1 OFFICIAL PAPER .. CM M'M.Y i 1 1 M I '! ll I n M4 rg ! KEEP YOUR EYE ON : IF YO U DOX ' T RE A D j j THE GAZETTE j ! ' You don't get the news. ! wij.Miit.iti i n i i 1 1 1 ii iim 1 1 1 in 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i ri i in i J j THE GAZETTE The paper of the people. ...... M4M'I4iM..'. . . . MM Hill I I 'MM44Mi TWELFTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY. JUNE 8 , 1894. i WEEKLY NO. S87. i UEHI-H fcEKLY NO. 238. gi ii i ft 1 1 1 1 1 in ii i u i rt t 1 1 1 1 1 mi ii i nit 1 1 in iu i 5 OF SEMI-WEEKLY GAZETTE. fUBLlSHBI) Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PCBLISfllXG COMPANY. A'.VAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTtillSON Editor At $2.50 per year, $1.25 fur six months, 75 eta. fur three mumus. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application, The "IZAQ-LS," of Long Creek, Oram County. Oregon, is published by the name com pany every Friday morning, rtubseription prire, $'2 per year. ForadvertiHiiig rates, address X&I.LT Xj. PATTEKS02T, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette." Heppner, Oregon. THIS PAPEK is kept on tile at E. C. DakeV Advertising Agency, lil and 65 merchant) Bxohaiigs, ban Francisco. California, where uuu recta for advertising can be made for it. THE (JAZETTE'S AOfiNTS. Wagner, B. A. Hunsnket Arlington i-hill Heppuei I-ong Oreek 'I he knelt Kelio l'OBtniaBt-'i Camaii Prairie, Oscar De Vain Nye, Or., 11. 0. tt rlgh. Harctnian, Or 1'os in; tet Hamilton, Grant Co., Or 1'oBtinaatw lone J - 'ari Prairie City, Or., R. R. Ik-Hale; Canyon City, Or S. L. Parrish Pilot Hock, i- V. Skeltoi, Oayvlllo, Or i- E. Snou John Day, Or F. I. McUallum Athena, Or ...John Ellington Pendleton, Or Postmaster Mount Vernon, GrautCo.,Or., Postmaster Shelby, or., Miss Stella Met! Kox, UrantCo., Or J- r Allen Eight Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew AhIiuuiikIi Ihiner Khea Creek, B. P. HevlanU Douglas, Or Postma.tei hone Kock, Or B. M. Johusoi. Uooaeuerry J. K. E teb Comlon, OrigO'i Herbert llalstenil Lexington Jas. Uacli AN AUENT WANTED IN EVEBY FRKUNCT. Union Pacfio Railway-Local card. No, 10, mixed leaves Houpner 9:45 p. m. daily exoept Sunday iu, " ar. at W iIIowb Jc. p.. 9, " leaves " a m. " 0, " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a. m. dailj except Monday. East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1: A u m WeHt " ' " leavea " ldla. m. Westhonndlo al fr-igh leav s Arlington 8 35 a. m., arrives . t The D dleB 1:1 p. ni. Local paBseng-r leave-i TV Dalles at i :0J p. ni. amv a at Portland at 71 p m. cppioial xMEoroivsr. United States Ottleiula. t'lunident Qrover Cleveland Vice-1'rwinl""'. li ai BievHUs.i.- tSeu-etHrj ot :;.iite Waiter Q (ireshain Secretary ol Treasury Jonu U. rarllat.- Hecretary of Interior HokeSiuilli Secretary of War Daniel 8. Lttiuonl Hivretaryof Navy Hilary A. Herbert Posluiiieter-Oeueral Wlli-on 8. Uisst.il Attoruoy-Ueueial Kichard 8. Oluej Secretary of Agriculture J. Kterliug Uortoc State of Oregon. Uovernor S. Pennoyer Hecretary oi atate (i. VV. McBrtde Treasurer Phil. MelBClian Hunt. Public Instruction K. B. Mchlroi Senators j N.u.Jpn 1 Bulger Hermann t'ougresemon yy. h- Kllia l'riuter Prank O.Bakei l If'. A. Moore 8r.pre.-ie Judges A,,,rd f 11. 8. Bean Seventh Jn.itciul District. Circuit Judge VV. L. Bradshaw Proswutin,,' Attorney W. H. Wils u Miiitow County Oincialt. i,.;Bi rlnnator Honry Blackmai, liiresenUitive J. K.Brown i ounty Judge Julius Keittil) ' C'ommiasiouerB Geo. W. Vincent J.M.Baker. Clerk J. W. Morrow Sheriff Heo. Noble. T reasurer W. J . L mei Assessor B. L. ha " tioxveyor Isa Brown cichool Sup't W.L.SalniK " l.'oroner T. W. Ayers, J i HEFPNEU TOWN OFFICERS. ftlayoi J. R. SimoiiB Councilmeu O. E. Farnswortli, M Lichtentlial, Otis Patterson, Jidius Keitlily, W. A. fohuston, J. L. Yeager. llecorder.... A. A. Boberta. Ti eaeurer E. (i. Mlocum Mainliui J. VV. HaauiUb. Pl'eciuct Offleerp. Justice of the Peace F J. Hallock Constable C. W. Kychard United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OB. J. W. Lewis K (ris' r T.S.Lang lieoeiv. r LA GRANDE, OR. B. F, Wi'son Register J. H. Kobbins Beceiver BECBET SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. uieeti ev ery Toehtlay evening at 7.B0 o'clock ii their Castle Hall. National Bank huilil ing. Sojourning br.it hers or liallv in vited tti HUeml. J.N. BaoWN, C. . W. V. CllAWFOUD, IV. of II. dt S. tf KAWUNS POST, N J. 81. G. A. R. M9etaat Ijexington, Or., tbe laet Saturday of 4ath monlb. All veterans are invited to join. C. C. Bonn. Geo. W. Smith. Adjutant, tf rommandfr. Osveats, Trade-marks, Design Patents. Copyrights. And all Patent btulDess conducted fcf MODERATE FEES. Information and advice given to Inventors wit not l crarge. Address PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN YVEODSRBURN, Managing Attorney, . 0. Box 463. Wai5HI0TO5, D.C s 7-Thls ro.ipaor 1 managed by a com'" '..atloo of ti,- )-. r.l r ;id nost infaential nowsrw Ti !n the I . -i -I -f fo'-1:!' ex"re purpose o.' protoS iy.jC lt.elr u!-ri!ni ..gainst uusct apuloul : l.uu t-:it l'j:vi.t A'fLt., aad earh pafwl ,iti ;!ct a Iveftlst'racT! vouchesfor the r.'.poni V:::: . I't. t io r..v'.:a ;f tbe Press C':aiaisCoir.uaay Wbere? At Abrahamsick's. Id addition to hie tailoring business, be has added a fine line of underwear of all kinds, neglige abirta, honierv. etr. Also has nn band kidi elesaot Datterns for suits. A. Abrahamsiok, May street, Eeppoer, Or. T. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS tiy a special arrangement with the pnbliHbera we are prepared to furnish FEEE to each of our readers a year's subscription to tbe popular monthly agrionltural journal, the American Fabmbb, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Obio. This offer is made to any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advanoe, and to any new subscribers who will pay j ne yeai In advance. The American tABMKK enjoys a large national oircula iiiu, and ranks among the leading igrioultural papers. By this arrange neut it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re ceive tbe Amkkioan Farmer or one vear, It will be to yonr advantage to onil promptly. Sample copies oan be oen at our office. 2. rvx& Original DISTIQHfiRY . IVY SPEClAu ARRANGEMENT WITH THE L piibliBheri, ve are able to obtain a number of th above bonk, and propose to furnish a copy to eurh of our subscribers. The dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house. It tills a vacancy, and furuisheB knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reach, and refer to its contenls every day in the year. As some have asked if this is really the Orig inal Webster'B Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this 1b the very work comolete on which about forty of the best yeart ot thft author's life were so well employed lu -v :ig. 11 ir-jams rur.ru voeaojiary 01 about 100,000 words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and definition of same, and its the regular standard size, containing about (00,000 square inches of printed Hurface, and is oo una lu eio wi nmi morocco ana Sheeo. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dict;onary 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 ad stamps marbled edges $i-oo. Half Mcrocco, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bouna leather la el . marbled edges, $2.00 Fifty cents added in -all cases for express age to Heppner. -A the publishers limit the time and (lumber of books they wilt furnish at the tow prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of lii is great opportunity to attend to it -it once. SILVER'S CHAMPION ;THE Rocky-. -Monntain-:-Ncws THE DAILY BY MAIL Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six Month " ; : 3 00 Three Months " : 1 50 One Month " : : 60 THE WEEKLY-BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) $1 00 The News is the only consistent ciarrplon of silver in the West, and should be in every home iu the West, and in thu handB of every miner ami business man In Colorado. Send in your subscriptions at once. Address, TUB NBWS, IDonver Colo LUMBER! HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN V dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at vhat Is known i -SCOTT A TTCIVII XjXi. KK 1,000 FEET, KOCOH, - - -110 00 CLEAR, - - 17 60 IF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD 1 14.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. L. HAMILTON. Prop. D. A. Hamilton, Man'nr THE A'ISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains Daily Between St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Chicago Milwaukee and all points in Wisconsin making connection In Chicago with all lines running East and South. Tickets sold and baggage checked through to all points In the United States and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest tieket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pus. andTkt. Age, Milwanrea, Wis. mm 7 H..,1ST FH-KSnr.r. Xi Unabridged "Ai nil an tholii!.s":ia.l never excel 1-o-l. " Tried nii'l pniveu " i.-i tiio vurdict o f millions. 8 i m m o n s Liwr rfgn Litor is t ho y-v laiur is mo fPs fpowX v Liwr JLJ Lsf tU ana ' Kidney meuicme to wliieli you can pin your faith for a cure. A mild l.'ix'i tivo, a n d purely veg ctabio, act ing directly on tlie Liver a n d Kid Than neys. Trv it. Sold by" all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to t.e taken dry or madointoa tea. he Kins of I.lvor Medicines. " I lnivc used .voiirsinunons LivtM' negtl li ;iM- nod c;lil cuils.rit'ntiously say It is the I. in t':,l! I i vcr int'tlit iiifs. I consider it ii l.ifiii'-llu' cll.ist 111 Itscir. tlKO. Y. J.VCK Tacomu, Vasliiti;;ttin. J-IJVKKY I" CKAOK ., 4ws tin Z Sl imp ia red on wrapper. QCIOS TXTYITa ! TO San Franolsoo And all points In California, via tbe Mt. Shasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. The great highway through California to all points East and South. Grand Bcenlo Boute of tho Paoifio Coast. Pullman Bnffet Sleepers. Seoond-olaas Sleepers Attached to express trains, affording snperior accommodations tor second-class passengers. For rates, tioketa, sleeping oar reservations, 4to.. oall upon or address A. KOEHLEK, Manager, E. P. RO0ERS, Asst "len. F. & P. Agt., Portland, Oregon. national m oi Heppner. WM. PENLAND, ED. It 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. Pbysiclaus Give their BemedieB to the People DO YOU SlMR?;0-Ww,e will send you FREE OF OHAKGE a full course of specially prepared remedies best Buited to your case. We want your recommendation. We can cure the moBt aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and deformitieiare modern and scientific, acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B.-Wehave the only positive cure for Ep llepBy (fits) and Catarrh. References given. Permanently located. Old established. Dr. Williams Mkdical and Soroihal Insti tute, 719 Market Street, Ban FranciBco, Cat, ARE YOU 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 tbe greatest on record. There Is fun, instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old and learned will find as much mystery in It as the young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle 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 CENTU Rent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the myBtery by return mail. a Made In an styles and sizes. Lightest, strongest, easiest working, safest, simplest, most accurate, most compact, and most modern. For sals by all dealers la arms. Catalogues nulled free by The Marlin Fire Arms Co., Kiw Hateh, Com., V. S. A. ANY LAPY can get a Taluable secret that I cost me IS.OO, and a ru bber anleld for 30 caat. Mrs. V. M. APP. CO. I P11B TBEFT, WT, l,OIII, MO. "3CS9 PANELS OF MAIL" FRE2 fflR 10 MWT STAMPS ,rtCreuUjr prlt ibc) your wf j drees If received wiibln M uai win oe ior i jew poieuy uriutvu on gnromm UbeK Ortiy Mrw-vry customers; from put Unhen ani manHfat? turfrs you'll rer?lvt prohably, thounarKls oi valuW rnxtis, pa(rt?r? BfiniDle&.nj&ffazlrir- Mr. All frc and earh ttarrt? with oneofyourprlutrMl fvMrtfS luiK-it piwte1 thereon. KXTB A t Wfi utl ai-o pritH and prepey poet&e on ' o your lfthftl addreiws V you ; whirr Hi Lr on vf.nr anvir,tMi. Ynn,kn. ci- U prevent t!hplr tlliK lost. J. A. Vakk f-of rteldsvflle. N. C., writes : " Vru J my' cfcpt llreB In ivour Llghfni vlfltwlK and ovur aMH ParrplM oi Mail. My addr-f.-5 you &-it;t r m piittlMafCti iLiitl nmri'ifni-lnn r of mull fiMnalt tiirw nflif Wir!-- WORLD'S rAItt DIRECTORY CO., No. 147 rrankford and Glrard Ares. PhtUdel ubla. Pa. C f. -ti't mm Mr- NORWEGIAN SUPERSTITIONS. Hen of Strong; Nerves and the Belnc of the Spirit World. The simple faith of the Norwegian peasants is that the seeing or not see ing of beinffs of the other world is a mere question of strong1 or weak nerves. Only reversing, says All the Year Round, the (renerally accepted belief, it is the Northman of strong nerves who has power to sec the un seen. And he who sees it fears it not. "If you have the gift," says my in formant, "you may see dozens and scores of forms pass your door, but you know not what it is to feel alarm." "There's a ghost on every ship," says the same authority. "My own uncle, who saw the unseen plain from his childhood, was married to a woman who could not brlieve in spirits. He had a fishing smack of his own, and saw strange things of nights. One night he asked her to go out witli him. and she went. "If I see anything I will call for you,' he said, and she agreed to it. In the dark middle of the night he could see three men come walking on the water toward the little vessel. He went and called his wife, saying: " 'Look out now; do you see noth ing?' . " 'No,' said the wife. 'I see nothing but the water and the darkness.' " 'Well,' said lie, 'there are three men there, plain to be seen, and now I'll go anil get up the nets, for a storm is surely coining.' "Two o'clock was the wonted hour for getting up the nets, but wait he would not, in spite of all his wife could say to him. "When two o'clock came the nets of all the other fishermen were lost and their bouts nenrly wrecked in a sudden great storm that rose, but my uncle was well out of it, and anchored in safety, because he could read the sign they were all blind to." CHEAP RENTS. Bow the Railroad. Have AfWted Branches of Old Mobile's Ilnsliiess. A portion of the glory of Mobile, Ala., departed when, after years of la bor, the railroads from the north were able to surmount the difficulties pre sented by marshland and bayou aud continue their lines to New Orleans. This affected certain branches of thu busiaess of the city materially, prac tically ruining the heavy trade in re shipping merchandise at Mobile to New Orleans, leaving giant warehouses tenantless and docks to rot and become grass grown. The extent of the depreciation in value of some of the shipping property can be inferred from the following ob servations of a recently returned com mercial traveler. In walking through one of the old streets recently h" saw on the ground floor of a huge five-story warehouse the striped pole and the sign of a barber shop and boot blacking establishment. Walking in to have his shoes polished he inquired of the proprietor how much of the building he rented. "All of it," replied the man. "What, all or tins immense build ing?" asked the drummer in surprise. "Why, how can you afford it? What do you pay for it?" "Fifteen dollars a month," was the answer. "I use only what I want of it, but ray lease covers the whole prop erty." Inquiry from merchants of the city confirmed the man's statement. Tbe class of property had become absolute ly useless by the altered conditions, enabling the barber to secure for fif teen dollars a month a building which formerly rented for thirty-five hundred or four thousand dollars a year. ONLY A FEW OF THEM LEFT. Xlphlotd Whale Wliich llelong to Lotilf Past (.eoloslcal Ages. Prior to 1883 the naturalists of Amer ica knew nothing of xipliioid whales except from comparisons and the fossil records of the geological ages, litiriiig the year mentioned, however, one of these queer cretaceans was stranded upon the sands at liarnegat City. N. J. J. II. Uidgeway and his assistants managed to save the specimen, mid im mediately telegraphed for the ollicials of the National museum of Washing ton. They went, of course, and took all the apparatus necessary for preserv ing such a unique curiosity. Among these Smithsonian worthies were sci entists of international reputation, yet the creature before them could nut be assigned to its proper class until after the brain was critically anil scientific ally examined this on account of its great rarity. He fore removing the flesh preparatory to "making a skele ton" of the great creature's bones a plaster cast of the exterior was made. After this operation hud been finished in all its minute details the incut was cut away and the bones carefully artic ulated. A scientific report of the inci dent, quoted by the St. Louis Republic, closes as follows: "The xiphioid whales have a most interesting his tory. They really b.'l.ing to the geological ages, and pcriiajvi only a few stragglers are now h'ftia remote quarters of the globe. It wonhl sri m that they are but the surviving relics of a great race, which declined long ages before man appeared upon the earth." National Peculiarities. It takes seven days after death, ac cording to Siamese belief, for the soul to reach Heaven, and prayers are kept up during that period to help it on its way. In Dutch Guiana the women carry upon their persons all the family sav ings in the shape of heavy bracelets, anklets, necklaces and even crowns of gold and silver. The Spaniard, however courteous he may be, never invites a guest to din ner. In Italy, too, the privacy of the family is seldom invaded at the dinner hour. Tbe members eat in silence. Tbe king of Assam has two hundred wives, who are divided Into nine grade When one of tliem dies her body is lowered from tbe roof of the palace to be buried; the law in Assam prohibits the carrying of a corpse through the doom. HUNTING WILD BEES. Tho Insenloua Method of a Con necticut Man. Tracking- the Insects to Their Trees wtC tbe Aid of Loaf Sugar How I Is Done -Hera with a "Jag." Up in Lltclafleld county lives Bert Ileeman, one of the most famous bee hunters of the state, writes a Connecti cut correspondent of the New York Sun. Mr. lieeman takes to the busi ness by Instinct, and so far this season has found nine bee trees and scooped in a hundred pounds of wild honey, and wild honey, it must be remem bered, has a flavor peculiarly its own, which cannot bo duplicated in those concoctions of glucose and flavoring extracts manufactured to order. Mr. Ileeman has his own method of finding bee trees, and he does not reveal them to every Tom, Dick and Harry who asks him. Bee trees are not so numer ous in Connecticut that there are enough to go round, so those few who possess the peculiar nature or instinct which picks out such a hive are keep ing their knowledge to themselves. There is one method which the Litch field county bee hunter uses in certain I cases which he has no objection to be i ing known. When he leaves home for an expedition he takes along with him several lumps of loaf sugar. Arriving in the woods he moistens two or three lumps and places them on the stump of an old tree or on a rock, and sits down to smoke his pipe and wait. De velopments come rapidly. A busy bee tlica over tbe spot, scents the sugar, takes a few sips, and flies away. Pretty soon it returns, accompanied by other bees, nnd these go and bring more, until Anally quite a swarm will be hovering over that sugar. Mr. Bee ninn gets in his work now. Cautious ly lie catches one of the bees, and with his sharp penknife he slits both wings. This doesn't harm the bee, and makes it distinctive. Keeping his eye on this bee he takes out his watch and notes the time when it flies away and the time when it comes back again, also the direction which it takes. From long experience tho hunter knows just how long it will take a bee laden with honey to fly a certain distance and dis charge its load of sweets, and how long it requires to return without its load. I!y making his calculations he knows just about how far the big tree is. Following the direction of the bee's flight to the distance he has calculated, it doesn't take long, with careful watching, to find the tree. As a rule this system works perfectly, though circumstances may make the location of the tree somewhat tedious and labori ous. Mr. Heeman's experience has brought him in a good income during the fall of each year, and he has gained quite a reputation as a honey hunter. A peculiar story of bees on a glori ous spree comes from up Bristol way, and shows Unit "jag," however de lightful it mav he to the senses, some times results fatally to insects as well as individuals. Mrs. Theodore Hyde was making "sweet pickle" pears a few days ago, and sweet pickle, especially after it is spiced, has a very penetrat ing as well as seductive odor. Mrs. Hyde left the jar of pickle in her kitchen, with the window open, for a little while, until she had time to run into a neighbor's and swap receipts for making pickles. On her return she was greatly put out, not to say alarmed, to find that her new pickle had at tracted a swarm of bees, and her kitchen was in possession of the in sects, which knew how to defend them selves when attacked. She awaited the return of her husband at dinner time to know what to do. He quietly picked up the jar and set it out on the lawn, where, dur ing the afternoon, the bees contiuued to imbibe tbe intoxicating concoction until over half the swarm were in a Hate of inebriety. The jar remained out of doors all night. The next morning the two quarts of pickle were entirely gone, while in the jar were two quarts of dead bees which had perished from cold while too drunk to fly home. It was tl. i most destructive jag in loss of life ever known in that region of the state. Alaiit.i clotll Waterproof. A correspondent asks for a recipe for making cloth waterproof. There is surely no better method than put-1 ting half a pound of sugar of lead and half a pound of ulum in a pail of soft water, stirring it often until it be-, WIIUKS t.L'UI , IJUllI.fj lb UU ItlW .11 oilier pail anil putting the cloth or garment into it, to remain there for ' twenty-four hours. The material should then be hung up to dry without wringing. It is said that garments thus treated will keep the wearer ab olutcly dry in the heaviest rain storm: the rain simply hangs in glob ules upon the cloth. Waterproof cloth is more healthy to wear than rubber goods. I Iduia.ruu. ..ca.,ntana- ' There is a small tribe of Indians in southern Arizona who are idolators. They are in rculity sun worshipersjiut make small images out of clay vfith faces Supposed to renrrwnt th. although bearing little if any resem blance to it. They do not associate with other tribes, and are very rarely 'seen by white men. The idols have large round bodies and heads, with eyes and mouth and cars, beams radiating from the eyes over the face. The In dians have these In their rude houses or wigwams, and at certain seasons they hold a sun dance, which la with them a religious ceremony. They have no other form of worship, although a few of them were at one time Induced to abandon their idols by tho workg of the Jesuita.aw.. r, Berg, tbe jeeler, is tb n.n to fix np your watch or clock. Ce keeps a full took of everything pertaining to bis busiuM. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report OrHl Baking ? &&m IT ABSOLUTELY PURE A ROYAL YACHT. That of Emperor William of Ger many. It Is Palatial In Its Appointments and Arm ad as Thoroughly as If In tended for a War ship. The Hohenzollern is a magnificent vessel, and looks more like a cruiser than a yacht. It is built of steel, painted white, and propelled by twin screws, connected with a double set of engines. Its average speed is nineteen knots an hour, and this can be in creased to over twenty knots an hour. The Hohenzollern has two wheels, one at the stern, the other near the bow, the latter worked by steam, the former by man-power, both being painted white and gold, with nickel spokes. The yacht, says London Queen, Is armed with eight quick-firing Krupp guns and with its graceful outlines sits high in the water. It has three masts and two funnels, painted yellow, the gilded imperial German crown on the prow and the Hohenzollern coat of arms in black and silver, surrounded by a laurel wreath, on the stern. The deck Is covered with linoleum and over a large part there is an awning, where in flue weather the emperor has luncheon and tea parties. In the fore part of the vessel is a bridge reserved for the emperor. It is approached by a mahogany stairway and has mahog any railings. The emperor's apartments on the middle deck amidships are on the port side, those of the empress and her chil dren on the starboard side. Wainscot ing, doors and staircases, as well as other fittings and furniture, are of very light-colored, almost white, maple wood; the ceilings white, picked out with gold; the rococo chimneys - nt nickel, and the walls covered with cre tonne, varying in pattern in the vari ous apartments. The lofty nnd spa cious dining saloon on the middle deck is twenty-five feet broad by seventy five feet long, but by an Ingenious ar rangement of portieres can be made of any size the emperor pleases. It is upholstered in gray and white, and, like the whole of the vessel, lighted bv electricity and warmed by steam pipes. On the center table stands the Queen's cup, won by the Me teor at the recent royal yacht squad ron regatta at ('owes, and on another table the County Down cup, won by the Meteor at; the royul Ulster regatta in 18112. Above this saloon is the prom enade deck, with the smoking-room at one end and the emperor's bridge on the other. The smoking-room is very comfortable, furnished and lined with porcelain plaques, on which illus trations of German buttles by sea and land are puinted. On the upper deck Is one of the em peror's working-rooms, furnished with a telephone. Hanging on the wall is the log book and on a shelf are some nautical books. Another work-room and a conference-room are on the mid dle deck, their walls beinL' decorated with water-color sketches and photo graphs of the queen, the empress of Germany, and her children. The saloon intended for family gath erings is decorated ill blue and silver and fitted with furniture of maple and a fireplace of marble and nickel. The empress' bedroom ton tains a bedstead of nickel, with a counterpane of red silk and hangings of gruy satin. Ad joining the emperor's room aft ure the apartments and the mess-room of the imperial suite, while the offi cers' mess-room and cabins, fitted up with oak furniture, are situated for ward. The kitcheiiB on the deck be low arc splendidly fitted up. The Ho henzollern is IU) meters long, with U meters beam, its tonnage a, 4110, dis placement 4, yoo tons, and horse power iJO.UOO. fine of the Finest. There was a woman of dignified bear ing and apparent intelligence standing at a post' box the other day, says the New York World. She dropped in sev eral letters and gazed hesitatingly at a small package which she held. She glanced about for assistance in her problem, and her eyes lit upon a po liceman. "I beg your pardon," she said, sweetly, holding the package up for his inspection, "but do you think that there are enough stamps on this to carry It?" And such is the chival rous attitude of man toward perplexed woman that the poUceman said, promptly, without making even an at tempt to weigh the package In his hand: "Oi'm shure there's enough, ma'am." Her doubts banished by this statement, the lady dropped her bun dle and went on her way rejoicing. Awarded Highest D-PR GES Qfll DO M l I g V .Osf41Sfiv IM 1 The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used hi Millions of Homes 40 Years tka Standard. bwder LICORICE HARVEST IN SYRIA. Gathered In Sacks and Carried on Camel to the Seaboard for Export. In a scries of articles describing the planting, cultivation, preparation for market and transplantation of licorice root, appearing in tho Pharmaceutical Era, there is the following interesting descriptive bit: In digging licorice root in Syria the usual way is to start a trench the length of tho place to be dug over, about two feet in length, and work from that, each man placing in a pile the root bo has dug, and at the end of the day or longer time it is taken to tho scales, weighed and paid for at a specified rate per pound. An allowance is always mado for the dirt that clings to the roots. The root is then spread out for few days to slight ly dry and piled in stacks about three feet wide and four or five feet high, rounded off at the top in order to shed rain, and tho piles arc narrow enough to prevent heating. At the end of the rainy season the root is spread out to dry for about two months, being turned over from timo to time, during which process all tbe adhering earth drios and falls off, leaving it clean and ready for transport to the point of shipment. It is then put into canvas sacks, each containing from two hun dred to two hundred and fifty pounds, two sacks being a load for a camel or a mule. For the transportation of the root from the place where dug to the port of shipment, varying from two to five days' journey, a contract is usually made with some Arab or Bedouin sheik for a certain amount of cuntars (of about five hundred pounds each) at a certain price, he to furnish camels and men and the owner to furnish and fill the sacks. About fifty camels go in one caravan or drove, for which five men are sufficient. Sometimes, if one hundred camels are used, the caravan 14 yjr:o in nucLiuun, uuu uiiiir. nullify a donkey leads the first camel and the rest follow the leader, while the other men walk, keeping any camel from Btraying or lagging too far behind. Thy usually start early in the morn ing, and go ten or fifteen miles, when a halt is made, the loads are taken off and the camels are allowed to browse on the thorn or other bushes for three or four hours, then loaded again and about the same distance traveled, when they are again unloaded and the night is spent in tho open air and an early start mude the next morning. And so on until the seaboard is reached, where they are unloaded, the root is weighed, tho sacks emptied and returned to be again refilled in tho fields for another trip. On the Euphrates and Tigris the root is obtained near the banks of the rivers and, after being properly dried, is loaded in bulk on native boats callud bugulows, carrying from fifty to one hundred tons, which float down the river or sail if the wind is favorable, or at times arc towed by men as fur down as Hassorab, where tho root is un loaded and pressed in bales ready for shipment. RErutiJ A THF.ONE. The Heir 1-ramnuiHlve of Austria Thrown Over for a Young; I.louteiiant. Some time ago, says Vienna Letter In the London News, it was believed that tho heir presumptive to the Aus trian thioue, Archduke Francis Ferdi nand, would marry his Bavarian cous in's daughter, Princess Elizabeth. It Is now beard that t lie idea existed, aud was much favored by the emperor, but the young princess frustrated these plans. More than a year ago she began to look approvingly upon a handsome young lieutenant, Huron S . Tho young officer began by riding past her windows a couple of times a duy, then he obtained a room with windows facing I'rince Leopold's palace. In the winter, at court bulls, the lieutenant danced ofleuer than any other with the princess, and in the spring lawn tennis brought them moru together still. All at once tho young officer was transferred to a regiment stationed in Alsace; and this seemed the tame end of a romantic story. But in the sum mer, when Princess Elizabeth staid with her emperor grandpa at Isehl, she is 'supposed to have used her time so well that the emperor promised to make the baron a prince, to give him some landed property, and to allow the happy couple to marry if their love was proof against time. The incess is nineteen, pretty, per fectly natural, and very sweet-tempered. That she should have preferred a union with the man she loves to the certainty of an imperial throne will not ulicnate thu sympathies of those who know her and love her for her no. ...... I - It I3f Bubscnbe for tbe Uazettb. Honors, World's Fair. ruwucr-