PAPElt OFFICIAL A HOT NUMBER- Is the Heppner Gazette. Without it the Heppner hill would appear dry and barren. People read it; business men advertise in it. A LARGE NUMBER .... Of Morrow County's citizens read the Heppner Gazette. A'ot much of ' an authority on agriculture or poli tics, but true to the interests of its neighbors. r xt- FOURTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1896. I WEEKLY SO. 7101 j SEMI-WEEKLY NO 481 1 1 5 : I, r SEMI WEEKLY,GAZETTE. POBLI8H1D Tuesdays and Fridays BY ' THE PATTERSON PUBL1SHIN& COMPANY. OTIS PATTERSON, A. W. PATTERSON. -" ' Editor Business Manager At tl.50 per year, 1.25 for six months, 7S ota. tor three moncns. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. THIS PAPKB is kept on file at E. C. Dake's Advertising Aaenov. 84 and' 66 Merchants Exchange, San Franoisoo, California, where oon raot lor advertising can be made foi it. 0. ft. & N.-LOCAL CAftD. Train leaves Heppner 10:46 p. m. daily, except nunaay. Arrives o:uu a. m. aany, except Mon day. West bound passenger leaves Heppner Junc tion 1:11 a. in. ; east uouna a. m. rreignt trains leave Heppner Junction going east at 7:45 p. in. and 8:10 a. in. ; going west, 4:30 u. in. ami o. u ill. OJTFXCTiTi BIRECTOET. United States Officials. fiesident G rover Cleveland Vine-President Ad'ai Btavtinaon Beoretary of Htate Richard B. Olney Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Beoretary of Interior K. K. Francis Neorelary of War Daniel H.Lamont Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert iPostinaster-Oeneral William L. Wilson Attorney-ttenernl Judson Harmon oecreuury of Agriculture J. sterling Morton State of Oregon. lovernor W. P. Lord 'Beoretsryof Htate H. K. Kincald Treasurer Phil. Metaohan Hnpt. Pnblio instruction U. M. Irwin Attorney General C. M. Idleman H.n.t j O- W. MoBride Bentor" J J. H. Mitchell r .,. J Hinrer Hermann "" I W. B. Ellis Printer W. H. Leeds ( H. o. Bean, Btinrame Judiies V. A. Moore. ( C. E. Wolverton Sixth Judicial District. Circuit Judge Stephen A. Lowell rroswaung Attorney 11. . . . Morrow County Officials. fni-mt (Senator A, W. Gowan Ksnrsaetitative. J. K. Brown tnty Jadice A. G. Bartholomew Commliwinners J. 11. Howard J. W. Beckett. " Clerk J. W. Morrow " Sheriff K. L. Matlock " Treasurer Prank Gilliam Assessor J. V. Willi. Surveyor.. J. W. Hnruor " School Sup't Jay W. Shipley " Coroner B. F. Vsuglian nsrvstB towh ornoiM. ii Thoe. Horoan n,nnilmnn A. H. Horner. K. J. Rlonura, Krank Huaers, Geo. Conner, Frank Gilliam, Arthur lliuor. . Ki, wnlsr F. J. Hal look Tiuonr E. L. Krwland Marshal A. A. JioberW Freeiaet OHeeiw. Jnatinaof the Pan W. K. Kinhanlaon Constable. M. 8. Whetstone tjblted States Lasd Offlear. n DA1.1.KS. OB. J. p. Moore Register A. 8. Biggs Haoaiver LA OaABbSL OB. RF. Wilson Rewlster J. H. Kobbins Keoelver 3BOK3BT OCI3CXI3CS. KAWUN8 FOWr, NO. IL O. A. B. Meet at Lexington. Or. the last Saturday of ark Boath. AU veteran are invited to nii. iLHom. Uao. W. Hmit. Adjutant, tf Commander. Dl Sir" I i r i . J. MCraUl, M. U. ' I AT J. M. H acer's Residence. E. L. FREELAND, COLLtCTlOHS, wettte INSURANCE. liflf ABSTRACTS. U. S. LAM) COMMISSIONER. Land mints Final Proofs Taken. STMLlim NOTARY ITBUCL xxrrtrxn. ojixo:i. Hatloual M ol MSI. W. rtKUAKD. 0. fieaKsat, K. iisHor. Cash lew. mmcn 1 mm bjlmins bcslxess OOLLKOTIONB lie. la an Favorable Tenon. EXCHANGE IJOUCHT i SOLD DcrrKcn. tf oreooh 1ft I fl VlAAr I I fl A -A. f l BnBKS-GgHTOH tJTflGEUHE OSTAlllOllUnSH fLaevae fin ma Dally at I e. as. sad br- rteae si Ooteria la U a a re. Sinalo Fore $7.00. Hound Trip $10.00; fartawgk rrlM r asasj - ewnnd. nuRS's-CAsro.s' lam aadeiif " aa-laf fail j eai-a t at an ! sas P n fmt la IMMal rna rwa ammmm-m auk ! a.'Vs rnae-t. S-4 Lseavtaw fag" a laraa, C4 gffwuiiist U fwrt?n Vanted-An Idea s3 r, , t fmf law IMf Wa ia WTas s teat ss a , rW ears, ff , 7 . SEAANEMONt ANO "ahnaulb. An Odd Pair of Chums to Be Seen In the Aquarium at Castle Garden. The sea anemone is very sensitive. It closes at a hostile or thoughtless touch, not rapidly,' for it can't do anything very rapidly, but as rapidly as it can, curling its tentacles inward and cover ing them over with its outer skin and flattening it down upon the rock, gays the New York Sun. But it is not dis turbed by its friends. In one of the smaller glass tanks at the city's aqua rium at Castle Garden there are several little sea anemones taken from spiles and stones about the" battery. In the same tank, almost within reach of these anemones, are some common barnacles little ones, half an inch or so in diam eter. Lacking in beauty as the barna cle may be, it is provided with a most wonderful hand-like member, which it throws up from its shell, with which It sweeps the water for food, the minute animalcules upon which it feeds. ' One of these barnacles is so close to one of the little an emoncs that when he flings his net ft almost or quite touches the tips of the anemone's ten tacles, which spread out from the top of the anemone's trunk like the most del icate and feathery of branches of the tiniest little tree. But the anemone doesn't close up a bit; here, down deep in the tank, its branches wave in the gentle agitated water, as. delicate as they are, they might do in the gentlest zephyrs on the land, and they wave and wave as the barnacle throws ita net. Perhaps the sea anemone has ita own benefit in mind through all this, for it is quite probable that the agita tion of the water brings to it food that it might not otherwise receive; but, however that may be, the fact re mains that the little anemone that would close at the slightest touch of an enemy is quite undisturbed by any thing its friend and neighbor the bar nacle might do. ON THE NEED OF SLEEP. Everyone Meeds a Goodly Amount af the Ketreeher. It is probable that the effect of night on individuals differs greatly, and that a process of natural selection is contin ually at work, men who cannot bear night-work avoiding it, while those to whom it is recuperative and every journalist knows such men throng into the professions in which sitting up, II not obligatory, is at least advan tageous. There' are extraordinary dif ferences of instinct in this respect, g few men being literally unable to bear night-work, while a few others delib erately leave their whole work to be done after the sun has disappeared. The incapacity and the faculty are connected in some way with the differ ences in the power of sleeping, which still remain among the perplexities of physicians. Why can some men sleep at will, and some "nervous" men, too, while others, sometimes very "heavy" men with apparently immovable nerves, are tortured by insomnia? Why, too, do some men seem to obtain tuOicient rest with Ave hours' sleet. while others require nine? Do some men "sleep slow?" as Mr. Hmedley joc ularly argued in one of his amusing stories, or do they actually require more sleep? We cannot answer the question any more than the doctors can, but we agree on one side of the subject most heartily with the British Medical Journal. The popular preju ul against aicep woraa aa uiuuuj oi mischief. There are plenty of slug- I . . a 1 lit a . n l dice against sleep works an infinity of hut the sleep-sluggard ia in that class a very rare specimen. The tendency of the educated la to wakefulness, and the man who dors intelrectual work and exhibits what his friends think a dispo sition to oversleep U obeying a healthy Instinct. Bleep recuperate him, be knows It STOCK IRANI. While roe aeap roar anhaariiitlue paid es ft- aaa kaa sanybraaa la free of saaigi Bnvw. P.O., Hwur. Or-Hursaa. Plea left ehoaliUTi (ls, ssmeoa tan bin. Chariie. H . Hardtnaa. Or. Hniaas twaadad r. cm rtM kin. I sUMknaiMUisnas. Alau breeds (1 aa anr a rtaiit ialh ea-tie eaa bral oa right eeoalder, a4 eal eg end ol rUM ear. Cat. A. J.Ja.Or.ltaie. Aaa rtgWaWI si t ottia, auaeaa rtaalfctiti aae ssaik Miaaia era) en tan eee soui ta ngtit. IW-ataaa. W. M . Hallowa. Ov.-t'allle. I h aa rletit aMta.ewwW.ttwa ia aaeaj aart km re as,, II U ea ien ate. Mr llm.rtnaa1aa.Or.-Rteas Wended ELY na Ul ehoeidar, eauia Sum aa Wfttiia. aoie la ne-bl ear. n ii na, L. A Mapaaer. OrTarlla, LF aa rlM kai ana. f win ant naoar an rtaU kruyUd m7m s J an law Ml MMkiwi aMlla aaed4 nwu, ,i uiju i . www nit kin. area eawtat in tan ear. nnaaw la Himv sanl. iaa-, rll s. Len. Oa RMaaa, te T mi I iafl .US.) aeiite. aa. an nM TXt-rr. nMaiss o.-H 1I mm kafikia asMla i aatf aw aa IM VWM KeaihariaM W.H. M-aa4 term. Of .-I Lea asuta aa nM sad lfl aia. ewaUnw f ta b ft aa? aad aa-aw M rlM a. H aad an a sakt-, Ikaaaa la Uraat r.l ka tfa4 snai I U J W. Msmmmw tkr-H. a Mt aVoakiarr eaMla ieeear nM ara. ttaas waas Wnedad aliai ta r-eM Miaflr. taw, aiisnaf nrMaNn, O an rVfHtkiankana tr ni.al It. . M i mmm aai aa Iafl ktn. , tloaaiaa. I a- i ki iaw O an W JO Iafl a ulia, latu. o aa r)wM kk It n , Wm i n. - r.MU w r aa ar k fanat at i WMr" lsBPl aaaaajpsn anl fWaiaa. I I, H Ian i aki.ans.v- aaila mm U4I Tanas ft, St, W m m s a,-. iww rN a fm4 b'a M eM j r-a a4 kw ie a ear. a- lb Saaia and aa, n. Waj aw. o,-w naia. Ml an Iafl akaal4aj eaMai asaH aa Ml ban. w., S, W .. U1 . is i k.,) o an lei kwaai llUis I aa MiM kia. rW iiimi a. Maalnasvm.-Mara airae M ata, fiw.4 M.taatesSaa. tw -M-raas. t aan. M4 aaFnsl 0 palsn kan as. an kaw. I asetal Iafl t ail lis b a mi asMte aaata an aafl b.f a-" la Wa an. Tawaa. II. M I f - Mawaa t-M It ' mmm a4 as k-l - aVaa awae aaaaa, tiel.wiiwiga. W, t 9 (Miavw lifikawi i . i W mm htM ski mi tiai mii .a Wanted-ln Idea EHlV.SH-Sr- piSi; t f f r - ! mmm-m mmm, m III W Siw.t,J n a ... rmm ,.. -,,. T . . . w 'eov, aa nwl at i-. I is a. ai aaaiea. LONDON'S HI'UiONIiY. An Island for Wild Birds In Ona Of the City Parka. A Preserve That Is Much Frequented and Highly Valued by Ornithologists Some Peculiar Habits or the , Strange Birds. Only a very small proportion, proba bly, of the citizens of London are aware that they possess what few of the peers and landholders of the country can boast, namely, an old and really fine heronry. It is to be found in the pleasance maintained for the enjoy ment of the public in Wanstead park, and the herons there are as much pro tected as in the old days of falconry, the difference being that now it is vol untary, then it was a compulsory pro1 tection. Wanstead nark, savs the Lon don News, is one of the most sylvan of such open spaces, but it is seldom over run with visitors, probably because it is more than a mile from the nearest railway, and there are no omnibuses to connect the inclosure with either Snaresbrook, Leytonstone or Forest Gate stations. The bank holiday ex cursionists go there in force, but at oth er times there are few persons to be met In a stroll round the beautifully-wooded waters. Xhe ornithologist, however, well knows this preserve, and loves it. By the aid of a pair of glasses and a fair Stock of patience he may at one time or another watch the movements of near ly all our wild birds. Many people complain bitterly of the regulation which forbids the use of boats on the lake, but it is a commendably wise re striction, and, indeed, without it our heronry would soon cease to exist, and the nests of the other wild fowl on the long wooded island' which is the secret of Wanstead pork's attraction to the birds would be rifled, and the natural aviary destroyed in a season. Outside the great ring of woods, entered at the ruinous grotto, which has never been restored since the fire of some ten years ago, there are three ponds in which is free fishing, and one of them has al ways been known as the Heron pond. Our heroury, however, is not there, though the birds built there in former generations. Tho herons are now established at the further end of the aforesaid island, in the part where the forest trees are finest and oldest, and the movements of the birds, and the nests, best come under notice from the i'cr-canopied path skirtin? the rltrht- hand side. The herons sit close on their great coarse nests, but the quiet observer, ry the exercise of patience. will now and then nee the birds going and coming, and even sitting, as they love to do, ou tho topmost branches near the nest. They nro Interestingly clumsy fi cures, and we in ponderous in bulk, but they sre really very light by comparison with their size, and perch as easily sit a rook. The sportsman shooting a heron for the first time is al ways amazed at the ridleulotwly small proportion of flesh to feathers; though the out'ttret .'hi'd wln-rs give a mesHure ment of something liUe four feet, and an adult bird la a yard long from beak point to tail tin. th rrona weight will be generally coni.idi rahly less than four pound o v. ilr.'n ,!. The time I i ti'iert now for an uninter rupted view of the Inhabitant of our heronry; with the grateful change m the weather thj Ireen teem to be put ting forth their leaves by leap and bounds, and a eompi-He screen of exoui site greenery v. i'.l . ton hldo the colony from pul.lU- nt-ruilny. The herons be gin building at Wa;iMl 'ad during Feb ruary, and V.w jonng arc hatched la March. Ihtrla'Tthe liar 1 winter weath er, when the birds are seeking their food down on t!ie o...'y kin ires of the marshes, an nauM-ml number were probably shot, on 1 It was with some anxiety that th j provrvrm of our her onry this year nitl a falling off In the Dumber of oet.u-r . Lrer Unee the city eorpnrstion a qnlivl tho property the Dumber of nest l,:id r.-Mulned steadily at about furty. iut U A year the her onry was In very fall population; there were sixty-wli-lit m-M the Urgeat Dam bar ever komvn. V;,cn the head keep er (l'umtt. who kf ;m a i an fully potted DinetMBik unili r I mi ilirtH-lWin of Mr, littxWm, a true bird lim-r and an en UtUkiaatia netorulUi f.wiid early this spring that tm-r wcro tat fifty neat. fears wr cnU rtt.- t hut the em k net gunner had 1 -i ahyo-l to mmt fatal purprsk. Hut IIiit.v hare Wn at least new tiear, a tj l alnen the Brat cimat. ao the nils .in f Is nH great, and best year may Cnl t!e maslmaa ol Wnanta In paMpa4iiu onee nwim. Weare Kanbe Bed Mane Abe-sad. The retlffintie sUUilW-e of Itetgieni f.if wa. arc if Jlng t the London Unar titan, which ware only fublUh4 to wsnja tna chaw of last rrsr. rive ths fittmWrof cmtenilal Inslitutiims and thrtr Inmates In !) ktml-mi-m ttvw iffi,mi:i,i;i sM-u-rs sn.l anna. Three have frown during the dm-ade prwwdifif trot til Mviasstnrkea, with ,IM nr.rt.Ws and l.lfl e-mvenln, with u.ziz auiam, i na inrrenae ae ftnf. an grat aa In the rrtit irro-ao, when snaay of IK laxmlis and bane espelU-d fruot I"rek.a arttled In 1 !! am. la the ft 1 1 davade naay ut the turoed. oarlDf to ihe t (station r-f tha t narea in we. na there ara atlii ever jn.rss) man and aisai aaWwiglng I ha sr Wms nrlrm, and taking the -r blaiu-n of lieigtara In lW at .fi.i we lad one mak ataUr to every suo rui Inl t' r t -T b nms buna i a- -4 kv m I M mmtf I, as WM (DJ : l.;v:W' RUB THE OTHER EYE. Advice of an Engineer Begardlng the Removal of Cinders. Nine persons out of every ten with a cinder or any foreign substance in the eye will instantly begin to rub the eye with one hand while hunting for their handkerchief with the other. They may and sometimes do. remove the of fending cinder, but more frequently they rub until the eye becomes In flamed, bind a handkerchief around the head, and go to bed. This is all wrong. The better way is not to rub the eye with the cinder in it at all, but rub the other eye as vigorously as you like, according tc a writer in the Med ical Summary, who relates the follow ing experience: A few years since I was riding on the engine of a fast express. The en gineer threw open the front window, and I caught a cinder that gave me the most excruciating pain. I began to rub the eye with both hands. 'Let your eye alone and rub the other eye' (this from the engineer). I thought he was chaffing me, and worked the harder. 'I know you doctors think you know It all, but If you will let that eye alone and rub the other one, the cinder will be out in two minutes' per sisted the engineer. I bciran to rub the other eye; soon I felt the cinder down near the Inner eanthus. and made ready to take it out 'Let it alone and keep at the wel' eye,' shouted the doctor pro tern. I did so for a min ute longer, and looking In a small glass he gave me found the offender on my cheek. Since then I hnve tried it many times, Bnd have advised tunny others, and linve never known It to fail in one instance, unlehs it was as sharp as a piece of steel or Norm-thing that cut into the K.ll sud required an operation to remove It." SAVVINd WOOD. " The Old Man Was H.i.ni-what Human Miture. Momln', boy." wild Old .Tack, who believed in Judicious llatterv. and whiwe doing-, are ren.rtcl in llnrper'a loung I'vople. Ah he Mxkc he luid down his haw. 1'eelin' wt 11. I hope.' Yea? Good. Nothin like feelin' Well to make a feller fi-el good. Youdnn'l look powerful strong though, Tommy; you re thin. 'What's that? You're wiry, Wye? I don't believe that You couldn't saw one o them bth kn through. You WIu? llo! Serin's liclicvin'! "Why, ye iis new ptirly welL Yrr stronger'n ye look. I couldn't o' done thst better myself, lie beats you on saw In", I gueaa. Hubby. Kit? He can't? Yes, ho kin, I believe, th at ye all hol ler. What? You II aaw two sticks quleker'n he sawed that? Nonsuns! Ilokryl ye went through that like llghtnln'i but ono alitt ulu t two sticks. No, sir. One bin t never two. tiln' to do the other? Well, well! Tommy, be'b go'n' to do the other; whatever you guln' to do? Ymi'11 do two? "Don I brag. lU.bbv. Ain't bragln". Ye'll do three? Waal, go ahead, don't lat Die lnt.-rfre. Altera glad to bar boys spunky. What! Hie hull lot aawe-l? Waal, I'm BurnrlimL That twin' the aa, I think I II go livl.a an' mt. hnwin' blh ra did make lite tirv-d." The old man walked Into the house. and V', and Tn uiny went home. Wrtnrlerlr" (f their friend hadn't put up little game on them, after nil. TMC CONSCIENCE FUND. V Beaded gnrty la 1kk feaiary.lt Ma AaaawaM tw Abaal tle.aon. The "t'rmw lenca Fand" has figured In the atalrnw-nta of the treenary rte part merit f.ic mar eighty )rem, says ', ta Crlsman la IJppioeoit a. It was opened by the rrgl'l. r -f Ihe trraury department In 111 and apra-era In the general fand of Ihe y-ovorntnrnl under the head of mlerw.taoeowa raerlita. Like othar a w la i-f the Irvaaury It ran be need f'sr any parpw that mngrvaa snnjr deans prota-r. Its origin sit due to the fart that swsy tmrk In the be ginning of the pre- it rentary aotay enkanwn person Iwgsn tofrel Ihe sfiarp Ihrusts .f ennseW-nra. In a-nua way he had 4efantteN I he government, bn-l enld And rvlwf rail ly retamlng Die avwiey to the treasury. ThU il the beginning of the aeonint showing Ilia recwlpt of mmf by I ha grrorott frvwnenknown perwwia. Mnea then lha fend ha bren aamnlalir-g In Urg bnd ewsall saieta, antil bl tba preernl time It bgrvwaraua nearly trTu isst, prf. BkitUaw are relved nearly every tweak.' Dwrirg Ut prvveUrwe t4 I Ha hard lima the rwrtpl have falle off oneiderbl tv, end w-iwl.aiae e f at- els-aa tatf.M-w r anrnsliUatH rt twaiveta showing thai e ari s aonarUbv tml Ut Cett U bf bt l m" - MODES OF MARRIAGE. Itrnnge Ceremonies Observed Ainongt Different Nationalities. 1 To eat maize pudding from the same plate, or to eat in any way together, is a widely distributed marriage cere mony. In Brazil, says the Wasning ton News, a couple may be married by drinking brandy together; n Japan, by so many cups of winel in Russia and Scandinavia it used to be one cup for both. ' The joining of hands among the Romans and Hindoos is common to many parts of the world. In Scotland it is called "hand fastening," and couples live together i after. To sit together on a seat while receiving friends, or to have the hands of each t'ed together with grass, or to smear with each others blood, or for the woman to tie a cord of her own twist ing around the naked waist of the man, constitutes marriage in one part or another. . In Australia a woman carries fire to her lover's hut, and makes a fire for him. In America she lays a bundle of rods at the door of his tent. A Loango negress cooks two dishes for him in his owu hut. In Croatia the bride groom boxes the bride's ears, and in UuhnIu the father formerly struck his daughter gently with a new whip for the lust tiiuA and then gave the weapon to her husband. Down to the present it lt a custom in Hungary for the grtHim to ffivo the briileakiek after the inarriii;;v ceremony, to make her feel her subjection. Even with all civilized people the servitude of the bride iscleurlv iuiliented. AFOOT IN THE HARTZ. tarles That t'lusu-r Around the llletorle Hill. Ilia llurgberg. Intercut In llartzhurg centers not In the town, but In a conical hill which riws just liehind It, tho IliirgU-rg. This Isaepotwith a history the one-time kitaof a hc;i;!icu nliur, nfu nv.ml the seat of empiro mid now a picnic ground and liecr gurden. On this height, now overgrown with trees, says Outing, the unfortnt-'ito Meiiry IV. built him a eustli- and citludrui, and from this spot he klurli d mi that Journey whose firkt ktugt- v. aa Canoaea, and lost a pauper's gi ii-. c In a lund of r.trnngars, lien- lli l.ry the Lion dwelt while sub ject to llarl:ii-oMi. and within it walls died the l:ti I emperor of the Saxon line. Now there it, a li'.tlo hotel on the bum mlt, rouml blmul chairs and tables for tired and tlilmty mortals, while over near a bit of the old eaalle wall, which, by the way, looks auspiciously re stored. Is a ahop stuffed with I'hllUav lltie ktili k kniu Us and mementos. Oa the brow of the hill stands a granite monument, n hereby bangs a tale. Some admirers of Jii-.marck erected It hare In his honor In 177, put a medal lion portrait f the greet chancellor on ita one aide bnd on It other chiseled bis lMful saying, made during a dw Iwte on the atholle question: "We'll not go to ( siiokMs." This monumrbt an inult in atoiie wee e reeled Just right hunilrr-d years bfU r the anforte nale kalwr went there and la-ggrd the pardon of the pope. Little did He tiiililrrs think that the tslf.l man of Iron would within decade get far toward lamsvui hlinaelf. NEGROES OF CURACOA. Haw tmt ttfebed TMf Uvea A gains Cireat (tdise tn Ho Fran. An anecdote alamt these fnraeiaia Drgnar la well worth Intrrpolallng, ao illu.tratlte la It of that love of lib arty admired by all Americana, aart the New Wk World. I hiring the os the npul-lk of Vrnrsuela alad Uhwl slavery end enartrd that hver ktrppt-d on t rnernelsa boll by that act lan-ama frvw. The nrgrisra of the nrighlairlng Ihilrh Ulead heard of thl and Ihry ! lrarne-1 the w U'nlifle fact thai during a certain prrket of Ihe year the gulf stream makes a rurlotia sharp curve around the Island end enrrlee ih Ri r-e rurrent Wrwards th Bjaln- land t nabla to biaka or steal ln la. many nf these Drgroe. although b Mikity Writ trratr-l on the plantations, s4 to n dwn I r , im nff the sutwr flaoiit tioil-i. and. Iahing themsalwa to three trunks on dark night when tltn wind was blowing timtigiy with lb eurreot, the daring navigator would trnet IkemaelvesWitha tempretbnd Ihenrean In Ihe h"pe ,.f Iwlng rart f-n th land of tits frea. Many prrWhad. KaM Sne wlel bar h w the type of lara4 tut he invented lb ari4 enftaxav It l.ti Inn vry tsy ! -I ease of I .sutndifin. Tliis-4-thres. I' i, i.,iii sat roan are . l-.i l as I If na- ey .. -kil i a 1 . esje by W vi.e A Weeree. for Highest of all in Leavening Power. MM ACOlLaJTEIsY PURE SOMETHING NEVVIN CHEMISTRY. Beef Preserved and Kept lure by a Per meation of O.-.one. A writer In a Minneapolis newspaper relates with great cii.-mstu.itiulitj how a party of diners in a hotel wore surprised and just a little horrified to learn that the roast beef they hud iv.t. en was twenty-ofte dayn old, and luiJ been lying exposed to the sun for that length cf time. They were reiiNsr.rod when they were informed that the meat hod been subjected to a permeation, of ozone,-and by this means "preserved as well as purified." The diners will probably learn be fore they gain the information from this column, says the New York Mail and express, that they encountered something entirely new in chemical ac tion, and if any one of them has the courage to try it he can very readily prove the assertion. Ozone Is one of the principles of oxygen. Prof. Loew says it is one of the greatest oxidyzers known, or, at; ie once expressed it, , "a sublimation of that portion of our at mosphere which supports life, and at the same time helps burn us up." Dr. Julius Edmund Doetsch, who died about ten years ago, claimed to have been the inventor of an Ozone-produc ing apparatus which would age any dead or living thing brought in contact With It. He took' two gallons of raw spirits iresn from a still and by run ning a current of pure ozone through it caused the liquor to taste and smell precisely ine same as the very same quality of liquor with an actual age of ten years. Dr. Doetsch believed that if living animals lived in an atmosphere of ozone they would become old men and women at the age of ten and twelve years. He proved that to treat animal meat with the pure gas would have the same effect on them as though they had been exposed to the atmosphere we now breathe for as many days aa there were half minutes In the artifi cial process. Loew and Doetsch are authorities on chemistry, the western writer may be or he may not. At all events he ev idently knows more about eating a din ner than he does about "osone." He or one of his friends can try the effect of It by shutting himself up in a small room and breathing the pure gas for twenty minutes. If the Doetsch theory Is correct, a little wrinkled old man, bald headed and decrepit, will come out to announce In piping treble that he has aged forty years in twenty min utes. TRADE UNIONS IN ENGLAND. Over a Mllllfi'i MemtM-rs la (St ftadlae Tbelr Ineomee and Kspeadllaraa. One of the leading features of a n cent iNaua of the labor Oasetteof Lon don la a brief summary Of the autistic of trade union for the year 1HU3, given pending the laaue of fuller details In the report of the chief labor corre spondent, now In the press. The re ports of .MM) separate anions have been dealt wl'h, 4.1'i of which are registered and 117 Dot registered, while I0S have branches numbering In all 7M, mak ing np an aggregate of 1.S37.M7 mem- in-re. The total Income of these socie ties $111 with was about 4,0oo,foo and ' i expenditures about I7S.0U0 less, .u societies, with A membership of 7i'i.0is, paid anemployed benefit to the amount of nearly 2,O00,O0U; Sot am lctlc.wlih 1.I03.M1 memliers, pldln dispute tirnellt 3.5),(io; Ittl union, with isS,3l niemtwrs, paid in alck ! low nee ovrr ll,si,(s, and M anion paid a accident benefit to disabled toembrr sv.0'0. fur the parpune of ootnpsrlng imit with the prevkms year only 31 nnlonaar avaiUbl, that be ing the Dumber supplying returns for both year. The Increase of metntier- aJilpon these s anion daring lvi wa 11,141, or a little ovrr I percent Uofi the mrmbrrkhlp of !. The to 11 Income of the 11 tor ie lie showed. however, aa incrraaa of II I per sent. There was also a very considerable rise In expenditure, btnoanUng, la fact, to Dearly H per rent, apoa the oatlay of 1WL Th chief share of thle Increase wss due to heavy demand a pen the an- empbiyed and diapnte bene fits, which la lV2 atraorbed H.tajo.Quo more thaa In m. rartleaUr are also given with re gard to a (operating farming la Eng land and Heotlaad ia IW1 and levs. torty-nrven wsrietir hv mad re tnras show lug that a toUl of 4 stil aera was Iwlng farmad In IM, an In rreaaaof 111 over lt. The capital employed In I! wa ItVi.om. aa la- rrveae of -t nt) pear lvi, and the art bai sustained av mated to 1,0, ae oan pared wit 1,4I0 In IM. i - a a "It it t m n fe Hal, la tag jm'tymsmti trhrlmrr IA tkft grow re r reel re oaf fa-aeat ma fa inrlj of i4 . . It httkrr d'w or &. mii i mm ft ft ke.ol" rlrwtrl fmm fe p nf H (loss J. yVrann In IM I lorn nf IUp- rearnfaf reef a Aen I A KUai bH a nitrt roaswfrf Ion. tbaasaaaw af New an Oae tUnek. bou.a haful rntatav who he Urn rexintisg uabulrr4 ehUkea are blaoit la start a poultry raanh near Ban rraoians wl.K k k In I Ui la r gee l Ih World. lllabearkltafatleaawil in litre jests, when it ks 1st put sen th' market unually f.'"U"i ryys bnd ). OS! )U Van t, briallhg. 1 ha plant 111 Im Inda w rneutaXne. With am parliy nf lormeggt 'b. bnd do end of MtiMiea end a, w he'll W'M ti laind let a t -m re fat b lbefawtljlai hria layirig fr the tneallat'W as I Isytiig M tba bjMBl-.kav CafaoUJ m9,. Latest U. S. Gov't Report fiH90Sk5P THE CZAR'S LAST GIFT. 1 An Instance of the Thoughtfulness el Alexander. The late czar of Russia may have pur sued a mistaken and somewhat crual government policy, but in his domestic relations he was all thoughtfulness and affection, says a foreign exchange. It is fold that last summer the czar and empress visited a great shop in St. Petersburg to buy jewels for their son' future bride. The empress greatly ad mired a beautiful bracelet, and told the czar that she wished to possess It. On their return ono of the serious attacks to which he was subject came upon him, and the empress forgot the brace let. The czar died, and to the empress, in the early days of her widowhood came, November 14, the first birthday she must pass alone. On her other birthdays the czar had been wont to place a bouquet in the morning room of the empress. Inside the flowers was always found some rich, rare gift, chosen months beforehand. Tho empress had avoided the room as too full of painful memories, but this morn ing, the morning of his wedding day, .Nicholas requested his mother to go there as a favor to him. The first thing she saw was the bouquet in the usual place, and insidu the flowers was a case, fastened and sealed by the czar's own hands. - It contained the bracelet. lie had ordered it on the same day that the empress saw it, and on his deathbed had given instructions for the birthday gift, bidding his son to be near to com fort her when she received it. CLOTHES MADE OF WOOD. J One of tha Things Which the Tatar BFIU Probably Ilrlng Forth. , Time was when references to a "wooden overcout" wero understood as the Irreverent equivalent of measuring a man for a collln, but it would seem, that suits of clothes made of wood may soon be an accomplished fact. The writer, says the Edinburgh Scotsman, is Indebted to a merchant of tho city of cloth Ieeds for a glimpse of samples of a species of cloth, and also of a sort of cotton, made wholly out of wood fiber, these two woven pieces having all the appear anco of attractive articles of their own kind, lloth thuso novel textile fabrics are the result of prolonged experi ments with pinmvood and spruce, which have been ingeniously torn to pieces In tho first instance and then bleached by an elaborate chemical process. After chemical treatment In many ways tho wood becomes a soft, white pulp, which Is run through perforated plates, the resulting threads being dried by a steaming process. These thread can bo woven, and the me- tcriul Is miaccptible of taking readily any sort of tlye. Tho fabric can bo made at an astonishingly cheap coat: It looks well and has a certain amount of strrigth (experiments in this connec tion are now being carried out), and Its appearance on the market, booner or Ibter, la absolutely certain, especially In the firrm of Imitation cotton. HOW FISH ASCEND. Oiygea Weessiary la Mitka Them Rise Ob- talaad from Their Own Illood. A carious physiological dlncovrry ha been iniwlo In thn lot t year by Prof. Ihihr, of OiM-nh:igen, In regard to the rmslo of storage by ivhlch a fish ao rumulntea ao much oxygen In the air that distends the swimming- or air bladder. The air contained therein has a per centage of imygcn that may rlaetoas mm h a eighty-flro, an amount In ri ces of the percentage! In atmospheric lr. I'rof. Ilohr tapped the air blad der of codfish and drew off the gas by mean of a trocar and airtight syringe. The gas hbd 0 fly two per cent, nf oty. gen. Ia a few hours the air bladder w refilled, apparently by a proeen of bee ret ion of gas (run the blood In the caplllarir on th well of the blbdder. Ia one experiment the gas thus aa- errte-l had eighty pi-r c-nl. of oxygeo. When nerve ei:inreted with th or pun War severe. 1. 1 he a-n-t ton erased and the organ waa hot red! led. It thu appear that when a flhd be nds to a gf bl depth, and his body la rrduerd In slse by inn-nMal pr,-sur of the water about him. ha I able to attain his former at? and rlx by beryatlng tb gas he n.e.1 and not by alajorhing th water. Hupjsirt la tha given t tha theie-y that lh gssnai i hangra that nr- ur In I ha lung of bnlinala are nd purely physical. hot l( K TO rTwO. Tla brill Dot b bllew I a;ub aflat Jsly let. All trereoni failing t pay by the I' ilk of en ibotb btreafur dl be aleff. Ilgrrata I,lsf a WsTts Co. i i I CATARRH iocalVisease a Is k asa a) eaM eaj Eli's Creani m etweMH M bs CVe eew ib-wr ran ray kwi h. t - is d-a4 m lf Mat e sl W-aOa. l a-a s4 ... I a 1 1 f. S-ll r S a la-av.-a. k- oa-as fmm tt waa.aa U s m ais u m" Bf ar a-. - y.v. V I . ft m W Aa.1 lta"l "JS W"a eaas -a I i la .a. at kf i t Si is I If -S WSfa a fa-- f aa las Hn ba. kf ' s f a WwtwM 4 f e a) ateawa. . Balm r