lllllrllllllllltlllllllllllllllill'I'IIIKIItlllKNtMM 1 KEEP YOUR EYE OX THE GAZETTE j : The paper of the people. Sun i ni 1 1 1 1 1 1 in n i i i i!i'iriiiiiii'iiii!iiiiiirii i l l ii nHiiii III I IT! I II I II III II II 1 1 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II III III I III 1 1 II HI I!t z z IF YOU DON'T READ j THE GAZETTE j I Yuo don't get the news.: SiM iiiiin i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i 1 1 1 in in i i i-i i mil i ini 1 1 n.ni'i'ii OFFICIAL HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 25, 1894. WEEKLY WO. 603. 1 SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 269. 1 TWELFTH YEAR PAPER SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. At $2.50 per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 ots. for tUree mourns. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. THIS PAPER is kept on tile at E. C. Uake's Advertising Agency, 04 and 65 Merchants Exohangs, San Francisco, California, where oou ructB for advertising oan be made for it. Union Pacfio Railway-Local card. No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 9:45 p. m. daily except Sunday 10, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. 9, " leaves " a. m. a, " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a. m, daily except Monday. , ,. , nu East bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :28 a. m. West leaves '" 1:21 a. m. West bonnd local freight leaves Arlington 8:35 a. m., arrives at The Dalles 1:15 p. m. Local passenger leaves The Dalles at a:00 p. m. arrives at Portland at 7:00 p. m. United States Officials. PieBidont Grover Cleveland v;nairaaitlnnt. Adisi Stevenson Secretary of State Walter Q. (jreeham Secretary of Treasury John 8. Carlisle Secretary of Interior ..... Hoke Smith Secretary of War Daniel S. Lamont Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert FoBtinaster-ueneral . Attorney-tteueral Kichard B. Olney Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor 8. Pennoyer Seoretaryof State G . W. Motiride Treasurer Phil. Metschan 8apt. Publio Instruction .E. B. McElroy j J. H. Mitohei Senators 1 j. N.Dolph 5 Binger Hermann Congressmen w. R. Ellis Mnt Tf:i Supreme Judges fStfj&F Seventh Judicial District. Cironit Judge W. L. Bradshaw Prosecuting Attorney A. A. Jayne Morrow Connty Officials. Joint Senator A, W. Oowan Representative J- H?0?;!'!5' llounty Judge Julins Keithly ' Commissioners J.K.Howard T M " Clerk ' J.W.Morrow " Sheriff;.'.'".' W. Harrington " Treasurer Iran Ortham AsseBsor J. C. Willi" u... Geo. Lord School S'up't n.?,a .Balsisf r " Coroner T.W.Ayers.Jr HEPPNER TOWN OFFIOEBS. fUavor r. U. Dorg Counci'lraen .....O. E. Farnsworth, Mi Lichtenthal, Otis Patterson, Julias Keithly, W. A. Johnston, J. Ii. ieager. . . Recorder F. J. H all ock Treaeurer A. M. Qunn Marshal Preeinet Offleerfl. Justice of the Peace E. L. Free land Constable N. 8. Whetstone United States Land Officers. " THE DALLES, OB. J. F.Moore Register A. S. Biggs lieoeiver LA GRANDE, OB. B. F, Wilson .' Register J.H. Kobbins lieoeiver SSCBSI SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meet ev. ery Tuesday evening at 7.30 o'olook in their CaBtie Hall, National Bank build ins. Soiourning brothers oordially in- vited to attend. A. W. Patte rson, C. C. W. V. Cbawfobd, k.. ot a. a a. a BAWLINB POST, NO. 81. G. A. B. Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of aoh month. All veterans are invited to join. ; 0. Boon, Geo. W. Smith. Adjutant, tf Commander. LUMBER! 1TTK HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OP UN tV dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is known as the SCJOTT S.A.T7C1VXXXjXj. PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, " " " CLEAR, 10 00 17 50 TF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD J5.00 pur 1,000 feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop. r. a Hamilton, Man'ar Hatiwi Hani of lewi. WM. POLAND. ED. K. BISHOP, President. Cashier. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLI) HEPPNER. tf OREGON Oaieats, Trade-marks, Design Patents, Copyrights, And all Patent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. Informstion and advice given to Inventors wlthot barge. Address PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN WEOOERBURN, Uaaaging Attorney, O. Bo x 43. Washington, D. C -Th!s Company ii managed by a combination ol the lure- 1 r.d moiit Influential newspanen la the ratted SIMM, for the eipress pavpose of prow In a- thfir suberrlbere igalnst unscrupulous svi Is'-oiepeteut Pslenl Agenu. and eara paper pictiri taU alverusementToacnei for tike rwponst. nn- o.gn isswWw ' u Prt" Stains Corneas. 0. R.&N.C0. E. McNEILL, Receiver. TO Til 10 GIVES THE CHOICE Of Two Transcontinental Spokane MINNEAPOLIS Denver OMAHA St. Paul Kansas City LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES. Ocean Steamers Leave Portland Every 5 Days For SAN FRANCISCO. For full details oall on 0. E. & N. Agent at Heppner, cr addresa W. H. HUKLBURT, Gen. Pass. Agt. POBTLAND, OBEQON. The comparativevalue of these twocarda Is known to most persons. They illustrate that greater quantity (s Not always most to be desired. TheBe cards express the beneficial quaU Ity of RipansTabules As compared with any previously known DYSPEPSIA CURB Ripans Tabules : Price, 50 cents a box, Of druggists, or by mail. RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 1 0 Spruce St., N.V. WISCONSIN 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 ueares tieket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pass. andTkt. Agt., Milwaukee, Wis. Made In all styles and sizes. Lightest, strongest, easiest working, safest, simplest, most accurate, moBt compact, ana mosi modem. For sale by all dealers in arms, Catalogues mailed free by Trift Marlin Tira Arms Co.. New Haves. Cons., P. S. A. SEWIN3 MACHIKE MADE MONEY XTtS OR OCR DEALERS can sell you machines cheaper than yon can get elsewhere. The NEW HOJJE Is our best, but we make cheaper kinds, mrh aa the CLIMAX, IDEAL and other HI eh Arm Full Nickel Plaiod Sen-ins Maehinea for $15.00 and up. Call on onr agent or write lis. W want yourtrade, and If prlee, terms and square dealing will win, we wl 11 have It. We challenge the world to produce a BETTER 50.00 sewing Machine for $SO.OO, or a better 2(. Sowing Machine for $20.00 than J on .n hnv from ns. or our Airenli. THS EEW HOSE SEWISG K KHiEIi CO. FOR BALE BY The New llome Swing Machine Co. i 257 Market 8t Ban Francisco, Cal. 4 1rsgsr it 13 AND rrWfl ABSOLUTELY c&vfUi1M The Best "As old as the hills" and never excell ed. "Tried and proven " is the verdict 0 f millions. Simmons Liver Regu lator is the e?ff0f"only Liver and Kidney medicine t o which you can pin your faith for a cure. A mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver and Kid Than Pills neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. The King of Mver Medicines. " 1 have used yourSimmons Liver Regu lator and can cousclenciously say it is the king of allliver medicines, I conslderit a medicine ohest In Itself. Geo. W. Jack son, Tacoma, Washington. ' M-EVERY PACKAGE-W Has the Z Stamp In red on wrapper. ROELS OF MAIL" FREE FOR 10 1-CENT S regular price 26c.) j retfulnr Drlce 6c.) voiir iu Ireas If received within 30 days will be for 1 year boldly firinteu on guiumeu libels. Only Directory guaranteeing 125,000 customers; from pub lishers and manufac turers you'll receive probably, thousands ol valuable books, papery sainpleH.maga.ines.ctc. i free and each oarctv with nnp nfvnumrinted address lube!' pasted thereon. EXTRA ! We nil also print and prepay postage on otto w vour label addresses to you; whic!: stick on your envelopes, books, etc., ti prevent their being lost. J. A. V.itr. of Keidsvllle, N. C, writes: " Knui my cent address in your Llghliitii'. Directory I'"re received niy5()(H0'lw labels and over 30OO liir''! .T ail. My addresses you wniti-rn. unions pu'jlisli'.'rs and mfimifm-i'.i'vr-,-ire jtri'ivini daily, nn valuable i ;,.t ; of iuM from a!l parls of ',w V-s'ii.. 4 WORLD'S Jt'AIK DIRECTORY CO., No. 147 Frankford and Girard Aves. Philadel phia. Pa. Good Koatla in the South. The southern road congress, which met lately at Atlanta, brought out the fact of the value of good roads, and the pecuniary advantage of them was fully recognized. Among the cases cited was the experiment ma4e in building good roads by the people olE Union and Essei counties, N. J. The ' pecuniary bene fits resulting from this work are summed up in a report from the board of freehhlders of the former county, which states that the total outlay haf been nearly $350,000, and there are now nearly forty miles of telford and macad am road in the county. The beneficial effect of the roads is seen in the fact that property in Union county alone has appreciated in value far more than the cost of the roads, as the assessment shows. The county issued 350,000 worth of road bonds, the interest on which must be met annually, yet there has been no increase in the county tax rate, because the increased assessment easily produces enough rev enue to meet this charge. Very few of these roads have been built more than a year and most of them only a few months, but already the people appre ciate the advantages flowing from them. Such practical evidence as this will certainly encourage roadbuilding in the south. The movement so far has made little practical advance here and has been confined mainly to conventions, etc., but this is a step in the right direc tion. It is true that conventions in themselves do not accomplish much in the way of roadbuilding, but they show how the work can best be done; they arouse the interest of the people in the matter; they prove the value of good highways, and they will, in the course of time, arouse the south to the necessity of building them. New Orleans Times- How an Arkansas Man Grows Cow Peas The cow pea differs from the Canada pea in the time of planting. It will not grow nntil the ground is thoroughly warm, and it thrives well in dry. hot weather. This pea can be grown after a crop of wheat has been taken off, say the middle of June. It is a nne son ren ovator, being one of the few plants able to take free nitrogen from the air. The cow pea is to the south jnst what clover is to the north. I would not recommend them as a forage plant where clover will do well, for they are no better, in my judgment, and are much harder to cure properly, owing to the stalks and stems being much coarser. Our way of sowing has been to use an ordinary force feed wheat drill, setting the feed at the 8-peck mark for wheat. The best crop I have ever seen grown was sown with an 8-Boe drill, only allow ing every third hoe to feed, stopping up the others. This made the rows almut 24 inches apart, and a small garden cul tivator was used for cultivating them, but was only used twice. This crop will produce three or four tons per acre as drawn in from the held. Just how far north these peas will grow 1 am not able to say, writes an Arkansas corre spondent of Hoard's Dairyman. About Cutting the Finger Kails. There are several well known sayings with regard to the paring of the finger nails, and among them are the following: "Cut them on Monday, cut them for health; cut them on Tuesday, cut them : for wealth: cut them on Wednesday, cut ! letter- mit them on Thurs- 1 day, for something better; cut thtm on i Friday, you cut for a wife; cut them on j Saturday, cut for long life; cut them on Sunday, you cut them for evil; for all of that week yonll be ruled by tho devg." j Philadelpfch ?vnc 1 v v t'lutii 5 t ASWi I MUSTY FODDEH. Shake It and let the Wind BIot tfca j Dut Out of It. It is a serious mistake to feed fodder that has been damaged by rain and wet weather to animals without first (lust ing it out to dry. The injurious effect which such food has upon stock more than equals the entire loss of all the fodder gathered. Such fodder is gath ered from marshy lands and meadows that have been inundated during the mowing time. Sedge hay or common upland hay that lias been wet at the time of mowing will be impregnated with disease germs that will be com municated to the animals that eat the hay. Stock of ft very robust nature will find their health seriously impaired ii fed regularly upon such fodder. A great deal of our sedge hay must be cut and gathered when the feet ot the plants are wet. During many sea sons the meadows never get dry enough to allow a dry harvest. This hay is gen erally stacked for fodder in the barn yard, and in a very few weeks mold and rot show themselves near tne Dottom and around the sides. If this decompo sition goes on long enough the stock will refuse to eat it, and as a rule nearly one-third of the stack is sheer waste. The storms of winter only aggravate the matter and make the hay poorer than in the fall. It is a cheap fodder, however, and probably the manure which it forms eventually pays for the work of gathering it. Otherwise the great loss would make it unprofitable to cut salt hay. All fodder thus stacked when it is wet, whether it is salt hay, fresh upland hay, corn fodder or any plant growth, will contain disease germs which under favorable circumstances will develop rapidly. The heat of the stack and the constant moisture are just the condi tions that are needed to develop fungi. The color of the fodder changes gradu ally, and the odor that arises from it when moved is strong and disagreeable. If such damaged fodder is to be given to stock, the ration of each day should be hauled out of the stack and shaken up so thoroughly that the wind will dry it, and all odor will be destroyed. In this way the wind and sun will dry it and make it safer for food for the stock. After it has been dried it will be well to moisten it a little with a weak salt or acid solution. This not only destroys disease germs, but makes the fodder more palatable for the animals. Orains are often damaged in the same way and fed in a moldy condition to the animals. There is just as much danger in the grain as in the fodder ration. Damaged grain is often bought by farmers for cheaper rates and stock is kept upon it right along. This will not be so cheap as the pure grains if it is going to injure the health of animals. Nevertheless all danger can be avoided by dusting the grain out well and mois tening it with the weak solutions men tioned. In this country and abroad it is quite a common thing to feed wet, dam aged fodder to animals regardless of consequences, but for all such careless ness there is strict payment to he made to nature. C. S. Walters in American Cultivator. An Experiment in Slioep. Six abandoned farms on a rocky hill top in Maine have been bought and thrown into one. It is proposed to stock them with common sheep, to be crossed with pure bred Hampshire bucks. Street car horses will be bought in Boston for farmwork, commercial fertilizers will be used and money will be judiciously expended wherever needed. This is what is said about it: "If successful, the experiment will prove that a wool grow er who does not believe in the present duties upon wool can make mutton sheep husbandry profitable upon the de serted farms of New England." Live Stock Ioints. A magnificent addition to the hackney horse blood in America has been made by Mr. A. J. Cassatt, of Philadelphia, president of the American Hackney Horse association. While in England the past summer he bought and brought home the famous hackney stallion Cadet. The horse is the highest priced hackney ever brought to this country. The new owner of course is rather reticent about how much he paid for him, but the price i3 said to have been not less than 120,000. The coming horse in America for both riding and driving appears to be the hackney, of which Cadet is con sidered to be the best living represent utive. He is H years old and of the model height IS hands 3 inches. He is dark chestnut in color. Breeders who expect to go in lor money in the next dozen years cannot, do butter than to turn their skill and c ipital in the direc tion of hackney bloi 1. If the present revolution in street cn,- transit continues the horse will go out entirely from this service, his 'place bei: 1 taken by elec- j trjcj1v alKi Sfiearn. Tln-:i of horses there will be demand chiefly I r four kinds the heavy draft, the genei ;il purpose farm horse, the pony and the fashionable animal for riding and driving. Here is where the hackney will come in. It will be unfortunate indeed if an thrax should crop out among any of the cattle in this country, lu the suspected cases of the cows that died near Wil mington, Dal., the sympionus were bloody dysentery, staggering gait, froth at the month, short, quick breathing, weak ness and great thirst. In true anthrax after the animal is dead its body is found to be decomposed and filled with black blood. The disease is apt to infest rich bottom lands. The best remedy is to kill the animals that are infected and quarantine the farm where the sickness has appeared. A bacteriological exam ination will detect with certainty whether the disease is anthrax. A Wyoming man has this to say; "More cattle are now feeding on the small farms of one slate in the great plains than could be ranged over the whole area from the lakes to the gulf." When a horse is lam" and stiff noth ing better can lie done than to remove his shoe and let biiQ run ;u pror THE LOST KiSS. I put by the half written poem, While the pen, idly trailed in my hand. Writes on, "Had I words to complete it. Who'd read it, or who'd understandy" But the little bare feet on the stairway. And the faint, smothered Iniifih in the hall. And tho eerie low lisp on the Bilcace Cry up to nie over it all. 80 I gather it up where was broken The tear faded thread of my theme, Telling how, as one nijsht I Bat writing, A fairy broke in on my dream A little inquisitive fairy My own little trirl, with the gold Of the sun in her hair and the dewy Blue eyes of the fairies of old. Twas the dear little girl that I scolded "For was It a moment like this," I said, "when she knew I was busy To come romping in for a kiss? CoTne rowdying up from her mother. And clamoring there at my knee For 'one Mttle kiss for my dolly And one Mttle uzzcr for me!' " God pity the heart that repelled her And the cold hand that turned her away. And take from the lips that denied her. This answerless prayer of today! Take, Lord, from my mem'ry forever That pitiful sob of despair. And the patter and trip of the little bare feet. And the one piercing cry 011 the stair! I put by tho half written pnem, While the pen, idly trailed In my hand. Writes 011, "Had 1 words to complete it. Who'd read it, or who'd understand?' But the little bare feet on the stairway. And tho faint, smothered laugh in the hall, And tho eerie low lisp on the silence Cry up to me over it all. James Whitcomb Hiley. The Kansas Ilaspberry. The Kansas raspberry here depicted is a new blackcap from the state for which it is named, and Orchard and Garden considers that it is worthy of a place among the most promising of the berries recently produced. A NEW BLACKCAP RASPBERRY. The Kansas is about second early in its season of ripening. It ripens its crop soon after Souhegan and that class, but much earlier than Gregg. The Kansas, it is claimed, is a good grower, making a vigorous growth throughout the sea son; its canes and branches are covered with a thick blue bloom. The berries are quite as large as Ofregg, but clear jet black, and without the down or bloom that is peculiar to tho latter ber ry. In productiveness it is superior to Gregg. The present indications are that this new berry will prove of value. White Grunos. The Niagara, all things considered, is perhaps the most valuable white grape in cultivation. Vine vigorous, healthy and productive, of medium sized bunches of fruit. The berries are large, pulpy and sweet. Moore's Diamond is a pure ' native. Vine vigorous and productive. Berry about the size of Concord and greenish white in- color. Martha is of medium quality as regards fruit; the vine is hardy and vigorous. Pocklington is a large showy grape. Lady Washing ton requires a long season. Rebecca is a delicious grape; vine a moderate grow er. Empire State ripens with Concord; vine vigorous, fruit tender, juicy and of good quality. Duchess ripens before Concord; medium sized berry and of ex cellent quality. Winchell, a new grape of promise, seems destined to become valuable on account of earliness, fine quality, productiveness and vigor of the vine. How to Graft Not Trees. The failures so generally attending the grafting of the hickory are, according to Professor lindd, due to the fact that the operator neglects to prevent too npid evaporation from the scion while the slow process of uniting with the stock is going 011, and that in the moot er climate of a large part of Europe this is never forgotten in grafting the nut trees, the mulberry or any other tree known to he slow in uniting, lie recom mends that, after the scion is inserted and waxed or covered with clay, the whole be covered with a tight paper sack tied at the bottom. Summer Itloouilng Itulbous Plants. Numbered with showy gurdon favor ites are the summer blooming bulbous plants, such as Oxalis, valuable for edging walks and beds; Milla liiliora. or Mexican Star, which bloom freely in sunny positions, and the Madeira and j cinnamon vines, each bearing fragrant I flowers. Tigridias, or Peacock flower, is a handsome member of this class of bulbous plants, and flowers freely when the bulbs are placed in a warm, sunny I "pot- j r'reMlily Alnmiril I.ttnr1. ! On land freshly fertilized with barn I yard manure wheat will not make a fine grain, according to Professor A. E Blount, becaiiKO the manure has a ten- ' i dency to make too much stalk and foli I age, decidedly to the detriment of the ! grain. If barnyard manure is applied at all to wheat it should be old and well rotted, or what ib far better, to a crop of corn or potatoes the preceding year and then follow with wheat. If fertilizers must he m.ed directly to stimulate the wheat crop let thorn contain elements that make uruin, nut foliage, such as Bujieqiiioshates, potaMi, nitrates, ashes, stilt, etc., in proper proportions. The farm will never give you complete eatinftictum W) hii:? t f! how to buy f. j'a 1 -.14 -M npi"MT Highest of all in Leavening Power. Absolutely pure KILLIES AND THEIR FOES. Not Only Fish, Fowl and Man Devour, Rut Kven Chickens Tillage Them. J "He doesn't mind a little thing like that," said the deacon, kindly, as he t passed his hook through the skin be hind the back tin of the killie and cast minnow, hook ana sinner the lengtn ot his line to try the effect of a fresh bait. "If the snappers don't bite any better than they've been doing he'll be swim ming as lively as ever when we pull up anchor to go home. Look at those killies in the bait box. Nothing damper about them than some seaweed since morning, and they'll all be ready to swim away if they stay till to-morrow. "They are tough and hardy little fel lows and no mistake," he continued, lifting the seaweed to look admiringly at the wriggling little stumptailed lish packed like sardines in the box. "They seem to have been created for the good of others. Everything preys on killies, from men who bait their hooks with them or eat the minnows as white bait, down to the gulls and herons and bass and bluckrish and weakflsh and fluke and snappers that follow them among the grass every full tide. And with all this keeping after them they don't thin them out that anyone can see. Why, the very chickens along shore will run from a dough trough for the sake of eating killies' eggs." "Hold on a minute, deacon," said the reporter, who was the pious mariner's fishing companion that day. "I grant all the rest you say, but please explain how chickens manage to get at the killies' eggs, If you'd said ducks or gfeese, I could understand it." WILHELM AS DRILLMASTER. Severe Ordeal Imposed Vpon One of the Ofllct-rs of the Dragoon Guards. The other day. says the London Daily News, Emperor William had the sec ond regiment of dragoon guards called out suddenly on to the Tempelhof common, lie then called an officer, Count von Wedel, known to be a good rider, and handed him a message for the king of Saxony with the order to ride at once to Dresden and give it to him. Count von Wedel set out imme diately, attended by a sergeant, and arrived after a twenty-two hours' ride at Dresden. The ride took so long a time, firstly, on account of the severe cold and the slippery state of the roads, and, sec ondly, because Count von Wedel was not allowed to ride on the high road from Her! in to Dresden, but had to take roundabout ways, the supposition be ing that a hostile army had occupied the territory between the two capitals, and that the rider had to pass unno ticed through the enemy's lines. Count von Wedel arrived in a very exhausted state at the royal castle, and, immedi ately after the audience with the king, fainted away, lie was taken into an adjoining apartment, where ho soon recovered. His horse was also very fatigued, though the attending ser geant and his animal were not much worse for the ride. At the king's re quest Count von Wedel did not return to lierlin on horseback, but by rail. An ordinary elephant produces one hundred and twenty pounds of ivory. Two exhibition tusks in London weigh one hundred and sixty-two and one hundred and seventy-three pounds re spectively. A satin dress in pale green is set with jet gimp, made with quite large triangles, squares and little disks. Hut very few small beads enter into this trimming; indeed, shells, drops, ar- row-heads and long points are much preferred. The Williams glee, banjo and man- dolin clubs have for the last few years been unheard of outside of New Eng- land and vicinity, but this year a trip has been arranged for vacation which ,..:n vi..nl as far west as Missouri, and include Albany, Buffalo, Cleve- land, Columbus, Chicago, Detroit and St. Louis. l'HINOK LOI'IK NaI'OMOON HoNAI'AltTK has just left the Russian army, to wear his uniform again only in case of war. He is an exile without a home, for the famous villa of I'rangins, at the foot of the Alps, near Lake Lrman, is for ever closed. His one ambition was to become a great soldier; the privilege was denied him in France and he went to Russia. Now he lays down his sword and intends to travel. Careful observers have noticed that a fish hawk, after securing its prey, will often rise very high in the air, drop the fish, quickly swoop down upon and seize it, and then ily home- ward. The object of this, as explained by an old skipper in the Lower bay of New York, is to get the fish "head on," as a hawk will never lly with the tail of its prey foremost. Ho, if it has caught it that way, giving it a twirl it drops it and seizes it again with tho head tiointiuir in the right direction. Awarded UiRhetit The or.' v Pure Cream )f Turtar sprt hi iMIIIiot'T r:' Latest U. S. Gov't Report Bakimt; WINTER NIGHTFALL. The roBe has faded from the western sky Behind the lazy mill. The snow'B wind carven drifts in beauty lie Where all la gray and still. Now dim and faint the distant steeple grow While night's drear shadows creep Across the land and dull the weird repose Of ashen wood and steep. Above the fields a great enameled star Is sparkling cold and white; The deep dark curtains of the east afar Shine with a sudden light. And In a moment, with a silver flood The full moon rises chill Behind the tangle of the somber wood That crowns the distant hill. R. K. Munklttrick in Harper's Weekly. Undemocratic France. As a matter of fact Frenchmen art about the least democratic people in th world in their Bocial longings and ideals. France is politically a republic, but so cially it keeps up most of the character istics of an aristocracy. The differenc between her and America in this respect is prodigious. In the United States it to impossible to find a man with a decora tion; in France it is difficult to find any body without one. In spite of the revo lution titles are still maintained, and the highest ambition of every bourgeoU would be satisfied if he could marry his daughter to a nobleman. The insatiable thirst to put on a uniform of some kind, no matter what, has often been used M a reproach against our Gallic friendv London Telegraph. On the Track or the Microbe. Science is pressing relentlessly on the heels of the microbe. The latest method of coping with this minute but potent source of disease is to literally cast it out of the abiding place in which it has in stalled itself. Micro-organisms contain substances for the most part heavier than water, and this fact has led to the introduction of a method of separating them from water, milk and other liquids by centrifugal force. A speed of about 4,000 revolutions a minute serves to clear a large number of microbes from the liquid and render it limpid. Exchange, General Grant's Well Meant Politeness. The Btory is told of General Grant that while engaged in an animated ar gument with Mrs. John A. Logan on one occasion he openod his cigar cose and offered her a cigar and took one himself. He lit hia own and proceeded with the discussion. Mrs. Logan quietly accepted one, too, but secroted it without attract ing attention. She now preserves that cigar as a souvenir. Springfield Repub lican, Looking For Information. A good brother who recently offered prayer at a prayer mooting startod to make a reference to Noah, but got a little flustered and forgot the name of the patriarch. After hemming and haw ing for a few moments he turned to a neighbor and asked in a loud whisper, 'Who was it built the ark?" Washing ton News. A Monster Ox. The McMillan musee of Omaha owns the largest specimen of the bovine race now in existence. This gigantio ox was bred by C. W. Curtis of Cass county, la. At last accounts he weighed 8,740 pounds, stood 6 feet 4 inches in height and measured 10 feet 11 inches in girth. St. Louis Republic. Birds That Lay Four Eggs. The spotted sandpiper and killdeer plover, and I presume most of the other snine and plover, lay four eggs at a clutch. The eggs are arranged in the nest or on the bare ground with their small ends together, and as they are pyriform in 8hflp9 they Join in to perfection. The egg8 of the snipe and plover groups are proportionately exceeding large for the ; Bize 0( the bird, and the saving of space , tui. arranireinent undoubtedly an- j Bwerg a purpose. Dr. Morris Gibbs in Science. No Need of Praise. "You never sit and talk to me as you did before we were married," sighed the young wifo. "No," replied the husband, who was a draper's assistant. "The guv'nor told me to stop praising the goodB as soon as the bargain was struck." London Tit Bits. Mot Misunderstood. Guest(wearing large diamond) I trust ' you understand my bringing a oorecuve with me to your reception? 1 Hostess Oh, perfectly. You could easily be acquitted if we rnissod any- thing. Vogue. A curious book, in which the text U nejtuer written nor printed, but woven, as been published in Lyons. It was mai0 0f Bik BUd was published in 25 parts, each part consisting of but two iave8- ' Honors, World's Fair. Powder. No Ammonia, N" Aium Mr-H(; -..If cyr ' h .raTiqarru