8 gMilili H I Hi l l I I III II I I t i l l Ul 111 1 1 1 h i 1 1 L) i,,M,5 - i The persistent wooing lover i Is the one who gets the maid ; I And the constant advertiser I I Gets the cream of all the trade, i i : I 5miiii hi in i idi i hi ij 1 1 1 1 in 1 1 1 1 1 1 hi u n in mi i i nid OFFICIAL PAPER I'M I CI If Ml I III 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 W M'lil Mill III 1 1 1 1 1 otii.. i I The man who tries to advertise I i With printer's ink consistent, I One word mast learn nor from it turn, 1 I ' And that one word's persistent S JJ HiftHM Pl l 1 1 1 M I I M ,M M 1 1 1 1 M IIHI I I II I I I 1 1 1 lWi TWELFTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1894. WEEKLY NO. 613.1 SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 2M. I SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. FUBLI8HKD Tuesdays and Fridays -BT- m PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY At f3. 50 per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 eta. cor inree m uncos. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "XAO-LE," of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, is pubiisnea oy lae same com BftnT everv Frldav mornine. SubBcriotlon price, $2per year. For advertising rates, address ORZJsr Xi. FAr5o, Editor ana Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette, Heppner, Oregon. THIB PAPER is kept on file at E. C. Dake's Advertising AgenGy, fl4 and 65 Merchants Uxcnangs, Han r rancieoo, (Jamonna, wnere cou racti for advertising can be made for it. Union Pacfic Ralway-Local card. No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 0:45 p. m. daily exoept aunaay ' 10, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. 9, " leaves " a. m. " 9, " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a, m. daily except Monday. East bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 : a. m. West leaves " 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 2 :00 p. m. arrives at Portland at 7:00 p. m. OFPICIAL DIRBCTOBT. United States Officials. President Grover Cleveland Vice-President Ad'ai Stevenson Secretary of State Walter Q. Grenham Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Secretary of Interior.. Hoke Smith Secretary of War Daniel S. Lamont Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert PoBtuiaster.General Wilson 8. Biasell Attorney-General Kichard S. Olney Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor S. Pennoyer Secretary of State G. W. MoBnde Treasurer Phil. Metsnhan Bopt. Public Instruction E. B. MoKlroy Senators (J. H. Mitchel J. N.Dolph 5 Binder Hermann congressmen , iw R.Ellis ( Printer Frank C. Baker ( P. A. Moore Supreme Judges W. P. Lord ?B.S.Bean Seventh Judicial District. Circuit Judge W. L. BradBhaw Prosecuting Attorney ...A. A. Jayne Blorrow Connty Officials. joint Senator A. W. Gowan Representative J. S. Hoothby DonntyJndge Jnlms Keithly ' Commissioners J. It. Howard J. M. Baker. Clerk J. W. Morrow " Sheriff G. W. Harrington " Treasurer Frank Gilliam " Assessor J. K, Willis Snrveyor... Goo. Lord ' School Sup't Anna Balsiger " Coroner T. W. Ayers, Jr HEPPNKB TOWN OFFICERS. Mayor P. O. Borg Councilinen O. E. Farnsworth, Mi Liohtenthal. Otis Patterson, Julius Keithly, W. A. Johnston, J. L. Yeager. Recorder F. J. Hallock Treasurer A. M. Gunn Marshal Precinct Officer?. Justice of the Peace E. L. Freetand Constable N. 8. Whetstone United SUtes Land Officer, THE DALLES, OB. J. F. Moore Register A. S. Biggs Receiver LA O BANDS, OB. B.F, Wilson Register J. H. Bobbins Receiver GOOIETIEE. Dorio Lodge No. 30 K. of P. meets ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.30 o'otock in their Castle Hall, National Bank build ing. Soionrnina brothers oordislly in- vlted to attend. A. W. Patterson, C. C. W. V. UBAWPOBD, K. Of it. & S. tf KAWLIN8 POST, NO. 81. G. A. B. Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of each month. All veterans are invited to join. : C. Boon, Gbo. W. Smith. Adintant, tf Commander. LUMBEE! WE HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what ii known as the SOOTT SAWIUJIjTj. FEB 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, - - - 110 00 " ' " CLEAR, - - 17 60 IF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD 16.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop. D. A. Hamilton . an'sr 01 I. WB. PENLAND, ED. K. BISHOP. President. Cashier. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON IF YOU WANT INFORMATION ABOUT ii.A-a .-l0,tfr fir rwumtl r.rl T THE PKEWS CLAIHII COHPAJIT, IOHN WMOERBUHN, - Wsnaoinj Attorns., P. O. Box 461. prfSIOSS PROCT&ED POTt SOLDIERS. WIDOWS, CHILDREN, PARENTS. Also, for Soldier nd Sailors 1lft.tiM !n the line of mr in the resralar Am.yor Nsvv alaerthe wr. survivor, of trie Indian wsr of 1K2 to 1S42, nd Uwlr widows, mow entitled. Old sad rejected claims I inert.itr TnouMt.ds entitled to M!icr t. teed fornki ! ebarfv !t H'lce, Sefst 0.R.&N.C0. E. McNEILL, Receiver. TO THE BAST GIVES THE CHOICE Of Two Transcontinental GREAT UNION NORTHERN Ry. PACIFIC RY. VIA VIA Spokane Denver MINNEAPOLIS OMAHA AND AND 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 O. R. & N. Agent at Heppner, or address W. H. HURLBTJRT, Gen. Pass. Agt. Portland, Oregon. The comparative value of these twoearda la known to most persona. They illustrate that greater quantity is Not always most to be desired. These cards express the beneficial qual ity of RipansTabuIes As compared with any previously known DYSPEPSIA CURB Ripana Tabules : Price, 50 cents a bor, Of druggists, or by mail. BIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 1 0 Spruce St., N.T. -THE 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 Bold and baggage checked through to all points in the United States and Canadian Provinces. For full information apply to your nearest ticket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pass. andTkt Agt, Milwaukee, Wis, Ss'Mt, Simplest. Strongest, Solid Top Receiver. Lightest, Easiest I Working, I Most J Accurate, Compact, Most Modern and progressive For catalogue or Information write to THE MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Conn. I FREB 3 C I "ortn ' lowly Music lor Forty ST" I U Cents, consisting of 100 pages fi: y ' hill size Sheet Music of the jj latest, brightest, liveliest and most popular Z selections, both vocal and Instrumental. w-- gotten up In the roost elegant manner, to- 1 eluding four large size Portraits. CMMCMCIU, tht Spznj Dancer, fc: PADCRW8KI, tht Onat Pianist. ADEUNA PATTI and 3 HINNIC StUQMAN CUTTINQ. y aoen... iu eaotaa to "" THE NEW YORK MUSICAL ECHO CO. 3 Broadway Theatre Bldg., New York City. ZS 5 CANVASSERS WANTED. 3 liliiliiliiiiiliiliiiUiiiUiUililt San Franolsoo And all points in California, vis the Ht, Bbasts ronte of the Southern Pacific Co. The greet hiehwar thromrh California to all points East and Sonth. trrand Scenic Route of the Facific Coast. Piulman Koffet Hleepera. Berond-claa. Hleepers Attached to exprese trains, aflnrding snpenor soconuDodations for aecond-clans passengers. For ratse, tickets, sleeping oar reservations, etc.. call npon or address SL EUEBLSU, ilanaor, X. P. ROOXBS, AMt, Qen. t. a p, Ait, Portland, Oregon, The thumb is an nnfailing index of character. The tSqunre'i'jpe in dicates a srrong will, great erierey and flrmnefr". CloHely allied is the Spatulatcd Type, tbe thumb or thope of advanced ideas and bntjirn-HS ability. Both of these types belong to the busy man or woman; and Demorest's Family Afnuaxiiie pre. pares especially fur such permum a whole volume of new ideiis, con. ri(nsir( (n . atnnll siihpsi an thnr tlm I rn ! record of the whole world's work 1 1 I 'or a 01onth may be read in half an relinement, culture, and a love of music, poetry, and Action. A person with this type of thumb will thor oughly enjoy the literary attractions of Demorest's Magazine. The Ar tistic Type Indicates a love of beauty and art, which will find rare pleasure in the magnificent oil-picture of roees, x 24 inches, repro duced from the original painting by De Longpr6, the most celebrated of living; flower-painters, which will be given to every nubscribcr to Demorest's Magazine for 1896. The cost of this superb work of art was $350.00 ; and the reproduction cannot be distinguished from the original. Besides this, an exquisite oil or water-color picture is pub lished in each number of the Maga zine, and the articles are so pro fusely and superbly illustrated that the Magazine is, in reality, a port folio of art works of the highest order. The PhilosophlcTypeie the thumb of the thinker and inventor of ideas, who will bs deeply inter ested in those developed monthly in Demorest's Magazine, in every one of its numerous departments, which cover the entire artistic and scientific field, chronicling every fact, fancy, and fad of the day. Demorest's is simply a perfect Family Magazine, and was long ago crowned Queen of the Monthlies. Send in your subscription; it will cost only $2.00, and you will have a dozen Magazines in one. Addresa W. Jenninus Dfmorkst, Publisher. 15 East 14th Street, New York. Though not a fashion magazine, its perfect fashion pages, and its articles on family and domestic matters, will be of superlative intercut to those possessing the Feminine Type of Thumb, which indicates in its small size, slendeniess, soft nail, and Bmooth. rounded tiD. those traits 1 which belong essentially to the gentler sex, every one of whom should subscribe to Deiuorest'B Magazine. If you are unacquainted with its merits, send for a Bpecimen copy (free), and you will admit that seeing these THUMBS has put you in the way of saving money by finding in one Magazine everything to satisfy the literary wants of sUe whole family. Leave Doubtful Seeds alone. The beat are easy to get, and cost no more. Ask your dealer for FERRY'S SEEDS Always tlie best. Known everywhere. Ferrv!. Rea Annunl for 1NU.1 tells von r wn&L. now. ana wnen t.n n Ant. . oom r ree. uei iu Address i D. M. FERRY & CO., uetrojt, Alien. A QUAKER HEARSE. It Is Used By the Rloti mid la the Plainest Hi-ante In This Country. The henrso that carries the rcm-iinr, of the ordinary Sew York man t.; tae grave mny he bedecked with ivaraj; plumes and conspicuous festoons of mournirtfr, but the New York million aire, if lie follows the example of dead and gone millionaires, makes his jour ney in a plain black vehicle with no unnecessary ornamentations. This is called the Quaker hearse. The Muauer hearse, says a New York exchange, is let out only to people who want to be buried as befits the rich. Strictly speaking, there have been a number of Quaker hearses, for these vehicles, like all others, will wear out, but as soon as one shows signs of going to pieces another precisely like it is built, and it is a precious fiction of the undertakers that the Quaker hearse which carried its grim load to Green wood recently is the same Quaker hearse behind which the sad procession of a bygone generation marched slow ly to the cemetery. It is called the Quaker hearse because of its extreme simplicity, which has endeared it to the Quakers. They and the millionaires always use it. It is drawn by a span of black horses driven by a black driver. John Gil martin, who has been driving it for the last twenty years, lias a solemn face that matches well the melanoholy hue of his clothes. Occasionally, specially instructed, John puts draped cockades on his horses and an extra wide weed on hir, hat, but he considers plainness preferable to an attempt at effect in funerals. So far as is known, no Quaker hearse ever disgraced a funeral by breaking down while carrying a body. Once the Quaker had a narrow escape. That was years ago, when Mayor Ilnve lneyer died. The Quaker carried the bo:b safely, but no sroner had it re turned to the .-.table than the rear a.de gave w-.:y and 'lie hearse came down willi a crash. The present Quaker has out-..- i-ii thr'C sets (;f wheels. Since the ri final Quaker lirst set out on its travel, it h-j'i carried the remains of the Vandei hilt .., Astors. Jay Gou!d. Catharine Wolfe, the Stewarts, ifave meycrs, and many others. Henry S. Ives made his last journey in the Quaker. His the plainest and finest hearse in this country. Largest Bsby Ever Horn. The largest h&by at time of birth of which the medicos of the world have any record first saw the light of day at Macon, Ha., during the summer of The child was the offspring of Will Lennon, ft wellknown painter of that burg. When thechild was twenty-four hours old it weighed but one and one half ounoi thnn forty poiini'.. 1 LUMBAGO SIGNALED BY MAES. Strange Sounds Which Might Be Celestial Messages. Electrical Experiments by Edison i Mount Ojrden Possibilities of the Future in Aerial Com munication. Can wie open up electric communica tion with the inhabitants of Mars? That is a question recently considered at a meeting of the Society of Arts in London, where Mr. W. H. l'reece, engi neer to the telegraphs department of the British post office, read a paper on "Electric Signaling Without Wires." Mr. Preece explained how he had re cently demonstrated that wires were not at all necessary to establish tele phonic communication, says the New York World. Under the supervision of a royal commission appointed between the shore and lighthouses he had conducted a series of experiments which amply demonstrated this fact. There was no difficulty in speaking between the shore and Flat Holm, three miles dis tance from the place of experiment. Mr. l'reece then went on to say that "strange, mysterious sounds" are heard on all long telephone lines when the earth is used as a return, especially in the calm stillness of the night. "Earth currents," said he, "are found in telegraph circuits and the aurora borealis lights up our northern sky when the sun's photosphere is dis turbed by spots. The sun's surface must at such times be violently dis turbed by electrical storms and if os cillations are set up and radiated through space in sympathy with those required to affect telephones it is not a wild dream to say that we may hear on this earth a thunderstorm in the sun." After further describing the mys terious sounds which had attracted his attention in the still watches of the night, Mr. l'reece said: "If any of these planets be populated witli beings like ourselves, having the gift of language and the knowledge to adapt the great forces of nature, to their wants, then if they could oscillate immense stores of electrical energy to and fro in tele graphic order, it would be possible for us to hold commune by telephone with the people of Mars." Those mysterious sounds which so puzzle Mr. l'reece seem to correspond with those noticed by Thomas A. Edison, who has turned Ogden moun tain, in New Jersey, into a great mag net and coiled miles of wire about it. At the time of the last opposition of Mars he noticed an increase of the seismic mutterings, which have recent ly been so violent. Mr. Edison and Mr. Preece are the only two of the sci entists who are now experimenting along these lines, and th whole scien tific world is watching the progress being made. Neither Mr. Edison nor Mr. l'reece has been so bold as to say that the strange sounds referred to are messages sent by the inhabitants of i Mars to those of earth, but they have not otherwise explained them. On the other hand there are many scientists firm in the belief that the next few years will witness the open ing up of communication between the people of the two planets. This conviction has been enormously strengthened by the strange lights seen at the Lick observatory when Mars was under observation during its opposition a little over a year ago. The three lights were arranged in a triangle, flashed out as soon as dark ness had set in and in the immense lens of the Lick telescope they glowed with steady and continued effulgence. Was this an effort of the inlmbitants of Miirs to attract the attention of those of earth? Such had been the opinion of Flam marion, who had argued in favor of earth signaling back with a triangle of lights thirty miles across. It was shown that tlie conditions of Mars were more nearly those of earth than of any other planet, lloth of the snow caps could be plainly seen and may lie seen now in any first-class telescope, for Mars is now to be observed in the morning about thirty degrees west and fourteen degrees south from Venus in the constellution Capricorn. The well defined atmosphere of Mars is also plainly visible, and astronomers can tell by the increase or decrease of its snow caps and its position in regard to the sun the progress of its seasons anil whether or not the Marsians are hav ing a cold winter. Tlie canal theory of Schiapparelli has likewise many be lievers, who assert that the strange straight lines on Mars are canals which have been built by its highly civilized inhabitants. Mr. Preece says he has kept a record of tlie strange, mysterious sounds which hav; attract -l his attention, while Edison has done likewise. These will require much study to decipher, if they are messages from Mars. The Preece discovery, on tlie other hand, puts it in the power of the people of earth to send direct electrical currents to Mars, whose inhabitants are so much in advance of ourselves that th iat tney may be able to help us out in the work of opening up converse. A pantomimic electrical interchange will he necessary for h"me time, but what will lxi the emotions of the scientific world when the message is sent out that communi cation has been estaijlislied? There are those who firmly assert '."at this is an cxpriem:e ' f the imme diate f.iture; that electricity is the unhvn-ai force and the one whereby tha 5.'uiaet'j will come into com munication with each other if they t "Ht: ever do. The mystery of electricity is the strange fluctuations it undergoes. If it were an earth property solely it would be steady, as it would be were it common to all the universe and not in terfered with, liut its strange goings and comings, its apparent relations to the sun, and yet its known sympathy with other heavenly bodies, seem to show that somebody somewhere is fooling with the dynamo nnd cutting off and turning on the current. QUAKERISM-UPT o" UA 1 1. Concessions to Modern Ideas by the Socie ty of Friends. The recent yearly meeting of the So ciety of Friends adopted several changes in discipline that will be of very general interest. The rule con cerning marriage, says the Philadel phia Press, that for time out of mind has been regarded with such rigor in the society, has been changed in the direction of liberality. It is now alto gether feasible for a member to marry one who is outside the society without losing standing, or, in any event, mem bership in the society. Formerly it was impossible for a member to marry anyone not a member of the society without the consent of the meeting, provided the person was a member of any other body. Now, in all cases, if the meeting consent, it can lie done in god order. Even if a member marry contrary to the order of the meeting and desire to retain membership, the meeting is now, by the changes in the discipline, permitted to retain him. The women's meeting, it may also be observed, is given equal voice with the men. The new discipline makes a number of other changes. Among the most in teresting is one recommending that friends abstain from the use, cultiva tion, manufacture and sale of tobacco. A recommendation against the use and sale of liquors has long been in force, and remains unchanged, exeept that it has been extended so as to embrace "furnishing any material whereby the testimony against intoxicants is vio lated." The testimonies in relation to "plain ness" of speech, appnrel and behavior remain unchanged. The article in no tation to slavery is stricken out, and many obsolete expressions are modern ized. The queries have been recast, and now embrace fourteen, the answering of which embraces a statement of the condition of the society on almost all essential points. One of the changes that has been made in the substitution of the term "free ministry of the gospel" in place of tin term "hireling," which was dis tasteful to mnny. The testimony ngaim.t a paid ministry is not changed, but only tile name by which it is known is rendered more euphonious. Peace and arbitration are also advo cated. VICTIMS OF FOOL'S GOLD. Thoy ItittiRe from I'orly-Nlni rs to World's I',:'.- 'ini'milr ilnrilors, Stretched Mat 'ii his stomach on the giv;vei!y will: i.i the front of tlio east entrance the .Mining Vnildiii;;, wilh hi;', iiese within one inch of t!ie ground, l.i' a. s:ti.iI.I hiy tlie other day. Around mm, ;nys Mr: (. ntca.'fn Tribune, were. as .'.u'i'iciiii:i'.t investigation showed one brother, his mother, two sisters, one cousin, o;je aunt, and one granil- nioiacr. ine Drotlier and sisters were seiitle.vd around in positions some what similar to tlie youthful hero of tliis story. Their noses were equally close to the ground. The olfactory ap pendages belonging to the elder mem bers of the party were as near to mother earth as their half-squatting, hah'-.iitting posture permitted. Each and every member of this aggregation was busy busy scratching gravel. With infinite care every inch of ground was inspected, and every once in awhile an exultant cry of "got some" from one individual would spur tlie others on t ) renewed exertions. One bystander finally went to the small boy and queried: "What are you looking for, son?" "fluid," was the sententious answer. "Found any?" "Yep." Slowly he opened his tightly closed left hand and exhibited half a dozen grains of iron pyrites, worth about seven cents a pound. All of which is but history under a modern guise. When the earth gave up its yellow treasure half a century ago many a man dug for gold and thought lie found it; many an aircastlu was wrecked when the bagH of shim mering dust turned out to be "fool's gold" iron pyrites. And there are storiis current in the far west that when some of the castles fell they buried their builders beneath the ruins. Origin or the Menhaden Industry. Mr. Kobert F. Walsh, in the Popular Science Monthly, thus recalls the origin of the present menhaden industry: It was in 1MV) when an old lady, Mrs. John Ilartlett, of Illuehill, Me., boiling some fish for her chickens, observed a thin scum of oil upon the surface of the water. Some of this she bottled, and when on a visit to Iionton soon after, carried samples to a leading oil merchant, who encouraged her to bring more. The following year the Ilartlett family industriously applied their gill nets and sent to market thirteen bar selsof oil, for which they were paid at the rate of eleven dollars per barrel. In the following year this family made one hundred barrels. Then the value of menhaden oil having become recog nized, many oil presses of a more or l,.uu imru.i-f.'of mtiiclrnl.iin ......... ..... . .. " '. : : - - ""'""i"-'" B1"K coast, and the in- uusiry ueveiopeu wi mjiiuiy iua& Wlin in twenty years the yield of menhaden oil exceeded that of the whale from the American fisheries. Australian Native Iytns; The aboriginesof Australia are stead ily dying out, although the colonial government spends a considerable sum on their support. Victoria and New South Wales have very few blacks left at ail, fnl Ui" vimUr lwm every Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Absolutely puke BESIEGED BY WOMEN. They Throng the White Houso with All Sorts of Wants. The Life of Private Secretary Thurber Rendered Kxceedtlifrly Interesting: by Jair Callers with Requests for the President's Signature. For a time at the beginning of the l-rescnt administration Private Secre tary Thurber was almost hourly visit ed by women carrying bedspreads and crazy quilts on which the president or Mrs. Cleveland were to write names. says the Washington Post. At last this fad assumed such alarming proportions that a bureau for the reception of all such things was established across the hall from Mr. Thurber's office. I can not say, but I strongly suspect that clerks were employed in this depart ment to sign the names, and credulous women worked in floss and filoselle the names of the head official and his wife that had been written by young men nnd women hired to do the writing at so much a week. Mr. Thurber is besieged constantly by women who want to see Mrs. Cleve. land and the babies. "Can't you just take me into Mrs. Cleveland's room and tell her who 1 am. She won't care and 1 won't do anything but look at her. they explain in their confidential way. hen lie assures tuem that Mrs. Cleve land is not on exhibition at that time they beg for a special dispensation for themselves, never realizing that if the demands of tlie people were regarded Mrs. Cleveland and thu children would be on inspection drill twenty-four hours every day without a moment's cessation for eating or sleeping. Some people come to the private sec retary with pathetic appeals. They want to see the president that he may have their husbands or fathers re turned to the government employ, from which they have been removed. The little stories of their sorrows and trials are quite as vivacious as they are pathetic, and though because of the impossibility of it doing them any good they never reach the president tliey ere not less kindly heard by his secretary. Nouictinie.s woman suffragists float into tin wliUe. house and up tlie softly. carpeted stairs to Mr. Tlmrber. I re- mcni!,cr one who wanted a consulate. She :-:iid, in iter inanly voi e, as if de- livei-ii'g a speech from thu Auditorium stage: "Mr. Secretary, il has been proved conclusively that woman is mentally man's equal, in endurance she is his equal, and in morals his superior. Mr. Secretary, I call upon you to know if this is not so? Mr. Thurber stroked his palo drab mustache, looked very doubtful and as sented. "Mr. Secretary, in the name of the women of these United States, in the names of mothers who bore the voters, by the right of their intelligence and the nobility of their motives, I demand that they may be given a vote." "Hut, madam, 1 cannot enfranchise women," said Mr. Thurber, apprehen sively. "Mr. Secretary, I don't want you to enfranchise women, but I want you to show your approval of bestowing that grand and glorious privilege upon the nobler, if weaker, sex by securing for me a consulate." The grandiloquence of the speech slightly aroused Mr. Thurber, who said: "In order to save you time and trouble in going to the departments I will tell you now that you are not eligible to a consulate and consequently cannot have it, no matter how much you and all your friends think you should." Then he explained at considerable length that only citizens were eligible, ami that women, not being citizens, could not be ambassadors. It was im possible to misunderstand such a lengthy and kindly explanation and the woman was naturally deterred from carrying the matter any further, but, unwilling to leave without once more asserting her dignity, she drew herself up to her full five feet nine and said: "Mr. Secretary, it is an unjust rul ing, anil I shall see that our represen tative to congress has it changed." I'p to date, however, it has not been changed. HUMBERT AND FRANCIS JOSEPH A Ilraee of Monarehs Who Never Rpeak an They Pans Ily. Indications of tlie peculiar relations existing between the courts of Vienna and Kome were manifested the other day, when Emperor Francis Joseph was permitted to cross over the Italian ter ritory on his way to visit Emperor Wil liarn at A bbazia, without any of tlio customary forms of courtesy and atten tion being paid to him by the Italian authorities. This neglect by the Italians was made all the more pointed seeing that King Humbert was at that moment at Venice preparing to receive the visit of Emperor William, which followed Im mediately after the departure of the Austrian monarch, who for a second time passed several hours traveling through the northern portion of Italy on the way back to his capital. The strained relations which led to this lack of courtesy on the part of King Humlx-rt are due, says the New York Kecordcr, to the persistent rufusal of tfic emperor and empress to return at Kome the state visit which King Hum bert and Queen Marguerite were por uadd by tholr minister to pay to the Baking court of Vienna" just ten years ago. The visit ought to have been returned with in at the latest twelve months, and the emperor's hesitation and delay in the matter are attributable to the compli cations which would arise in connec tion with the Vatican, since the pontiff absolutely refuses to receive at the Vatican any Catholic sovereign who has not first paid his respects to the head of the church before holding any inter course with the quirinal. King Humbert of course insists that the first visit should be to the quirinal, and this renders the stay of Catholic royalties in the eternal city a source of endless complications and awkward contretemps. To make matters worse, Empress Elizabeth has, even since the death of her son, visited Rome incog nito, and been received by the pope without paying the slightest attention to the quirinal, and that it was after this that she was permitted to make a stay at Venice without receiving any attention from the Italian authorities, being even forced to take her turn with the tourists when she visited the royal palace in which she had formerly dwelt as its mistress prior to the forced surrender of Venice to Italy by Aus tria. FATTEN ON BARBER'S WHIMS. Odds and Ends Turned Over by Cheeky Fellows with an Eye to Business. "There are only three men in Chi cago in that fellow's line of business," remarked the chatty Wabash avenue barber, as he turned to strop the ra zor. "Oh, he trades in barber's crank notions, superstitions and whims, the operator continued. "lie goes from one shop to another with that little handbag and trades razors, strops, brushes, hones anything in the ton sorial line. How does he make a liv ing at it? Easy enough. You don't know barbers very well, I guess. Well, one of 'ein buys a razor for, say, two dollars, and after he's used it awhile makes up his mind he doesn't like it. So he sells it to this man for one dol lar. This man leaves it on trial with some other barber and gets four dol lars' worth of oltl razors in exchange, and then he sells one of those old razors to the original purchaser of tlie two dollar razor. He does the same with strops and hones and brushes. Of course he makes money. Dresses well, smokes good cigars and works only when he feels like it. There's money in it for the three fellows in the busi ness, but the snap will be overdone as soon as the scheme is better known. Capital necessary to begin? Cheek and acquaintance are all that are neces sary. When the razor broker gets a cranky customer who shaves himself and wlio doesn't care what his outfit costs, provided it suits him why, then, he doi-s what anyone else would do. He makes the crank pay for his crank iness." INDIANS DIE IN PRISON. Apaches Yield to Consumption In Confine ment at Vuma. It is a remarkable fact, though one easily accounted for, that imprison ment at Yuma for any term of not less than five years of an Apache or any mountain Indian is equivalent to im prisonment for life, and the cause of death is invariably consumption. This is a disease, says an Arizona ex change, almost unknown among the Apaches under normal conditions of climate and habit. The change, how ever, from the high altitudes of the mountains and the bracing mountain air to the lower level of Yuma, with its more than semi-tropical heat, wears away what mountain storms and ex posure cannot even indent. On March 2'Jof this year Say-es, a Tonto Apache, died at Yuma. lie was a member of tlio Kid's band, anil was one of the murderers of Sheriff Rey nolds and his deputy, who were guard ing them on a journey to Yuma. The murderers, along with the Kid, es caped. Say-es alone was afterwards recaptured, and all the rest of the band except the Kid have since been killed. Say-es was sentenced for life from l'inal county. Two months before the death of Say-es Dr. Cotter pronounced his case hopeless and recommended his pardon on account of the danger of infection. The governor decided to grant the pardon, but vigorous protests came up from Pinal, Graham and Ciila counties. The pardon was not granted, and Say-es died two months later. Taklue; a Telephone to Bed. A doctor's profession requires him, if he seeks convenience and comfort, to have two telephones one in his office nd one in his bedroom. As anyone who hns"to pay tribute to the tele phone knows, says the Pittsburgh Tele graph, their charges hardly represent the progress that has b"cn made in other lines m tlie worlil m cheapening commodities. Hut necessity is the mother of invention, and a doctor in the East End found a way to have the convenience of two telephones and yet only pay for one. lie has his tele phone hung upon hooks in his office, the connections being made by the telephone coming iu contact with an electric board which he hits had con structed. He also has wires run to his bedroom, where another electric board has been placed. The doctor may be said to take his telephone to bed with him every night, lie takes it from the hooks in his office, carries it under his arm up to his bedroom, and places it upon the hooks there. Should any calls come during tl.e night, he can answer them without leaving his " room, thereby get.tiug the use of two talnphoiitxt for th priet1 of on.