I'M p I'M in i in 1 1 i 1 1 in i i 1 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiihii'I i rm i lium ni'5 The man who tries to advertise f i With printer's ink consistent, f I One word must learn nor from it turn, I i And that one word's persistent I Z m 9 - 5iiiiini!iii i i i 1 1 i jii mi ii i iii i i ii;i i iti'i'i i rv'iii 1 1 1 ii 1 1 iwiwi ii 91 li I II MiHlHHItl l I'M'I'I IH l lliHHIHIH 'IWMiUtfWMWS 4 t S 4 9 - I The persistent wooing lover 1 Is Uie one who gets the maid ; I 1 And the constant advertiser I Gets the cream of all the trade. i iiimiM HI II IIWI .Mil 'Mil HWMI Hnlilllliltllllillimill .WMilS OFFICIAL HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1895. WJEKLYrO. 6?7. SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 318.1 THIRTEENTH 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 eta. tor three monens. E. McNEILL, Receiver. TO THE Advertising Rates Made Known on JHv 2 J! Application The "EAO-LE," of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, is published by the same com pany every Friday morning. Subscription price 12 per year. For advertising rates, addreBS 'OXailT Xi. r'-A.XTESaSOZT, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "faazette, 'Heppner, Oregon. GIVES THE CHOICE Of Two Transcontinental THIS PAPER is kept on file at E. C. Dake's Advnrtisinir Aaenov. 64 and 65 Merchants Ezohangs, San Francisco, California, where cou raots for advertisu-. ' can be made for it. An agreeable laxative and Nekvb Tonic Bold by Druggists or Bent by mail. 25c uQo. and $1.00 per package. Samples free. IfA TJf The Favorite TOOTH tlWIIS 11. U liUforfueTeethandBreaUi.ao. For Bide by T. W. Ayers, Jr., Druggist GREAT NORTHERN Ry. Union Pacfic Railway-Local card. No. 10. mixed leaves Heppner 9:45 p. m. daily except Sunday ' 10, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. o laavM " a. m. q " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a. m, daily eitoept Monday.. H'wit, bonnd. main line ar. at Arlington 1W a. m. West " "leaves laoa. m. West bonnd local freight leaves Arlington 8:85 o urrivBs at The Dalles 1:15 p. m. Local passenger leaves The Dalles at 'i :00 p. m. arrives at roruana ai i aiu p. w. VIA Spokane MINNEAPOLIS UNION PACIFIC RY. VIA Denver OMAHA jisSf type: St. Paul Kansas City United States Officials. President Qrover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson w..roiorv f HitA Walter O. Grenham Hocretary of Treasnry John ' Q. OarlifilH tiecrotary of Interior Hoke Smith Mwraiurv nf War Daniel S. Lamont Hecretaryof Navy Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster-General William L. Wi.son Attorney-General Kiohard S. Olney Seoretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. W. P. Lord Secretary of State H. K. Kincaid Treasurer Phil. Metechiin 8npt. Public Instruction O. M. Irwin Attorney General . 0. M. W'eman ( G. W. MnBnda Banators j, H. Mitchell J Binger Hermann omjreoouiou i yy k, ule Printer W. H. Leeds ( U. 8. Bean, Supreme Judges j F. A. Moore, ( C. E. Wolverton Seventh Judicial District. Circuit Judge W. L. Bradehaw Prosecuting Attorney A. A. Jayne Morrow County Officials. ....A. W. Gowan J. 8. Boothby Julius Keithly J.K. Howard LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES. Ocean Steamers Leave Portland Every 5 Days For SAN FRANCISCO. -Joint Senator Kepreecntntive ( entity Jndge ' Commissioners.. J. M. Baker. " Clerk , RHeriEf " Treasurer Assessor Surveyor " School Sup't... " Coroner .T. W. Morrow ..G. W. Harnnirton Frank Gilliam J. ('.Willis Geo. Lord Anna Halsiger T.W. Avers, Jr For full details oall on O. B. & N. Agmtat Heppner, t.r address W. H. HURLBTJRT, Gen. Pass. Agt. Portland, Oregon. THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES Run Two Fast Trains Daily HEPPNER TOWN OFFICERS. favor Thos. Morgan C luncil.nen O. K. larnaworth. M. Liohtenthal, Otis Patterson, T. W. Aysrs.Jr., c u un.na. IV .T. Hlnp.mn. !'!, (order ' ,;F-,J,wH"1!o0!5 r. .a.nwT E. L. Freeland M;.rhal..'.'. N. 8. Whetstone Precinct Officers, T.ioanf fho Panne E. L. Freeland Constable ,.N. 8. Whetetone United States Land Officers. TBI DALLES, OB. J. F. Moore Register A. 8. Biggs LA GRANDE, OB. B.F. Wilson Register J. H. Robbins 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 ncaresi tieket agent or JAS. C. POND, Gen. Pass. andTkt. Agt., Milwaukee, Wis, l BanK ol Henier. The thumb is an unfailing Inrtc of character. The tenure 'i'. pi- in dicates a strung will, great ennui and firmness. Closely allied is tin Spatulated Type, the thumb ol timet of advanced ideas anu Diismesr ability. Doth of these types bi-lonf to the busy man or woman ; ami Demorest's Family Jim nine pre pares especially fir such pirsi lis a whole volume of new ideas, con densed in a small space, so that the record of Ilia whole world's work for a month may he rend in half an hour. The Conical Type indicatet refinement, culture, and a love of music, poi-trr, and fiction. A person with this type of thumb will thor oughly enjoy the literary attractions of Demorest's Magazine. The Ar tistic Type indieates a love ol beauty and art, which will find rare pleasure in the magnificent oil-picture of roses, 1;)4 x 24 inches, repro duced from the original painting by De Lonirpre, the most celebrated ol living llowcr-painters, which will he given to every subscriber to Demorest's Magazine for 1895. The cost of this superb work of art was $850.00; 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. fnselvand superbly illustrated that the Magazine is, in reality, a port folio of art works of the highest order. The Philosophic Type is the thumb of the thinker and Inventor of ideas, who will be 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 yonr subscription; it will cost only ta.OO, and you will have a dozen Magazines in one. Addresi W. Jennings Dsmorkbt, Publisher, 15 East Hlh Street, New York. Though not a fashion magazine, it perfect fashion pages.nnd itsarticles nn fiimilv and domestic matters, will be of superlative interest to those smooth, rounded tip, those traita whirh beloni? essentially to the 'entler sex, every one of whom should subscribe to ii'inorcsl's Magazine. If yon are unacquainted with is merits, send for a specimen copy (free), and mi will admit mat seeing inese i iii .tioh nao pui In i he wav of saving money by finding in one lagazine everything to satisfy the literary wants id he whole family. 'O LONG BEFORE PULLMAN'S DAY. Benjamin Dearborn, In 1819, Thought Out the Sleeping and Dining Car. The recent Pullman troubles impart a special interest to a discovery re cently made by File Clerk Walter H. French, amontj the archives of the house of representatives, says the Washington Post. The discovery is in the nature of a petition to congress preferred in 1819 clearly foreshadowing the modern system of sleeping cars. The petition is all the more interesting because the power of steam used in the propulsion of railroad trains at that time was still in its infancy and wrapped more or less in vague mystery. The paper is as follows; "The memorial of Benjamin Dear born, of Boston, respectfully repre sents: That he has devised in theory a mode of propelling wheel carriages in a manner probably unknown in any country, and has perfectly satisfied his own mind of the practicability ol con veying mails and passengers with, such celerity as has never before been ac complished, and in complete security from robbery on the highway. "For obtaining these results he relies on carriages propelled by steam on lev el railroads, and contemplates that they can be furnished with accommo dations for passengers to take their meals and their rest during the pas sage, as in a packet; that they be suf ficiently high for persons to walk in them without stooping, and so capa cious as to accommodate twenty, thir ty or more passengers and their bag gage." HIS ORDER. The College President's Injunction Was a Difficult One to Obey. The speaker who has planned an ad dress for a multitude, and finds himself confronted with but a single auditor, sometimes fails to readjust his remarks, and the result is apt to be ludicrous. A little story illustrative of this point is told in connection with a former president of the University of North Carolina. One day, as this dignified aid stately personage was walking about the cam pus, he observed an unlawful assem blage of students at some little dis tance. He did not hasten his steps, but proceeded slowly toward them with his head down and his eyes apparently bent in contemplation of his own boots, When this leisurely proceeding had brought him to the spot where the students had been gathered, only one young man remained, the others having precipitately departed. The president raised his head and surveyed the solitary culprit with ap- possessing the Feminine Tvpe of parent severity, although the young Thumb, which indicates in its small , contended that he detected size, slenderness, sort nan, ana "Sir," said the president in a com manding tone, "instantly disperse to your several places of abode!" Difficult though the feat required cer tainly was, the young man executed it to the best of his ability by "dispers ing" without further delay. mals with" it, the tigress pounced upon the baboon and with great fury dis patched it. After gently caressing her offspring, she turned to me with a look which plainly expressed her thanks for the service I had rendered her. She then disappeared in the forest, her two cubs trotting behind her." Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report THE VAMPIRE BAT. A Dnsd Creature That Is Common hi India. I have always despised bats, said a Cleveland man recently, and it always sends a shudder over me whenever one of the hideous creatures approaches me. The bats of this country, how ever, are not to be dreaded in compar ison to those of the vampire species which abound in India. Just imagine a big mouse with a horn on his head like a rhinocerous, furnish him with a pair of demon-like wings, and you have a very good picture of this latter kind. The natives dread the vampire bat on account of his blood-sucking propensi ty. In the sultry nights he fans the heated sleeper with his wings while his needle-like teeth are being in serted into the veins of his victim, quenching his thirst for blood with such gentleness that it is only by some fortunate chance that he is discovered before the mischief is done. It is a well-authenticated fact that if an indi vidual is once bled by a vampire he is invariably chosen, in preference to all others equally exposed for a subseqent attack, and even if he were to move ten or twenty nnlus away, no im munity is gained thereby, as the bat is sure to follow him and keep up his blood-thirsty attack until his victim succumbs or the animal is discovered and killed. Cattlo and horses, from being more exposed, are more frequent ly chosen as the subjects of attack by these loathsome creatures. IT IS NOT SLANG. trived to overturn the earth by means of the forked limb of a tree, shaped in the semblance of a plow and drawn by oxen, began a great revolution in the art of agriculture. To this unknown genius we may award a place among the benefactors of mankind, quite as distinguished as that which is occupied by the equally unknown inventors of the arts of making fires or of smelting ores. After the experience with the strength of oxen had been won from the work of plowing it was easy to pass to the other grades of their employ ment where they were made to draw carriages. Next after the contribution which the kindred of the bulls have made by their strength we must set that which has come from their milk. Although this substance can be obtained in small quantities from several other domestic ated animals, the species of the genus Uos alone have yielded it in sufficient quantities greatly to aif eet the develop ment of man. It is difficult to measure the importance of the addition to the diet, both of savage and civilized peo ple, which milk affords. It is a fact well known to physiologists that in its simple form tliis substance is a com plete food, capablo when taken alone of sustaining life and insuring a full de velopment of the body. , Receiver j . Receiver WM. PENLAND. ED. R. BISHOP. President. Cashier. HUNSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS GECEET SOCIETIES. KAWL1N8 POST, NO. 81. G. A. R. Meet at Leiinirton. Or., the last Saturday of each month. All veterans are invited to join. (' r. hvon. Geo. W. Smith. Adjutant, tf Commander. LUMBER ! THTTlt TIAVH! FOR BALE ALL KINDS OF UN T dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is known ai the SOOTT SAWMIIjIj. COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HSPPNER. tf OREGON I FREE 1 PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, CLEAR, - 110 00 - 17 ro TF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD X 16.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop, I j. A.. HamlltoniMan'sr 1 00 worth of lovely Music for Forty ui lug pages size Sheet Music of tin latest, brightest, liveliest and most popular selections, potn vocal ana instrumental. gotten up In the most elegant manner, in- eluding four large size Portraits. CARMENCITA, thi Spanish Dancer, PtnFRFWSkl Ik, Or.nl Plnnlmf. ADEUHA PATTItnd MINNIE 6EU0MAH CUTTING. THE NEW YORK MUSICAL ECHO CO.n - Broadway i neaire niag.,new lorxuiy. r Z CANVASSERS WANTED. I'Slwil Constipation, 1 SlfJ DIzz iiess. H i STORY OF A CAT. This extra ordinary Re- Juvenator is me moil wonderful discovery of me age. it has been en dorsed by the men of Europe and America. Hudyan is purely vegetable. Hudyan stops Premalureness of the d la charge in 20 flavs. Cures LOST mm m The comparative valut of these twoearda la known to most persona. They Illustrate that greater quantity is Not always moat to ba desired. .'. These carda expresa the beneficial qual ity of RipansTabuIes Aa compared with any pravioualy knows DYSPEPSIA CURB Ripaoe Tabulea ! Price, 50 cent boi Of drug (ieta, or by mall. HIPtNS CHEMICUL CO., 1 0 Spruca St., M.T. Ilmpieat. ffltfj A"" strong., hmMm worUnt- reiver. J " Vou Can Get Ferrv'e Seeds at your dealers aa fresh and fertile as tbouxh you got them direct from Ferry 'f Seed Karma. Ferrys Seeds are known and planted every- wnere, arm are mtwmym ins brat. Kerry'a Serd Annul for iu tens 1111 auout them, Free. D. M. Fan? Co. Detrolt.Mloh. QUZCI TITVIB 1 TO And all points in California, via tha Mt, Hhaata nmta of the Southern Pacific Co. Che areat hisrhwar through California to all point Kwt and Month. Grand Hnonin Route of the Paciflo Oiaat. Pullman Hnflet Hlwpara. Beooudilaaa Hleepan Attached toeiprnea trains, aflurdina ranonor "1 aeoom'an"IaI,"D '" oecmd-olaaa peaaengere. For rautj ..fiekete. almping car 1 animations, atn.. oall npon nr kiiiW a KoKH VJL rC Mner. a suuiss, . Oeo. F. P. Agt. Portland. Oregon MANHOOD mmlPbi Bm,l0I,Pta mmmmmm DirziiieFS. Falling Hen-aatinns.Nrrv-oustwilching of the eyes and other paiti. Strengthens, invigorates and tones the entire t,ystem. Hudyan cuits Deb 111 ty, Nervousness, Emissions, and develop) a and restores weak uigaiis. Pains in the back, lofses d o'llcklr. Over 2,000 private endorsements. PreinatureneNi means iinnotenry in the first frtiize. It is a sjmp'om of aeminal weakness a'irl barrenness It can be Slopped In SO days by the use of Hudyan. The 1 ew discovery wes msrji by tbc Bnerlal It'.'of the old famous Hudson Medical Institute. It is the strongest vltanzcr made. It is very powerful, but ba'mless. fold for S1.00 a psck Bfreorti packages lor M.0G (plain sealed boxes). Wrltusi guarnn'ee given fore cure. If yon buy aix boxes and are I t entirely cured, tlx more will lwut to you five of ml eaiges. Scii lf .r rlpti'iip-ind teMiinonlsls. Adlrea Kl'DMON MriUCAI-i INSTITUTE, J o action Mor! ton, .VI arket ic I. Ilia ftu. Nan I'l'.iiicJuco, t'al. Carried Bo Much lilertrlclty That a Car la Net on Fire. The efficacy of a black cat as a light ning rod has been too frequently the subject of discussion and assertion to be treated at length at the present time, the drift of which Is to i-hmv the apt manner in which an illustration of this popular belief can be deduced from an incident that occurred on the evening of the Fourth of July to the wife of a well-known business man of Washington. On the evening in question the young matron had been expending consider able time and attention upon a hand some black cat, which she continued to stroke, notwithstanding thei assertion of her family that by so doing she va charging herself with electricity. Finally after dark the young matron decided that a pleasant way of wind ing up the evening would be to go for a ride on the electric ear to Itetliesda. Accordingly, inviting two of her friends to accompany her. she set out for the ride in high spirits. The trio found places together near the middle of the car, and hud irone a short distance beyond the power house when their conversation was inter rupted by the conductor hurriedly bending over them as though to avert some catastrophe beneath and telling them to leave the car with all speed, as it was on fire. Scarcely had they left their seats lefore a sheet of flume burst through the floor just beneath the very spot over which the young matron had been sitting, the electrical apparatus beneath having ignited at that very point. GRATITUDE. wild The Term "Gent" nnd Its Modern Application. The word "cent" nowadays seems to wear its hat cocked on one side of the tiead and to walk with a caddish swag ger of vulgar self-importance. But I inow a worthy old lady in the country, writes Edward Eggleston in Century, ivho calls her husband the "old gent," .uingitasa title of respect, and such it was in her childhood and long be fore. In 1754 Rev. Samuel Uuvies, afterward president of Princeton col lege, traveling in England, describes Rev. Dr. Ltirdner as "a little pert old gent," epithets that would not be nat tering to a minister to-tlay, nor even digniiied for a minister to use. "l'ert'' here has the sense of "lively" much as a Kentuckian might use "peart" or a New Englander "perk." Indeed, I suspect that Davies gave the word the sound of "peart," That Davies used "gent" as a term of respect is shown by his characterization of another rev erend doctor as "a venerable, humble and affectionate old gent." It will not do, therefore, to account a word recent because of its slanginess. When a smoker professes fondness for "the weed" ho does not dream that he is using an epithet applied to tobacco by King James I. in 1H:.'0. and that nearly two hundred years earlier than James, in the reign of Edward VI., the liop- pliint just coming into England was called "the wicked weed." Whut plant had worn this title of contempt before the hop l do not know. THERE IS A DIFFERENCE. , Sport A QUEEN'S PERQUISITES. AN ANIMAL'S How It Was FJwhkI McDonald, of Orpgou City, eommittod suioide hy sdno'intr, iu the Elite Htiloon. at Portland, Tuesday night. Noentise is known lor Ihedt-ed. The deceased whs 25 year old Hiid highly respectfd in Oregon City, nbere he ran cigiir store. The hoilM f'f Jerwiniab Webb wsa bnrtieil at Oilmore, Texnt, c,n Toeada ight, together with lo children, Htfer) 11 and 13 Walter (Sinclair, aged 17, vraa arrested on suspicion 11 rid nt the I ial it developed that lie had aasnultpij toe elder girl, stid then murdered both ai d burned the house in conceal hie crime. ( leurly Shown by Tlgrrsa. "Savacre bensts. even in their native wilds, nometimes recognize an act of kindness, and show their gratitude by the most unmistakable sigtJS,"..r inurkeil an old sea captain recently. "A numlier of years ago the ship which I then commanded as becalmed off the coast of India, and, taking a boat of men, I went ashore in search of fresh water. In some way I became separated from t'n; crew, and in wan dering around was agnl deal startled at coming directly upon a full grown tigress. Much to my surprise, the beast did not make any hostile demon strations toward me, but crouching on the ground looked steadfastly, llrst at my face and then at a tree short distance away. For a time 1 could not understand thisconduct, and, not daring t run for fear she would at once overtake ine, I stool rooted to Most Modern and proreelv I-..- .-.Ltna ur li.f..mv II ,n -U W r- MA RUN FIXE AR.".3 CO 3T. JACOB5 OIL Is tiie Perfect CUKE for NEURALGIA WITHOUT RELAF5B, CO-LAPSE, AAI3HAF5 cr PERHAPS ' Y ' - Whales Captured on the Itrltlsh Coast lie long to Victoria. Among the most curious of Queen Victoria's perquisites Is her right to every whale or sturgeon captured on the coast of the United Kingdom and brought to land, iioth of these per quisites date back to the days of the Norman kings, and it appears that in the case of the whale the monsters were divided between the sovereign and his consort, the queen taking the head ill order that her wardrobes might be replenished -with the whale bone needed for the stiffening of her royul giiriiii'iitH. Another of the queen's perquisites, says the '".ii-ago Times, is a certain number of magnificent cashmere shawls, wlsi'-li are dispatched to her every 1. ::r n "in the kingdom of t'ush mere. They vary in value, as a rule, from sixty to two hundred and lifty pounds sterling apiece, and the queen is accustomed to present one of them as a wedding present to every young girl of the aristocracy in whose future she Is in any way interested. Every tailor holding a patent of "purveyor to her majesty," if he conforms to ancient tradition and usage, should present her with a silver needle each year. Another class of royal purveyors is called upon to present to her annually a tablecloth, while from other sources again she is entitled to an annual con tribution of currycombs, lire tongs, scarlet hoiscry, nightcaps, knives, lances, and crossbows. Moreover, at the coronation the lord of manor of Addington must present to the sover eign a "dish of pottage" composed of "milk of almond, brawn of capons, sugar, spices, chickens parboiled and chopped." At the same ceremony the lord of the manor of Iloydon is olt- liged, by virtue of his tenure from the crown, to present the monarch with a towel, the lord of the manor of the workshop giving the sovereign a "right-handed glove." These arc only a few of the various requisites to which Queen Victoria Is entitled by tradition and usage. EARLY USE OF OXEN. They Fraeeded IhaTTforaa In Acrieultural Labor. The help which our lxvine servants render us by the power which they exert in traction, a in drawing plows, sled or wagons, Appears to have been first rendered long after their introduc tion to the way of man. The first of these use In which the drawing strength of these animals was made serviceable appears to have liecn in the work 01 plowing, id primitive nuj e A Sportaman, Sporting Man, and Not the Same Thing. There were a knot of men standing on a streetcorner, says the Washington Post. One of them had just finished re lating some experiences of a hunting excursion which he had taken the day previous down the river. "No you re a sporting man, are you, Jack? I never knew that before, really," said one of his companions. "No, sir," said the first speaker, "I am not a sporting man; I am a sports man, but I am neither a sporting man nor a sport." "Indeed! And where, pray, is the difference?" "The difference? Why, great Seott, man, there is as much distinction be tween (t sportsma.i, and a sporting man, and a sport as there is between a doctor, a cannibal, and a thief!" The speaker glared at the others, but the first man still looked blank. "Pray define it then," he said after a pause. "To be sure. It's something that everybody ought to know, but unfortu nately lots of folks never take tho trouble to learn those things. A sports man is a man who- loves sport in its truest sense. At least I so consider it. He is a man who enjoys hunting, fish ing, camping out, and is commonly fond of other athletic amusements in the way of boating, swimming, and the like. He is, pardon my opinion, apt to be a man of gentlemanly in stincts and brains. A sporting man is an entirely different sort of a fellow, lie is one who takes an interest iu sports of different sorts, although he may not engage in any of them at all. lie prob ably plays the races, drinks hard, takes in all the prize lights, and spends most. of his evenings, when there is nothing else on hand, playing cards and whoop ing things up. Hut a sport is on a still lower scale, lie is a fellow who thinks he's big potatoes when he's really noth ing but 11 runt, lie need not know any thing about sports or engage iu them either. His reputation will be won smelly by his lonil dress, his llirtalions with the girls, his hanging around sa loons, and his general wortlilessness, No, sir; there are a good many persons who are proud to be called sporting men or sports, but to call a true sports man by Buch a term is little short of an insult." MEN AND WOMEN. onie Cardinal Voiuts of Difference Be tween the Sexes. Women always show by their actions that tliey enjoy going to church; men are less demonstrative. When a wom an becomes Hurried she feels for a fur.; when a man becomes flurried he feels for a cigar. Women jump at conclu sions and generally hit, says the New York Advertiser; men reason things out logically and generally miss the truth. Some women can't pass a mil linery shop without look 1kg" in; some men can't pass a public hohsp without going in. A woman never sees a baby without wanting .to run to it; a man never sees a baby without wanting to run away from it. Women love admir ation, approbation, self-immolation on the part of others; are often weak, vain and frivolous. Ditto men. . A woman always carries her purse in her hand, so that other women will see it; a man carries his in his inside pocket, so that his wife won't see it. A wom an can sit in a theater for three hours without getting all cramped up, catch ing the tootb'ache or becoming faint for want of fresh uir; a man can't. A woman, from her sex und character, has a claim to many things beside her shelter, food and clothing. She is not less a woman for being wedded; and tho man who is fit to be trusted with a good wife recollects all which this im plies, and shows himself at all times chivalrous, swet-spoken, considerate and deferential. I.lllpuMun Cattle. The Sumoaii Islands are the natural habitat of tho most diminutive species of variety of the genus bos now known to the naturalist. The average weight of the males of these liliputian cattle seldom exceed two hundred pounds, the average being not greater than one hundred and fifty pounds. The females usually average ubout one hundred pounds larger, are very "stocky built, seldom being taller than a merino sheep." These dwarf cattle are nearly all of the same color reddish mouse color marked with white. They have very large heads as compared with their bodies and their horns are of ex ceptional length. Not In Ills Mne. A short time ago, says the Louisville Courier-Journal, a young lady was troubled with a boil on her knee which grew so bad that she thought it neces sary to call in a physician. She had formed a dislike lor tne laiiiuy (mj"- 1 1 i j 1 ... ., 1 i..l t!i tirn I'll 1 cian, so her miner mibi;i-"-', olhers, und finally said that he w.ouui call in the physician with the homa-o- pathic case, who passed the house every iy, They Kept a suaiii ihou.mii, him. and when he came 11 long nu w nlled 111. The young lady moiiesuy showed him the disabled member. The little man looked at it ami said: "Why, that's pretty bail." "Well," she sain, "what must I do?" "If 1 were you, "ho answered, "I would send for a physi cian. I am a piano tuner." I.N France the cooks have salad baskets made of wire, in which they swing the leaves after being washed until they are thoroughly dry, this be ing considered hetter than serving them on the table wet. ytiner I'aoe of Kens. There nre many curious uses of fans in Japan. The umpire at wrestling and fencing matches uses a heavy one, shaped like a huge butterfly, the han dle being the body, and rendered im posing by heavy eods of silk. The various motions of the fan constitute a language which the wrestlers fully un derstand and appreciate. Formerly in the time of war the Japanese comman der used it large fan, having a frame of iron covered with thick paper. In case of charge it could be shut, and a blow from its iron bones was no light 11 flair. ( Hie notable vnrkty of fan is made of waterproof paper, which can be dippeil in water, and creates great coolness by evaporation, without wet ting the clothes. Tho flat fan, made of rough pa per, is often used as a grain winnow, to blow the charcoal fires and as a dustpan. Only 50c. Read This All Through. Nevrost TcU'ns. Lending Ptylcs. Perfect Patterns for Ladles, MiMios und hiMren. Superb I llnsl milium. Fashion Notes. Health Mini Ileum y. I'aie y Work. Iteaiitifully Illustrated Hiigiestlun. Slorlei. ( lilldren's 1'iigo. Practical I'uge. l'laelloal, useful mut economical bints of nil kinds. I'm -emlncnllv the I'u-lil loiiinal fur (he million. A valuable, clean hounehold paper lor only 60c. a year. THE QUEEN OF FASHION the spot, l'rcuciiuy tne tigresa arose and walked to the tree, looking back ward aa fchc went. On turning my gaze aloft, I saw among the branches of the tree what had caused the evident solicitation t.f tho tigress. There, perched in one of the limbs, sat a bitf baboon with two little tiger cubs in it arma. Having an ax with me 1 start ed to cut tlie tree down, the tigresa and with primitive Ux.la, baud delving watching me tnu-ntijr an trio wnue. 1 wfti, g K,re task. ren tho tree fell and tho thrani-l Th Inw-nt W renlna who fr cm- ILLUSTRATING The Celebrated KcCall Bazar Patterns Eilabllihtd Tenty-FIa Yean. Ton may think yon cannot nfford another paper. Ton rannot afford to b wlilmut It. Tiik yi-aai or Kasiiio will actually save you from fifty to live hundred timce Ml cents by lit hlnli, " How to inako over old dressua. stockings, gloyea, chlldren'a clothing, eb:., ui." 1 he way to begin real economy, fll'lf KIPrlif TV Kiich month we fell yon how to get, a completn suit for from III, It ill rAIlUI ej I II.OO to I0.M riiial lo tailor undo. Juki how to do It. V, h. ro to le t it. All the Material, ev n to the minutt itl article of trimming. Just bow to iuh'kh l, eto., etc. Tiila aloa-5 will be worth liltr lUnca the coi .of the auhwrlpttun U any vom.fn. rrS GREATEST OFFER V:-.V. A anyfoumf th foHnwInf Mfimlnrd Wk, tvnn4 In : " i M,bj UrifH . .. mr, Hit writ Irtt: r thn futtrnrii Hint sift of -i i would tumty ..i n t irh In a ntor, lHlvfl frss In any rt i.f th I " '. 'J1,1 01 'Unmla, If youw h'1 hloii'lwiit-nvy. titm(isf.r-4Diwjrrlf sutTipUnri. W . nionny lr this, hut one a uhs-TirMfr slwsrs a uhsrrttv.f. 'hm sHwt tha pAitcra hf tuu Huutiou the numbers of ths books you want. Dou'l wtlt'UU Its too litU. .mi YftLOW Mask W.Hr It Collins fwf.iN'j f Mt Finin -Mn Alvikiidtr. lor rox'xir -Mm M E lira4ri-n. AKV ' t Mrt tlonry Won! 1( S.kiim rAl IN' heulott M Hrawftij, 1 hk Shadow fir a Sin rurMt M Hi . Uf.p,tm or a tu Mat i on Ik. Marvtl, I nr. I " . hm " I kr lhn hrw " Si', I IU am r AMti burnt i h "ti Fe4. II I' M f H IMK IIVAHtM -4 iiltklll. It A Wm km e i py i . M4iy i il II iy It MhH ( Al.'lll IfcM'H AIM I h ll.'Mk I). JMTttla. 14. CAU.1U Ha K llut;H "it way, Adlreaa, THE McCALL CO., i. A Borer's f.irr. WMUs rvilMit. if. LMirs lHr l's IM 1H Nn. 11 1 -n Ifirrsdtn, II A iiopv IM S'.l rT I nn.n l.iyl tA v.'Boi.rn ahu I'Atrrn f i,tri.,tt M. Jiraemc. ,i My 1 ahy'H M'IST - V. m-. olhni. n Maio, Wiir on Wii ow -Mfi Alnn't'r. ,i Iia, 70 1li 01 o II .l Miy Cei.,1 IIaV- 31, A V HI LOW A 1 KM In, o A, I:mi iv A 1,114 ..-wit t. I ioki'ii o. tmni - Mi. Kiiwein. ji I n Urn op I - hoi, ti tin. um A 1 nf. M.I II I'.i o K -atilcy J. Yttyiuul, 17, lJouo.fc.. t. IIchboii, 49 East 1 4th St., New York. i 1 -" New Haven, Ccna.