the texture of a finger
nail. Curs and sycophants partake of their
masters' antipathies and follow up
their disputes.
There is another sentence than that
pronounced by the judge which falls
upon the conscience of the accused.
Kathrine Grosjean.
Borg, the jeweler, is tbe man to fix op
your watoh or clock. He keeps a full
Btock of everything pertaining to bis
ouaineaa. a
INDIANS ON THE TRAIL.
Wonderful Work Done by Utes, Apaches
and lther Uedskin Tribes.
While Indians are better trailers than
whites, it does not follow that all In
dians are equally expert.The best tribes
in this respect are the Deiawares, Co
manehes and Apaches. The best trailer
I ever saw, says a writer in the St.
Louis (rlobe-Deinocrat, was an Apache
who was in the employ of the govern
ment during the Crook campaign in
the southwest. During that campaign
a report came in that a band of Indian
raiders had made its way down the
valley, almost under the very noses of
the troops, and had robbed several
ranches, killing the settlers. In order
to successfully move against the In
dians in that country it was necessary
to march at night, on account of the
warning sent ahead by the signal fires.
A troop of cavalry and a company of
infantry were sent out after the raid
ers as soon as night came. AH that
day the Indian scouts had been scat
tered over the valley searching for
trails, and when the command was
ready to start the scouts were ready to
follow a trail that was believed to be
the one that led to the"rancheria"or vil
lage of the Indians. The trail was care
fully followed over the stony ground
and through the underbrush, the
scouts actually feeling their way with
their hands. They seemed to experi
ence no difficulty in tracing the trail
with their fingers in the dark, but sud
denly there was a halt. Word was
sent back that another trail crossed
the original, and it was a fresher track.
A light was procured, and it was dis
covered that the cross trail was that of
a bear, which had passed along after
the Indians. The original trail was
taken up again and followed steadily
through the night, and the raneheria
found and captured early in tho morn
ing. The most remarkable bit of individ
ual trailing that ever came to my
knowledge was the finding of a lost
child in the Gunnison valley. The lit
tle girl, four years old, wandered away
from a cabin on Tumiche creek, and
was not missed for several hours. Hun
dreds of men in the valley turned out
and searched all that day without
finding a single sign of the girl. At last
it was proposed to send for some Ute
trailers at a camp about twenty miles
away. The Indians did not get on the
ground until twenty-four hours after
the child was missing, and then the
whole country had been so searched
over that all hope of a trail was seem
ingly gone. Three Indians went to
work, stimulated by the promise of a
big reward, and before dark they
found the child, unhurt, but almost
dead from fright and exposure. They
diil their work in a most systematic
manner, and covered the ground so
thoroughly that they soon found the
direction taken, and then began an
ideal bit of trailing. Foot by foot they
went over the ground, noting a broken
twig here, a turned stone there, or a
small impression in the damp earth.
Sometimes they would go for a mile
without finding a single thing to indi
cate that tbov wrn nn the right trail,
and then they would find a perfect im
pression of a little bare foot in a mud
spot. The child was found eight miles
from its home, and hid so close when
the Indians approached her that they
were almost at fault when they were
at the end of the trail, and were com
pelled to double back several times be
fore they espied her crouched down un
der a fallen tree.
The Indian is taught from earliest
childhood to examine and note every
mark upon the ground, lie is given
instructions regarding the placing of
his feet while on the march, and under
all circumstances, whether in peace or
war, he hides his trail. It becomes a
second nature to him, and the watch
ing of the trail that he crosses is as in
stinctive as hiding his own. The In
dian on a raid pays little attention to
his front. He knows that his weakness
is in his trail, and he always carefully
guards the rear of the inarch. His
knowledge of his own ability to find
the trail of an enemy makes him afraid
of the discovery of that left by himself.
MICROBES CARRIED BY BULLETS
Taken from Infected Klannel Through
Whlrh the I'rojectlle Was Fired.
Some interesting experiments were
lately made by Dr. Mcsmer, says tho
London News, by way of solving the
question whether or not rille bullets
are liable to carry infection with them
in their course of entry into the body,
lie made his trial with bullets which
had been infected with germs of a
particular kind, and the infected bul
lets were shot into tin boxes from dis
tances varying from two hundred and
twenty-five to two hundred and fifty
meters -a meter being nearly three
feet three aud three-quarter inches.
Inside the boxes was placed gelatine
peptone in a sterilized or germless con
dition, so that whatever germ develop
ments were found in the peptone
(which is a great growing medium fur
microbes) would be presumed to have
come from the bullets. The tracks of
the bullets through the gelatine were
duly scrutinized, with the result that
in each case germ growth took place
corresponding to the particular mi
crobes with which the bullets had been
respectively infected. In another se
ries of investigations the bullets were
made to pass through infected flannel
before penetrating the gelatine, the
bullets being of the ordinary kind.
Here, again, microbic growths ap
peared in the gelatine, showing that
the flannel had yielded up its microbes
to the bullets as they traversed it. If
noninfectcd and ordinary bullets were
used the gelatine developed only the
ordinary germ life, such as the air con
tains. The bullet is, therefore, a germ
carrier of a very decided kind, and it is
also clear that if clothing is penetrated
by a bullet prior to its entrance into the
tissues the missile will be liable to
carry into the wound it makes the bac
teria resident on the clothes.
One of the daughters of the lute Fan
nie Kemhle is the well-known translator
of German novels, Mrs. Wistar, of Ger
mantowD, Pa. .
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A RICE ELEVATOR.
Hew Orleans Claims the First Oae Ever
Erected in the World.
What the New Orleans papers call
"the first rice elevator in the world"
has Just been erected in that city, Bays
the Seattle Telegraph. The "plant"
consists of an elevator tower, into
which the grain is directed through a
movable chute from the loaded rail
road cars and from which it is trans
ferred by machinery to the bins and
barrels of the warehouse, the latter be
ing connected with the elevator tower
by a covered bridge. The rice, on reach
ing the summit of the tower, is spilled
out on a rubber belt some sixty feet in
length, running at a high rate of speed
between rollers inclined at an angle of
sixty degrees. These rollers are lo
cated at intervals of eight feet and
serve to keep the rubber belt curved in
such a manner that the . rice is not
spilled while in transit. This belt
terminates just within the wall of the
warehouse, where the grain is received
in a hopper. At the bottom of this
hopper is an aperture opened by a trap
door, through which the rice is spilled
on to a screw conveyor traversing the
length of the second story of the ware
house and passing over a series of bins
designed to receive the grain. By a
delicate arrangement of scales and
weights the rice is weighed while in
the hopper. At regular intervals rub
ber belts similar to the one running
from the elevator tower receive the
rice from the screw and carry it across
the bins. An ingenious contrivance
causes it to be dropped into the recep
tacle when that receptacle is reached.
A single man can operate this apparatus
and thus control the movement of each
class of rice, till it is finally deposited
in its appropriate bin. Its travels are
by no means terminated at this point.
Six screw conveyors traverse the ceiling
of a lower Btory. Opening the trap
doors in the bottom of the bins on the
story above, the rice enters the spirals
of these machines and is borne across
the building and received upon another
rubber belt. This leads directly to the
milling department, where the husks
are stripped off and the grain pre
pared for the market. The capacity of
the elevator is estimated at about
eight hundred barrels per hour, which
is equivalent to twenty four hundred
bushels, or four loaded cars. The
warehouse can accommodate ninety
thousand bushels of grain.
WITH THE ELECTRICIANS.
.Tint contract for the electrical dis
play at the California midwinter fair
has been awarded to the Western Elec
tric company.
Theme is said to be absolutely no
foundation for the rumor that the
General Electric and the Westing
house companies were about to con
solidate. The entire system of tracks in the
Pennsylvania Railroad company's new
station on Broad street, Philadelphia,
is to be operated by an electric system
of switching and signaling.
The development of gas and gaso
line engines in this country has been
so great and so practical that many
believe it is only a question of time
when they will supersede steam en
gines for the generation of the electric
current.
An electric locomotive which gen
erates its own electricity from a steam
boiler is the latest French novelty in
electric traction. The test of this lo
comotive on its first trial is said to
have been satisfactory, but no infor
mation is given as to the cost of operat
ing it.
BOOKS AND AUTHORS.
Walter Besant has hurried off to
Vermont to join Rudyard Kipling, and
they will do the world's fair together.
Joseph Nicola, a Penobscot Indian,
has written a one hundred and seventy-five
page book telling of the doings
of his tribe from way back up to tho
present year.
Gkn. Lew Wallace's novel, "The
Prince of I ndia," is nearly ready for pub
lication. The catastrophe of the book
is the assault and sack of Constantino
ple in Mftii, and the entry o( Mohammed
11. into Sancta Sophia.
Mus. Stannard, the writer, who is
best known by the name of John
Strange Winter, sayB she knows of one
happy marriage that was the result of
a proposal made on the fourth day
after the couple met. It is her own.
Mrs. Geohoe William Ccrtis lias
used the money received from the edi
tion of "Prue and I," published by tho
Harper Brothers last Christmas, as a
fund for a free scholarship in the
Staten Island academy, in memory of
her husband.
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THE STING OF THE NETTLE.
Some of the Poisonous Vegetable Mon
sters of Other luda.
The leaf and stem of a nettle are
literally clothed with erect hoUow
hairs. If one of these hairs is viewed
under a microscope it will be seen that
its free end, after tapering to a very
fine degree of slimness, finishes as a
little knob, while in the other direc
tion, after gradually becoming more
robust, it suddenly expands into a large
bulb corresponding with the poison
gland of the adder.
The point of the hair, says Good
Words, is very brittle, and contact
with our skin causes the end to snap
off, leaving a hollow needle point
which readily pierces our cuticle, aud,
pressing upon the bulb at the other
end, the poison is forced though the
central channel and inflames our
blood. The tenderhanded who stroke
the nettle are stung for their pains,
because their gentleness has only
served to break the brittle points and
render them fit for piercing, but the
rough-handed break the hairs at their
thickest parts, whore they are too
stout to prick.
Our common nettles, though they are
capable of inflicting considerable an
noyance upon many persons, are too
insignificant, nevertheless, to be in
cluded among vegetable monsters, and
we have only referred to them for the
sake of making clear the enormities of
some big cousins giants of the nettle
family. These are, first, the Urtica
stimulans aud Urtica crenulata of the
East Indies, species whose attack upon
one's hand is sufficient to cause the arm
to swell with a most frightful pain,
which lasts for weeks. Hut even these
are milk-and-water nettles by compar
ison with the Urtica urentissiina, which
grows in Timor, where it bears the sig
nificant title of Daoun setan, or devil's
leaf. The effects of its sting last for a
year and have often produced death.
Frksii pears sliced and sprinkled
lightly with powdered sugar are a de
licious breakfast dish served with
whipped cream. , This is exclusively
for millionaires now; inter in the sea-
THE WKSTERN I'KDAu'OGUE.
We are in receipt of the May number
of our state school paper. It exceed
any of the former numbers ii value.
Tbe paper this month contains many
new and valuuble features. The illus
trated series on tbe schools nf thn otnr.o
is introduced by a paper on the Friends
x-uiyieconic instnuie at Mslem. Oregon.
These miners nnnnnt fntl tr hu 1
value both fo the soliools so 1 to tho
puuiio.
There are also severnl fine articles
bv onrhent wrirurn u,4 tl, . ......... i
"Current Eveuls,""HKturdny Thoughts,"
iLuuuHiionai .news' "The Oracle
Answers, Correspondents," etc., eaoh
oontain much valuable reading for
teachers or parents. The magazine
has about 50 pages of matter, well
printed and arrnntred. We pronounoe
the Western Peduuoo-iin tho n.i
r. -"v uubii cuuiiW
tionnl monthly on tbe ooust.
everyone or our renders Bbould have
the psper if they are at all interested
in eduontion. No tenohnr school direc
tor or Htniliint nun utm. iili,, -.ui.
out it. VVb will receive Biibsoript.ons
nt this olliee. Price only $1.00 a year.
wueu uesireu we win send the Western
PedltOTlUllA llllfl tiufatla ..no ...... ...
"i.iiiDcoi IU UUB
addreBB for 83.00. Call nnd examine
sample copies. Teachers, direotors and
pmcuin, now in me nme in subscribe, tf
0. A. It. NOTICE.
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers that the new commis
sioner of pensions has been apoointed
lie isan old soldier, and we believe
that soldiers and their heirs will re
oeive justioe at his lianda. We do not
anticipate that there will be any radical
chaugeB iu the administration of pension
aff airs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. 8,
soldiers, Bailors and their heirs, take
steps to make application at onoe, if
they have not already done bo, in order
to secure the benefit of the early filing
of their claims in case there should be
any future pension legislation. Huoh
legislation iB Beldom retroaotive. There
fore it is of ureat importance that ap
plications be filed in the department at
tbe earliest possible date.
If the U. H soldiers, sailors, or their
widows, ohildren or parents desire in
formation in regard to pension matters,
they should write to tbe Press Claims
Company, at Washington, 1). 0., and
they will prepare and send the necessary
application, if they find them entitled
nnder the numerous laws enacted for
their benefit. Address
PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Weddkrhurn, Managing Attor
ney, Washington, U. C, P. 0. Box 385
tf.
Honors, World's Fair.
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