Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, April 26, 1895, Image 1

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    S-1 PAPEK
fMlMII I II in tHM IMM l I Kll ltlMIlf WitKI'
2
A 4 4
I The persistent wooing lover
I Is the one who gets the maid ;
I And the constant advertiser
1 Gets the cream of all the trade.
M4 trilllM't 1 lltl 1 1 I I I I I I 1 1 III IIMMttllMtlMlft MWMt
i
-
i The man who tries to advertise I
With printer's ink consistent,
1 One word must learn nor from it turn,
I And that one word's persistent
OFFICIAL
---- i
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirvKMiitiiii!i!iiittiiii iiiititimiwini
THIRTEENTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1895.
WEEKLY rfO. 634 (
SEMI-WEEKLY NO.S30.1
SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE.
PUBLISHED
Tuesdays and Fridays
BT
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY.
At $2.SO per year, J1.25 for six months, 75 ot.
tor three motions.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
0 OO.lXi
E. McNEILL, Rece;-er.
TO THE
The " Bjft-Ca-XjE!, " of Long Creek, Grant
nnnntv. Oregon, ia nubllsnea Dy tne same com-
mnr nvrv Friday morning. Subscription
price, $2 per year. For advertising rates, address
Xj. FATiEfisofr, naitor ana
GIVES THE CHOICE
Of Two Transcontinental
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or
Heppner, uregon.
"Gazette,"
oS3&H ' " i1
EASY-GOING POSTMASTER;
He Let Mail Accumulate In
. OfHce for Twelve Years.
His
From the Day of His Appointment He Let
the Office Run Itself and Plgeon
Uoled the Commissions of His
Intended Successors.
THI8 PAPER is kept on tile at E. C. Dske'a
Advertising Agenoy, M and B5 Merohants
Exchange, Ban r ranoisco, jaiir.uriiia. wu uuu
Toott for adyertising oan be made for it.
Union Pacfic Railway-Local card.
No. 9, mixed, leaves Heppner 3:30 p. m. dally
except Sunday. Arrives at Willows Junction
6:20 p. m. '
No. 10, mixed, leaves Willows Junction 7:15
g. m. Arrives at Heppner 10 p. m. daily except
'East-bound, main line arrives at Willows
Junction 1:40 a. in.
West bound, main line, leaves illows Junc-
ttlnn 19-1S a. m.
West bound Portland fast freleht with pas
senger coach leaves Willows Junction 6:31 p. m.
;and arrives at The Dalles at 12:01a m. Here
ipasseneers from the branch lay over till 8:15 a.
m. and take the fast mall west bound which ar
rives at Portland 7:95 a. m. The Dulles and
Portland passenger leaves The Dalles dally at
-2:15 p. m. and arrives it Portland 6:30 p.m.
Leaves Portland 8:00 i. m, dally and arrives at
The Dalles 12:15 p. m. This connects with the
east bound way freight with passenger coHch
-which leaves The Dalles at 1:30 p. m., arriving
.at Willows Junction 6:58 p. m.
GREAT
NORTHERN Ry.
VIA
Spokane
MINNEAPOLIS
UNION
PACIFIC RY.
VIA
Denver
OMAHA
St. Paul Kansas City
LOW RATES TO ALL
EASTERN CITIES.
OmCIAXi SIBECTOB7.
United States Officials.
President Grow Cleveland
Vice-President Ad ai Bievenwin
Secretary of Htate Walter Q. Gresham
Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle
Secretary of Interior Hnka Bmltli
'Secretary of War Daniel 8. Laniont
.Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert
Postinaater-Oeneral William L. Wi son
Attorney-General Riohard 8. Olney
lijecretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Mortoi.
Htate of Oregon.
Governor W. V. Lord
Secretary of Htate H. K. Kincaid
Treasnrer Phil. MeUchan
Knot. Public Instrortion (. M Irwin
Attorney General C. M. Id'eman
ttenatota j, H- Mitchell
1 Dinger Hermann
Congressmen J k. Ellis
Printer u"Jv-H- Uedi
( R. H. B wi,
.Supreme Judges i V. A. MMre,
( G. K. Wulverion
Seventh Judicial District.
Cironit Judge W. L. Bradshaw
Prosecuting Attorney A. A. Jayne
Morrow Comity Oftliiala.
Jol Senator A. W. Oowan
U,pnentatiTe. J. 8- H"0, "
ijs n1 y J oilge Jul l" Keithlf
Com in issi oners J. R. Howard
J.M.Haker. ,.,
" Clerk .T. W. Morrow
" Sheriff G. W. Harnne-ton
" Treasurer J rank (iilliam
Aaaeaaor J. f. Willis
' Surveyor.- 0". Lord
School Hup't Anna Halstgyr
" Coroner T.W.Ajroro.Jr
BKPrKCI TOWN ornoEBa.
Myor Thoa. Morgan
Cmncilinew O. K. Farnaworth. M.
Mrhtenthal, (His Patterson, T. W. Aysrs, Jr.,
. S. Horner, K. J. Blocnra.
loMir .F. J. Hal nek
T'wuiiinir fc. L Vreeland
Marshal N. 8. Vilietatoiie
Preriaet Officer.
Juatieanf the Peso K. 1.. Frssland
OrnoUuU N. B. W heuton
llnlted mates I And Officer.
TBI DALLE. OB.
J, F. Moor, Hrlsr
A. S. Higgs Receiver
LA OBAHDB, OB.
B. F. Wilson Ilelr
J.H. KoM.ios lUxielvw
SItXT tOCIXTIXB.
KAWUNH POrr, NO. IL
G. A. R.
Ms at Leiinrton, Orn th, bat RatnrrUy of
ck month. All veteran are lnvitd tn Kiln.
I 'C.Boxi. Ubo. W. HniTH.
Adiotaot, tf Commander.
J. H. FELL, M. D.;
Physician & Surgeon.
Ocean Steamers Leave Portland
Every 5 Days For
SAN FRANCISCO.
For full details obII on O. R.
A.i nt at Heppner, r address
& N
Thfg extra
ordinary Ee
Juvenntor is
the most
wonderful
discovery of
ma ai?e. 11
has b-en en
dorsed by tua
luen of
Europe and
America.
Hudyan in
purely vego-
Hudyan steps
Promaiureness
of the dls
charge in 20
days. Cures
LOST
MANHOOD
m
Wi!
III
Constipation,
DizzineFS,
Falling Sen
sations, Nerv
ous twitching
of the eyes
and other
paits.
Strengthens,
in v i g orates
and tones the
entirettem.
Hudyan cures
Deb illty,
jervouscess,
Emissions,
enddevelopi s
end restores
weak rgaDB.
Puius in the
back, losses
bv day or
nithtstopped
quickly. Oyer 2,000 private endowments.
Prematureneta mesns imnotency iu the first
stage. It is a eymp om of siml"Bl weakness
and barrenness It can be stopped in 20 days
by the use o f Hudyan.
The rew discovery wns tnsd by the Special
ists of the old famous Hudson Medical Institute.
It is the strongest vltallzer made. It is very
powerful, but harmless. Sold for $1.00 a pack
age or6 packages for 85.00 (plain sealed boxes).
Written guarantee given for a cure. I f yon buy
six bones and ore not entirely cured, six more
will be sent to von free of all charges.
Bend for clrcularsand tpstimonisls. Address
HUDSON MEDIOALINHTITUTK,
Junction Stockton, Market A: lUllaSts.
Sau f rauclsco. Cul.
W. O. HURLBURT,
Oen. Pass. Agt.
Portland, Ubeqon.
loin. ljrti noisco
Vnd aU point in California, via the Mt, Shasu,
routs of the
Southern Pacific Co.
I'he vrmt hisihway through California tn all
point Kant and Honth. lirand Kn In Route
of the Pacific Cimnt. Pullman Hnffnt
Sleepera. Seoond-elniM Sleepers
Attached tn nprms trains, affording superior
cenmmociatiims for seoond-claas paMenger.
Fur rate, tirkeu. sleeping; oar reservations,
oall npon or address
t KOKHI.KK, Manaier, K. P. ROOK EH, Asst
ien. F. di P. Ait., Portland, Oregon
$1800.00
GIVEN AWAY TO INVENTORS.
$i ;aoo every month given away to any one who sp
plies through us for the most meritorious patent during
the month preceding.
We secure the best patents for our clients.
and the object of this offer is to encourage inventors to
keep track of their bright ideas. At the same time we
wish to impress upon the public the fact that
IT'S THE SIMPLE, TRIVIAL INVENTIONS
THAT YIELD FORTUNES,
uch u tht ''car-window" which can be easily ilid up
and down without breaking the passenger's back.
" Muce-ptn," "collar-button," 'nut-lockt" 'bottle
Wop per, and a thousand other little things that most
any one can find a way of improving; and these simple
inventions are the ones that bring largest returns to the
author iry to think 01 something to invent
IT IS NOT SO HARD AS IT SEEMS.
Patents taken out through us receive special notice in
the ' National Recorder, published at Washington,
l. C, which is the best newspaper published in America
ill the interests of inventors. Ve furnish a year's sub
scription to this journal, free of cost, to all our clirnis.
We also advertise, freeoi cost, the invention earh month
which wins our $150 priie, aiH hundreds of thousands
of copies of the "National Recorder." containing a
sketch of the winner, and a desciiption of!ii invention,
will be scattered throughout the United Slates among
capitalists and mamilacturers, thus bringing to their
attention the merits 01 the invention.
All communicauoni regarded strictly confidential.
Addtess
JOHN WEDDERBURN & CO.,
Solicitor of American and Foreign Patents,
618 F Street, N.W.,
Box 385. Washington, D. C.
RifirtnttJiteftlii ",'. Wtiujtruf
9raC r ftimpnttit rir.c.
C I A 00 wo"h of lovely Mulc lor Forty
I IJ , , Coals, consisting of 100 pagrs 7
v latest, brightest. Ilvelkst snj most popular
y ' Sflrctlons, roth votil ani Instrumental,
grttrn up In th most elgunt muuurr, tn- St
" eluding four lares slit portraits.
CAHMINCIT. tht 8panl$ Dametr,
fn PADt HI SI, th, great Pianist. T
T AVIUM PATTI and
5 HIHNlt iCUeMAH CUTTIN0. z
? aaaetso iu eaeeeo v
THE NEW YORK MUSICAL ECHO CO.
; tiroaJwsv Iheatrt III Jg., New York City.
S CSNVtslIss svinTrn
7jaiJllJilllUiliUiUil"'illllH
HEPPNER. OREOOX.
orricE at comn oftua towc.
LUMBER!
HAVE FDR SA1.X ALL KIXD OF CM
t drui 1 1 Lumixr, IS satis of Heppner, at
wnas ia a now n mm lite
BOOTT HAWMIIjIj. I
FEE 1.0U0 FEET. Rol dll.
" CtlAK.
!0 Ox. I
ilk
I r DFUVRRED l! HtPFfttft, WILL ADD
a (Vi.au par l.iaii Mwl sdltlotiat.
L HAMILTON, hop.
I.A. f lrslltotB.I.f jasB'ur I
Tho thnrno Is an nfslllng Inrlet
of tinKUi. 1 be huuarr 1 1 pr In
dwairo a atnn( win gmi n.r.vj
ami IrrenrM. t luoel sIlMfl l tht
aiiiuiir4 Typ. lhml' lh"
of s.l.six-'xl til as oia biixriri
i.lln y. h.b of liim l) brM
to ike bus, stsn mt otit.nl si.
ImmirMii Isrni'y Ws,sii. pro-
tn-S rlll, . SniB p. fo lia
IvoiO voiome of fclia em
d'tio 4 In s snail ( bl the
M'otd uf li s nitd'. ts- r
for a snMith snsr h rorl It. ha f aa
knnr. Iko t ,itiKsl Itn to d. tat"!
r-ii.nni. tuiiotv, ai d a M ul
aan.H- t"tr, ani in A pf
iih tt)i tip o4 tbttntk win ilw.
s(iiliriiiif llf lll.r.r, sli'x lions
OT OtxMII S(U H. III. At.
Ii.le Tn . (
Iwsaif s4 Ot. tikrh will toe nr,
plooaf ra lb ansfti ft oil .x v
ore ol rmmm, 1 St lwbr. nt "
4we4 fmssi th unfl' iiiiii !
m lAorirra. !' "l eost-S
lisist Suwaf paiaiers. vkkk
l t :n mlnrb
.xMni"s VsruiM f- l-si the
km art UH svfirrrk svwk ot art as
tXauOi i-4 l..ur I. I
isnnoi an mn tir..i.l frn th 1
of f !. ssj-s S- lalll )
' ff T0U WAttT IWFORMATI0H ABOUT
Hll
An1r-a a IpIIit or t-..t.l ciir'l to
Tilt: t-H : ILAMO IIIHPtlT,
I0HN WEDDf RBURN, Msnsqlno Allornef,
f.O. WI fSS. BAnlll.'ulu.'i .
rrtoi(iNa riuxTHKD r"
soLDitRs, wmows,
CHILDREN, PR NTS.
Alan, f.r o'.iim nrt Bsllors flrtH In ih- llnn
ni in the reasstrar Annn r v. t alRe"t"' wsr.
nrvlvora .f u Indian ar..f Ikij t i unit
tlM lr Mna,m rnt'llrd li'rt and re!"-li d ij-.hns
a',lall,. I ri'iiiami'ls 1-nilUrij 10 nii'ncr run.
ti l f irnrw laws u cltargu fur advhs. h'uti's)
There is a quaint and curious old
town on the Colorado river in Arizona,
situated about one hundred and forty
miles above the town of Yuma, that is
known to the few who are aware of its
existence by the name of Ehrenburg.
It now consists only of a few long
streets of crumbling and uninhabited
adobe houses and a population of about
twenty Mexicans and Indians with
perhaps half a dozen whites. But, ac
cording to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat,
it was not always thus. In for
mer days, before the advent of the two
transcontinental railways that now
cross the territory, Ehrenburg was a
place of some importance and boasted
a population, transient and permanent,
of near one thousand souls. In those
days, besides being the center of a
flourishing placer mining district, it
was the entry port for all the freight
and passenger traffic between Cali
fornia and northern Arizona, a line of
river steamboats from Yuma making a
weekly landing and the overland stage
between San Bernardino, Cal., and
Prescott, Arizona, crossing the river by
ferryboat at this point. In 1878, when
! the Southern Pacific railway reached
the territory, the glory of Ehrenburg
commenced to decline, and later, when
the Atlantic and Pacific railway built
its bridge at the Needles, sixty miles
above, the old town was soon deserted
by all save a few miners who held
claims in the vicinity, and since then,
both the town and its inhabitants have
been enjoying a Kip Van Winkle re
pose. If we are permitted to judge
from the results of an official investiga
tion l.itcly conducted at the Ehren
burg post office, this statement must be
especially true as regards the post
master of this forgotten town.
It seems that one Jesus Daniels, a
Mexican, received the appointment of
postmaster to the town some twelve
years ago, and has ever since held the
position without the interference of
postal authorities and without com
municating with them in any manner
whatever. The population of the dis
trict tributary to the post office has in
creased during the last eighteen
months, owing to an awakening inter
est in some of the old mines in the vi
cinity, and the failure of letters to
reach their destination through that
office led to complaints, until the mat
ter culminated in Inspector (icorge B.
Waterbury being sent from Washing
ton to investigate. He arrived there
Nome wcA-h tto, ttnd ) is examination
brought to light a curious t-tate of af
fairs. In the office were found one
, hundred and fiily-eight letters, some
of them postmarked twelve years ago.
Among tlieiii were seven registered
letter.-., fifty-seven with renuests for re
turn of them: seven were addressed to
Ellisburg, Wash., und had never been
forwarded, and fifty-one were ad
dressed to persons living In Ehrenburg.
These latter the inspector himself de
livered to the parties to whom thuy
Were addressed. Laid to one side were
sixty official letters addressed to the
post'iiuster, not one of v lich had been
opt' ned. and two full ww of newspa
per mail lay in a coriu.-, neither of
which hud U-en opened. It was also
brought t light that since taking
charge of the olliee Daniel has never
made a report or purchased a stamp
from Washington. Further search re
vealed the fai t that three years ago
Thomas .1. (iiHiilwln, an old citizen of
Khrcnhiirg. had luen upiHiinleil post
master of the town, and hit commis
sion had been duly forwarded to liim.
Tim document was fount.' mioM.-ited,
und of course had not been delivered.
tiling or other in the rustic revels. Hut
worst of all he missed the dear old
fashioned villain, and although this
play had a tremendous villain in it our
friend was not impressed with him a
bit. He sighs thus:
"I came away again, sadly disap
pointed. The play was not what I ex
pected. I shall go no more to the play
house. The palmy days of the drama
are over. The theater has fallen into
the sear and yellow fifth act, and there
is no health in itl 1 The theater has fol
lowed the path of literature and the
good old tilings are changed. I beheld
a lot of swell people in evening dress
on the stage. They spoke quietly to
one another, very much as people do off
the stage, and in very much the same
sort of language. This is not what I
want when I go to the theater.
"What is the theatrical villain of to
day? Is he a real, good, old-fashioned
ruffian? Does he ever drag a helpless
maiden from the domiciliary roof of
her ancestors by the hair? No, sir.
Does he ever say to the hero: 'Say one
word and thou art food for the wolves?'
Does he ever grab the heroine by the
wrist, drag her down the stage in
three strides, slam her down in a big
chair, bend over her and whisper
fiendishly: "S death, maiden, but, by
my soul, I love thee! Thou shalt be
mine! Yield or by heaven I'll '
"That's all I know of that speech,
because 'liv heaven I'll' is the cue for
the maiden to spring up, and, throw
ing the villain half way across the
stage, to say: 'Unhand me, ruffian!
And know, that rather than mate with
such as thou, I'd cast myself from
yonder battlement into the foaming
flood beneath!"
"And does the villinn then say: 'Now,
by heavens, I like thy spirit! I love
thee all the more for it'."
"And does the maiden say: 'Merciful
powers, protect me'.1'
"And does the door open and the
hero rush in, armed with it ;;. ."tl, blunt
broadsword? And then do lie and the
villain fence up and down t Ik? stage,
sixes, eights, shoulder bl .ws, cut and
thrust? Oh, no. These tilings have
given way to swallow-tailed coats and
high collars, and the villain is now (is
big a swell as any fellow in the show.
Oh, for the good old palmy days of the
drama, when the broadsword ruled
and there was gore! The modern
drama is too much like ice cream after
a heavy dinner cold and unsatisfying-"
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
WASHINGTON WIDOWS.
The Haven Par Exr ellenoe for Di
vorced People.
I
Census Figures Which Shc-v That the Na
tional Capital Carries OT the Laurel
as a Ke;ort for Matr nionlal
Unfortunates
The funny writers will have to re
vise their jokes if the figures of the
census office are correct. There is a
good deal of danger that he District
of Columbia will soon be pointed at
throughout the country and cartooned
in the comic papers as the haven par
excellence for divorced people. For it
is a fact, savs the 'Washington News,
that the figure? of tho latest census
bulletin given to the public show that
Washington city has more people in it
per capita who have been through the
divorce court than has Chicago, that
hustling metropolis of the west, which
has a world-wide reputation for tho
cheapness and dispatch with which the
lawyers can render asunder the bonds
of matrimony that were supposed to
be eternal when they wore riveted at
the altar.
The figures that are reputed not to
lie arc these: Chicago, with a popuht-
not more than enough to support
themselves. The divorced people get
there in pretty much the same way.
Women shorn of the protection and
support of their erstwhile husbands
have tried their fortunes in the capital
and in many instances been able to
secure desks in the goverment work
shops. TOOK HALF IN RATS.
How China's Dowagtfr Empress Mltlgater
the Force of the Pestilence.
A recent number of the North China
Herald, jui.t received in this city, tells
this story of the Empress Dowager of
China:
"A rather good story is told among
the Chinese about the empress dowa
ger and the plague. The empress
keeps constantly burning, day and
night, in her palace, eighteen lamps,
which- represent the eighteen prov
inces of China. Not long ago one of the
lamps, although it received precisely
the same attention as all the others,
was burning very badly, and the em
press sent for the chief imperial as
tronomer to learn the reason. The
chief astronomer having carefully con
sidered the matter and consulted the
archives, told tho empress that the
lamp which was burning so badly rep
resented the province of Canton, which
tion of l,()'.i!l,8."i(), has 1,040 men and 1 was about to be alllieted with a serious
isr.
WH. 1'KM.AXH, Ml. K
Prnldrat.
KISIIOP.
Caalilrr.
THANSACTS A GENERAL I! INKING USW
COLI.KCTIONS
Msvla 00 Favorabln TVtnia.
EXCHANGE .'.OUGHT ft SOLD
OEPrNKIL tf OIM'.UON
SERVANTS ON INSTALMENTS.
It Takes Six In Ciiufciii ila to Do the Work
of O110 t.irl Here.
The American woman, when she
grumbles at the generality of servants,
'Wsn't know when she is well off. If
she could spend a year at housekeeping
in Guatemala she would come back to
the United States and puss the rest of
herTife in peace and contentment, wiys
the New York Journal.
In Guatemala the servants nre ell her
Indians or half-breeds. They will live
on Muck beans and lnrtillns. and as to
wages, they are content for 11 month
with what a servant girl receives here.
But no American housekeeper would
feel inclined to elvirire a servant board.
You hire a Guatemala woman, for in
stance, as n cock. Then you intist. hire
a man to keep the fire going. If he is
away, the cook will let her lire go out
S Kitur than debase her dignity by put
ting tin more fuel. A third servant
must be furnished to put the crude
articles of food into shape fur buiidling
by thoeixik. A fourth is Heeded to do
all the currying. Still another must
do the di' h winching.
AltoTe'.her, 11 Itiilf-dozen servant are
needed l t't t 1111 ordinary breakfast fur
thre'.' or f -Mir pervitin. A bright, in
ttdligen'., ,uir,!y ei vant in liii coun
try woul I fu .'i nliplii-.li the simie fel.t fill
by hei". If in an hour or h ,. It Is
coinpiii'.illvi ly inexpensive to initiiitain
a hoiii-cliold of twelve or fifteen Kcr
vaiitalii liiiiiU-imila, but they nre a ter
rible trial to an Aun-r iciiu woman.
INGENIOUS
Falsa Hank
SMUGGLING.
TIME AT THE NORTH
cavEATS.TRADE Mark?
COPYRIGHTS.
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I
'It in
I f j sf
s Iv.
Not Carried Into Kuaala la
Hollow I'mrll.
"One of tin- most in'fenlotia tlcTleeo,
for stntii'i'lintr huh detected it lltiHsiit
lint lung it go." said G. L. liatovltch. of
St. PetiT'liiir.". an recorded by the St,
lnii-, GIuIh- I UIKTIlt.
"A gn at tmiiilN r of fiilte bank note
had la en put Into circulation within
the b aatiiiib of the cznr. They could
nnly have Im-i ii iinnrti d. and although
the strictest M'lireh wm tnnde Itnliit
unlly over every vcsm I t illering a Uua
sinii port, no triwe of the siiitiggling of
false liotea wits d'lMMivcred. Accident,
liowevi r. at lust brought the mystery
to light. It happened that aeviral
!, if lead peneil1 arrived one day
fmrn l.ni'liirtd. ai:d while Ix-lng pxaifl
Ined niie of 1 1 1-nt fell out from a pack-
Ilge, und the custom ll'ius.' ofllecr. pick- j
lug it up. cut It bl a 1 ilnt and used It
to si, '11 the urdera hiell di livi Ted up
the tx-rii'll to Ihr- ronslni-.1. He kept
tin- loo.' iN'iieil fur his own us., and a j
f,.V lln s af trrw IIT'l, U'1'lllls It tu eili'd
POLE.
I'olnt
Th Man Who First Kearlira That
Mill Meet with Surprise.
If ever the north hiIc 1m reaehed the
dvcnturotia spirits who gel there w ill
find that they have actually out
atrip'd Father Time altogeiher; In
fact, lie will have given up the rate en
tirely, for at the northern and south
ern extremities of the cnrtli's axis
there la no fixed time at all, snvft the
Iondon GIoIn. At any moment il can
lr ii' xiii or midnight, breukfu-t time or
aupper time, work time or pl.ty time,
whiflinver one likes. f'l'M'ks will In' a
fraud and delusion, for at the pole all
ilegreea of longitude roiiverge Into
one. and therefore all times, The jmis
sibilil ies of sm h a p'H item are eiidlrss.
Not only, loo, will the eliM'ks In- out,
but the rule iiilnr as well, ft i nn he, at
w ill, either yesterday or to-dnv. or be
morrow. We have heard a lot of f nil
Ish people ask whtit the and iileiiH
tire etin In of (felt ing In I lie north Hile,
bill a little relleetioli w III show us n l
vntitnges can gi.ini'd Cu re whiili
women in its limits who have been un
marriedthat is, one divorced person
to every fiTO of tho population. The
District of Columbia, with a population
of 23u,oD:i, has 400140 men and 314
women divorced people, or oue in
every fit) I of tho inhabitants. So the
District carries oil the laurels. Still,
throughout the United States, there is
one divorced person for every 520 of
population. But while this is a start
ling statement, there are a number of
other communities that surpass the Dis
trict in this respect. The little puri
tanical state of Vermont, for instance,
with a population of 37ii,.ri.'!0 has 1,2(10
people who had to seek legal separation
in order to kt peace in the family.
Virginia evidcily has a climate better
adapted to domestic peace than has the
District, for while it has seven times
the number of inhabitants, it contains
slight ly less thnn four times as many
divorced conpl'ja lis does the capital.
Maryland rhowsup still more staid, for
its population is four und a half as large
as that of the District, though it bus
less than twice the number of divorced
people us lias the latter.
There Is another peculiar thing alxmt
the ilislriet- its percentage of married
people is less than that which prevails
throu rhout the country. Taking the
United Slates at large and nearly .fii
ler cent, of the inhabitants are
married. In the district less than XI
per cent, have ventured upon wedlock,
lint more alarming than any of these
li 'tires Is the presence of widows In
the District. There arc actually n,l)2'J
willows here dashing or otherwi:'
or one for every I'l' t of the population.
ThW figure appears to ! very large
when it is considered that throughout
the United StatcH the iiuiuImt of ImiIIi
men and women win- have lost their
partners In life do not number more
than one to every twenty-one of the In
habitants. Yet in the District the
widows alone move around in society
at the rutin of one to sixteen and one
half. An Interesting study U brought up
In the elTort to discover why it Is that
the District lias more than its share of
tlivoreed M-ople, willows und unmarried
inhabitants. It is answered very easily
by Hie simple fitet thut one-half of the
einploves of the government are
women. There are great iiiniiU rs of
w idows of soldiers w lei were killed III
the Mar who have s night Oils city and
Im'I II siieeesi-ful ill securing lilerulive
govriiini nt npiKiiiil tin tils. Then Ihere
lire tlioiisniids of young Indies w ho get
places in the depart iin nts and con
clude that it Is I tier lo hold tin-in
1 1 ill ll to give their lieiirts to some fel
low whose salary Ihrir estimation is
epidemic, in which the god of pesti
lence had determined to take off eight
tenths of the people.
"The empress was very much con
cerned at being told this, and asked the
chief astronomer how such a dreadful
doom might bo averted from eight
tenths of her people in the province.
The chief astronomer said that the god
might perhaps be moved by prayer and
offerings, and everything was done to
placate him by the empress dowager'a
orders. After this the chief astrono
mer was asked what success had been
achieved, and, after much considera
tion and consultation, he replied that
the god of pestilence had consented to
compromise but this was absolutely
the best he could do for four-tenths
human beings and four-tenths rats.
Thus the frightful mortality of rats anil
human beings at Canton this spring la
explained.'' t
Nklnneil llflmaeir ami Ate IU
My uncle and sister and I were out
in the garden one day watching a lit
tle toad, and my uncle took a twig and
very gently scratched first one
side of the toad and then the other.
The toad evidently enjoyed it, for ho
would mil slowly from side to side,
says 11 correspondent in the Philadel
phia l'n'Vs, und blink very expressively.
I was so Interested that when they
went in I took the twig and did as my
uncle had th iie. If. thought I, if he
roll from side to side, as 1 touch him,
what would he tin If I ran tho twig
down his back? I did so, and what di
you think happened? His skin, which
was thin and dirty, parted In a neat
litlle seam, showing a bright new coat
below, mid then my quiet little toad
showed his knowledge, for he gently
und curt fully pulled oil his outer skin,
taking il olT the lusty anil lega first,
and then blinking It over his eyes, till
w here had it gone? lie hud rolled it
In a bull und swullowud It.
I'yeng Yung, a city lu Corea, was
founded three thousand and sixteen
years ai'o. II Is Known as me wrti-iesa
city. Within its walls Is not a single
well, and all the wuter of the city la
curried up by watermen from the river
wlilcli washes Its southern wall. Tra
dition shows that this has always Wen
so, for It is mi'hI that when a Chinese
general Is-sieged it f wo thousand years
ago, believing that he emihl coiiiih-I Its
inhabitants to eiipitiilute by rutting off
tin irwati r supply, he was led to givf
up the nttaMi.pt lieciiiise the soldiers on
the walls look flsli scale and went
through the motions of the baths, and
the M ales, glittering i" the sun, l.sikeil
In the eyes of the astonished besiegera
to l.e droiis of wuter.
a ff.ml itnlnt. he rut It again and found! annot U-found In any other part of:
the glofs-. I here, at liny Mt.'. Ili'l) iel
of Is'lng like the tcsir ililiiil'itntils of1
Unit tin-re was no more h ad. Iln rut
si ll further, and was surprl -ed to find
a thin roll of rfts t nested in the hollow
plai e w hi re the lend was silpHiSed to
be. The p!is-r was one of the false
note, and in this why they had been
smuggled liit'. the l oiintry "
lower liilit mlei
ran turn the t:
1. the In is of time, wu
I'lrsrilid lie Its muster.
THE MCDCfiN
It
DKAMA.
lka I ha
Is a Irres ,el A Pair aavl
t.aflnaxa nt nrr.
Th other night a man went loth
theater who had imt Wi n for year,
and he c.tildn t t:mk It nut. any IVar- i
ill a Weekly. I if I of all h missed!
the s'iiiij.1" illt'e Jotith. the tirlll'HI
l.er 1 who was taotit t'i lads? thai first
'ie At the h fl M'll t U T I Starlet?, Or
1 I v Win U.e r-l'i.l at ouoila or . il&e-
II . ,
V IV f II si ta so 1 .. :
f a aW.. M m Ad.ir-so U f tt. A 9 'd r 11 ! ir.s'.'.n.
J S ii::,,,rat';r-t'"tr:1 1 t. ..m... .. . ... ,., . ..
trr 7 14-sf a-si s s..tasi sr' io fciiWriba allli ll I 'H !;:.
tf7f a-r' 'aa- m4 -a soil "iintH j
rm M la'f S1 asaoea sHU . SaaaasaaasaaaasMasaaasaiaaimaaaaaasaasasaaam
l .,e.l lr.-H t lS-aa ' "
. V M. IS s.oea'so T o I S I mil n - i P "S Sm SJ'i
'. 1ss sasss la. s"l fssassl . 11'
a -k. --. M UP -- tl. .. Ill " I ' ' M , I f'
k ' " . X ; ' ! I . ; , . j J j I f
-s SM) . , -4 s--eela sa . I ' I I 1 ! I
m ak . If f a .wi.oMti - i . . . i- , .. , .' M IT ft V I I I
ai i 1 i "'f 'i- I''1 H ' i ,'
tn im sr - a" H 4 ' '- t
s i ia sa'l liaf ll'i asfcta s) . -
CURESA
PAINS or,
MAN &
lafsfst a.
ko s" i.-;
I r. ka ta. Iak. j
An oil btiliter Jli'l the other day that
A ben he lit t wefit lip llilo Mieliigun;
and Wis.-in HI Hhi re wild leek j
alcnind. he w i siirpri-e'l to l.n l hin;?
at the ai'l.i of his phlte at Gie tul.U a '
pier of I"" k almiit three or four be hi i
long. He did hot understand why il
wa plaeed tie-re niilil lie tried the but- j
ter. willed he found to U- alltiot lnto.
. r.ble from the tte of In ks, lie then
followed the example of the others slid
ate the leek, w hen hn found the butt, r
instantly transferred lnl Jti.t as din
lirlnii but Ut a hn rvt r ttste.J. Ilia
leek pro-. up through Hi snow, and
are the first grr-en thing to found r
the fields and fclor.g !ie .reruns, and
the eowa rut them wi'ha f' I ! ' ,'U
the T". ul! that the Ini't.r in.. I fr i I
'h If I lilU I" I r .: -I - e'titel. fclld I I"
,i , i 'f. :thi" I i ' ran nf.l v Im, r"
i t . I Ii ii'ii'.nf It i'ii i n ii
w i i;"i. a 1 1 i'l 1 .', a kr provi J.-J f ,r
a p-."
Only COc. Read Thia All Through.!
Tlet Iil-ti. I".e-. IHTles i'r'ret rsiirrn i
f'lf l.nlll. Mi s, r'l I lnhlirn Sil!"Ttl I llualr all..e.
,.,i..ii S..i.. l ah'l lu-sic, ran ' Wmk
j.. a ilil'illr I l i'"io. S ir '-llii"" sii.rl.-. I Inl.lrrn a I
I aif l'r.,1 tl- .1 i'g- I'r iei. at tiaful ami e.-ott,iea j
, i.l i.l Ml h 1 1.' I rreeinliwi.il, lh Ki-lil'.it Jmiinal
f .r ti, n..ll"iii. a s.aalila, (issa kooMkoitt oasor l I
al tu. a sar. i
THE QUEEN OF FASHION I
tlraasea, i
lUU'.TaATlk
Til Ct!ebr2le. KcCall Biiif Pillirss
tltslilliss4 fatal, rha Tssrt.
Tiwi fsayiMnk il esnivil sff A ai'ilSeffsspee. T1
ear.n. art r. to Im lo....,t t las si ,aa ,ir Cieims
will avlnai y .' "U I ' in f.ftf l-i S.a l,.it..i.. urm
Ul emit I., 1 I.I..I-. " 11. to ti. ,Sa nfrr owl
lor Unfa, fl'iT, ehlMrn'ori'i1liln, le .,us" 1 Urn star t'i Ulntitlsf,
III" I siPFI'l I TV Fi m..nlh mm I'll yi. re.w In e a r..oi'la "ill f. fra
'" " ' ' ' l',, ' ' atu lata l i i,, ii.., n.. '-. i'i.1 l.-iw lo f.. II.
A.l li. n..lr'sl. eei l li,a -" I II. He HS M lilmi.ln
-Ui , oU. Is axiu and bo n .ro, 1,11 ttuwt Ihs) ous' A lies ou! Ill-Is. a
I
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: GREATEST OFFER
al l"if IM f.,'..aln slanlsrd hntiljs, Imsi1 Is Mae?
Ir..il S'i.1 Imi m Ii I d"! Ii'i i""'f ' somH
i Ii In a i,.r, iili-e. f in am I H" si' Nsnsyla,
i,l ,t I nil, m t' aiainn f a tf "' r a-e r .n..n V I-- a. l?
H .. l.-il n ..,'i r.i. f alal. a ' tilf On a I rd lyatUia ani vl.sa. jlaSiUua
tl. S'in.ler of tlx Ueiss f oaiit, Ifu I aa.l'ti.l Its I'm. 1st-.
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I ii! M.f M I. f 'I.. ' r.isl I St., New York.
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