OFFICIAL sxv A HOT NUMBER. e- . Is the Heppner Gazette. Without it th. Heppner hilts would appear dry and barren. People read it; businesi men advertist in it. PAPER A LARGE NUMBER.... Of Morrow County's citizens read the Heppner Gazette. Kot much of an authority on agriculture orpoli i tics, but true to the interests of its neighbors. ' r '.-'. FOURTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1896. J WEEKLY NO. 712( SEMI-WEEKLY NO 4861 SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. FCBL1BHKU Tuesdays and Fridays W PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. OTIS PATTERSON, . . . Editor A. W. PATTERSON. . Business Manager At$a.S0 per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 ots. or three monons. Advertising Rates Made Known on ' Application. THIS PAPER is kept bnflle at E. C. Dake's Advertising Agenoy, 64 and 85 Merchants Exohangs, Ban Franoieco, California, where cou raote for advertising can be made for it. 0. R. & N.-LOCAL CARD. Train leaves Heppner 10:45 p. in. dally, except Sunday. Arrives 6:00 a. m. daily, except Mgn day. West bound passenger leaves Heppner Junc tion 1:11 a. m.; east bound a. m. Freight trains leave Reppner Junction going east at 7:48 p. in. and 9:10 a. m.j going west, 4:30 p. m. and 6.15 a. m. , OFFICIAL 33XR.ECTOH.Tr! United Btates Officials. resident Grover Cleveland Vine-President Ad ai Stevenson Beoretary of Htate. Kiohard 8. Olney Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Beoretary of Interior....'... K. B. Francis Secretary of War Daniel 8. Lsniont Booretary of Navy. Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster-General William L. Wilson Attorney-General Judxon Harmon Secretary of Agrioultnre J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor...... W. P. Lord Secretary of State H. K. Kincaid Traaenrer..... Phil. Metanhan Rapt. Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney General C. M. Idlnman In: Kiel! Congressmen : J wgf roUs"" Printer...... ,.....'.W. Il!Leeds !R. B. Bean, F. A. Moore, C E.Wolverton . "" . Blxth Judicial District. Oirenit Judge.:.. ........i Stephen A. Lowell Prosecuting Attorney H. ,.' a . Morrow County Officials. . Joint Senator... ... ........... A, W.' Gowan Kopreeentative J. N. Drown !'.onty Jndge A. G. Bartholomew ' Commissioners,..., :). 11. Howard J. W. Beckett. " Clerk..... J.W. Morrow " Pheriff K. L. Blstlock " Treasorer Frank Gilliam ' Assessor J. V. Willis " Surveyor... J. W, Horuor " Hchool Bnp't Jay W. Bhipley " Corouer B. F. Vttoghan BIFPHEB TOWH OrflOEllft. Mayor .Thoe. Morgan C xmnilmon . 8. Horner, R. J. rtloonm, Frank Rogers, Geo. Conser, Frank - Gilliam, Arthur Minor. Recorder F. 3. Mullock Treaorer.M E. L. Freelnid Barshal ..' ................ A. A. KoWrta Preeisct Officers. Justice of the Feaoe..... W. K. Richardson Constable. N. 8. Wbetatone Cslted "tatcs Land Officers. TBI DALLES, OB. J. P. Moors .... Register A. 8. Bigg Receiver ' LA OBAMDB, OK. B. F, Wilson .' Rngla'er J. H. Bobbins Heoetver XCXtJST QOCI EXIZS. KAWLiLNB POST, NO. IL . A. R. Meet at luexington. Or., th last Batnrday of neb month. Ail veterans are invited to Join. 4." C. Boon, Go. W. Smith. Adintant. tf ( imuiniUr. D. J. McFaul, M. D. OI'KICIC I At Mrs. H. Welch's Residence. Night telephone connection with tha Palace Hotel. E. L FREELAND, COLLECTIONS, yjJISI INSURANCE, iIf ABSTRACTS. U. S. LAND COMMISSIONER. land Filings and Final Proofs Taken, STENOGRAPHER. KOTiRT PUBLIC national BaaK oi ttmi mn. Finland, to. r. bishop. Presides!. C sailer. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANTING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS If ad M Fsvorsbl Teem. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLI) II EITHER, if OREOOS (Mario-Horns Staac Line a. r t BDHHS-OHHYOH STRBELIHE H. A. WILLIAMS. Pop, osT.inio-nunsti ls-str Burp llsily at fi p. m. an J ar rive at Ontario, 1st H Imor. Sinqlo Furo $7.00. Round Trip $10.00 XVTftmoik tr!M t tMll par pnue I. nuRS's-CAsro.v laave pirs 4aitv es.iaes ayar r mm is ettaatnai iiy ana ii-Mie i9ii era Baas ftte Wi li.f W f r4fat mtav44 db U , rrtsviii '4 Lt at Hum. Wanted-Rn Idea SS5 S asl4 f I f 'f f'-m la J 4'f ashtt ha tt, rM-Vw A-av Just Received ! We have just received a Large Line of Ladies' and Misses Jackets and Capes In :. 0 First National Bank -OF IIEPPNEB- C. A. RHEA, T. A. Rhea, Geo. W. CONSER, S. w. Spencer. - President Vie PrtEldant - Cashier Ass't Cashlsr Transacts a General Banking Business: On all parts of (he world Bought and Sold. Collections made on all points on reasonable Terms. Surplus and undivided Profits, .IS,(tO0 00. hTOCK URANUS. While yus aaep yonr aabeerlptiiia paid ap trm aakesp soar brand is free of charge. Bora. P.O.. Hanonar. nr-Knnii PRm honlder; eattla. auoe oa left hip. Chanin. H.. Hardman. Ctr. Hum hniukii noartcht bio. I atlie bmodod the sania. At.. brands CI on bora nhl Ibishi astle brand on ri(bt abualdar, and mt ult end of rbthtaar. Cook. A. J..Ina.Or. Ilnraaa. trine rlht K.xl at atua, asma on nam ntpi ear stats I nut aqoare crop oa ten and split la nuk DWmu W. M .(talluwav. Or.Vnl Rli rbfht swallow -fotk in each eari kimas. H p a left hip. Ely. Ilrm. TVm.las. O.-Horaas hrandad fl.V oa lft shaaliiar, eat tie same oa Uftlup. hols ir rM ear. yi.icaiwi. L. A., RMnaar. Or. at I la I.P . riki htp; boreaa wiU taw sadar as riahl ehuolihw. Jooaa. Run. ntiMtr. (r II ir. Imtwl Hi am tha l..t ah.l.lar: aattla bra idarf J . cht hip. aian anlartiit la lft ear. kanaa is tutruw euaatr. inlipana. Palis, tna. fir Hawaa. .ImU T (ft a(i flat eailia. aatnans rttit hip, Sadat half wwp in ria mmn man M an ear Rena. Mika. RaafMter. - I. ,i . 4 It N f oa laA his naiHeaameaaal atua Ui ean aadar eh na tna rlbl Isaibartard W. fl Mi ma I Tsraoa. Or. 1 1. a am. os nt.l aad lafl autaa. awsikra fnrh ia fa fl ear ana w ctP IS nsl.l aw. ll.maa aataa brand as larfl ah4ldar. Ila.ie hi Ur auwtt , Iflati. Kaapnaat. Pat. Or. 41 I, on lafl hip aaata breed ua baft aaaabtar. Hm.f Omul suaatv. waiita, ma aei attot ra rur I aaf - Uahey, . W, Hnra llr.-Mraas hraedaal I. aad i nn lal ah,atlWi eailia aama as aip, iua arar rism aya, ure aiita ia riahl Xiaor. ISfV. napaawe rw. I aflia. Oh rl'.l hip, h-aaa M ua tfl ah.I.U. Bl'wwaji, I . . llavpfia. Or. rl Ml lafl ahoakla, nulla aaaas aa kafl a! a. (Maa. J. W.. Uaialaa. IK- i IwraaaU ai U( at, n I 'tar: faifila sama m ritl hiu. farkar Otaaaoa. Uanlnaa (i -P. IP tat ah.l.)-r. I'.p... i. H . w. .Nneiaa. l . aar -.l-nal-l.lf,uia1asaaaeaf htp. tav til ia aaaS aar. HarfW I. W . Haptaiaa. Ov-Naasaa, tO at haft aaamUae. tatIM, l aw rltt hls rS-rry tf II. Itataa. th. - C.llla W f aa Ml Sip. ar-iai aeT f si a1 anaWdai la kafl eaa, sVlai I iws li'mi kafl HaaMa', .. t, .. ila-. I , ft.waaa.la U afc..fcV wiU aa kafl Makla Taraav H Hnaa IS7.-NM aar-HaJ t tad as-aiMaf k- , MUs aaja a kafl hip sr ai.l.t ia t-s a-. It H la, (V - N HT aaiaaal aa Ul a-if a: akaaa laatal'aav, W, J , llailnarar. I horaM (" " i IW t (i. Um ii aaitta saVa- rrrlr t W a riskl kp aa4 ntM4 '"f aat k-.a ia Ml aar. Raapa ta Kant aa4 V ia alula aunlMa n n ni U U Xaay' VVJ r fi!l0tl4 Ir f f m Ills a. 4 a H a.aa(.s B at k I mmi S ka. k-a..t. isM m Eadies desiring anything , in this line, will do well to call early and make their selections before the assortment is nr We Have if) These ties RangiQg $2 to If s LUNAR PHOTOGRAPHS. The Larrea. Ever Obtained Were Taken st tha I'arls llliseiejtory. The Obwrvatory o( I'arls puaaesseM s telesoopa by moans of whiuh photo gmphs of celcurial IkmIIps of remark able size and cloarnrsH can be taken. By the aid of this prest Instrument the astronomers of the observatory hare Just taken a series of photoiraphs of the moon's surface which are said to be the largest erer obtained. The value of lunnr photogTapha, says the Chicago Inter Ooeun, Is very (Treat to astronomers. Formerly ther went to infinite trouble In sketching aspects of the moon, and two persons seldom produced drawing of the same thing which were not contradictory. The In cessant changes in the moon's surface caused by the rays of the sun compli cated the ilniiirrliOtmsn's task. The most detailed chart of the " mofm ever obtained was of a diameter of aii feet. . Hchmiilt, of the Observatnr of Athens, panned the years from 1S40 to I7 in completing It. The photograph le method alone gives indisputable reatill. No drUlls escape, and priKifs obtained agree absolutely. The eul.w qtirnt enlargement gives a phoUigraph of alnnit the same a lite ss the largest ehnr'v of tlm moon made by haml. 1 he j-x-rllomif the moon's aur face photo rmpiio I U remarkable for great w rii-s of emtem, which pass from the center to tlm smith of the earth's satelllta. At tiio bottom of the photo graph U thti gresl ein le of I'tolemaeua, ofv.hih the actual dia tn.tr r on the miam'a anrfa"v la estimated to be lit niilrs. The hi Irfht of iu circular ram part Is said to l 1 1. Too fivt. ImmiMislcly sh,rve la Atphonsua, M mlli'a In illametrr, with si eentral Jx-ak 8.iq fiwt high. To the Utl la Altcgn.t, with a diameter of 8T mil'- and a -ak toward the norlli.-a.t 1 1 . fe.-t high. A nsr rrw rrster, eI!.-. Alpetrsglus, to the siititheaat of A!l'nr.ua. has a depth of I0.9M fert, 'Mirl.ot I P.000 t-H deep and I'urlm h fl.WI f.t, Th pltoto graphs will f-rM p-.rt of a new erxn plrte map of the ri-aina aurfse which it Is pri,w., to tnalia. m r 'a ai.d Lsal Tenia. A land turtle that wlth.rut fall fr twenty J ynn has rrgalartj ap firsrrd st the hitnc of Michael Markey, at I'srW'-r K-ird. heatr cninly, Ta., cam U- time a f w ilara ag and la be ing Jinii:y rhiliiel Br.aind i'mrU t "n by Ms. 'iff. 1 ,l gentleman Saaj-rl that tlx re ean be bid mistaking Mat ttrtlc.ee I le Initiate of hi nam are er)lUrHi- oti Ha slirll. a aayi that Ha lra:ninif has Its an well d vei.if.ed st hi b.i tl.sl at th arxind of tl dinner U II It eanr Into th di' tntf r.a.m t.) rml ite ail.tmept rr f'-l. It stars sr.Kjiid th Mark) pftMlx-s until H.-ptemWr sad then goes off to IU winbrr ' 'tarlT. If VMir rbll Ire ar isl.j'et tapvnwp sleb ff lb Cist lystptoni lf tlm daj eaa br.aa. If Ch(r.btlslt's Cnh fUvassly I given a anon a lb efeild sveam k e'e it will pe h sitwk. afia th erospy rasb I s Si pi'a4 tl a si'srk eaa als)b tret .el. I P gtteg tbr toMf, U S'SU Istsllsbi f t.1 It, I t $ Siia. I k iaie t f Caf A U' b. M 0 broken. Goods fill Quali t) Price Fron) $18. FATALIST, BUT CAUTIOUS. II Believed la Predoetlnstlon, nut Wanted to Re st a Safe Dlstane. It was once said by some humorist that the chances were If a man intent upon committing suicide should meet an angry bull In a field he would run to save his life. And so it goes, the New York Herald moralises. Most men who profess a belief in dentlny and an Indifference to fate when brought face to face with a danger or placed In a desperate situa tion seek to avoid rather than embrace the Inevitable result of the event re garding which they have held such philosophical opinions. A case in point Is related by a trav eler returning from the south, and hinges upon the experience of a minis ter of the foreordiitatlon school of be lief on a Mississippi stesmer In the good old-fsshioned dsys of river rac ing, when a negro sat on the safety valve and the furniture and woottsvork of Uie boat fed the Are. The captain seeing a rival boat balf a mile ahead began to curse In true old time Myle, and ordered tar pine knots, nsrsl stores, bacon, tc., to be thrown In to kindle the Are as hot as possible. As the steam gothighrr and higher and the old I uat trembled and groaned under the pressure, the preacher drew Dearer and nearer to the stern. Noticing this and never losing an op portunity to crack a Joke, the bluff captain tapped th fatalist on th shoulder and ;ild: ili-llo, llrotbrr lllsnk, whsl's ailing you? I thought yon was one of them fellow what be lieves what Is to hsppea. will happen nohow." "So 1 d," replied tha rlergymaa drswlng blmaelf np. "Ho I do, but I want to be as near th stern as poal bl when It dues hsppen." THE nt'LCR OF ALL RUSSIA. "any Ways ka vThkrh I ka Aalaarars tjia ark Till fa apella. Aft we are upon P.asalsn topics, 'says a Ilerlln lettrr to the fhiladelpbla I-elger. It may li worth while to rw- f.-r to th nolle nnder lh word eiar In tlm rrcrnilyifiinplpted awond vol ume l "Tha ?.cw l:ri.'l ih IHrtlonary," th monumrrital work of lr. Murray and hie aawa late. "The aiwlllnif With (." It sava. 'Issjfsln.l th of all Mavonic Isngnarea. The word wsa s.1 VfirUml .y ll.-rl rr is In kVrnt Mnacitvli t.mnirnlaril. IM4, th rhUrf sr1f Sfrarr of Information as l Kaa sls In western l,.ir..r-. hrnc it pea.-. Inf.. I the we-trrn Unyii'r grn eraHyi In aimie .f litem it la fi'iw old rahi'tnl Th l.arman fm la ar. and y ra n has recrritly s-Ued taar. lit. h la al-a-i the ntratt snltalilo f.itg ll.h spelling " lt.it laarrtlUh, some times Sard to dca.gnate It. hrr4try pvinca, h wr-itif. II has the differ' nlit mi, reaaravlu-h, wbkh U r'm4 dirwetly tm th l.atta f pad B"t la any P!svf.r,ll f.ra i.f h word" Tl IVrmsns tranlal hi ttaaaisn till very ebawly In railing him th r.ntuNrst lbr'.r,f-.lrer-tr, !ly, the 't.rsmt lriae Throfk fo. the lit af (..aeiiipa, -. tot then half lb lilt 4 nntbsa, Ksd's Clovef T ht 1 :(( I I Ufa f,,f f t,lSll3n. PaVSti by w.i.ie warren. ODD POST OFFICE NAMES. Curious Results of a Reform of the Postmaster General's. Ingenuity Displayed In Some Sectlooa in the Selection of Unique Names Many of Them Remark ably Abbreviated. Postmaster General Bissell wants short names for new post offices. Some of Mr. BLssell's predecessors attempted reforms in the direction of post office nomenclature with rather curious re sults. When the residents of a new town in Missouri sent in their applica tion for a post office ' several years ago the name they suggested was not satis factory to the department for some reason. . "Select another "name," wrote the postmaster general; "something not so common, something peculiar." "All right," the applicants replied, "call it 'Peculiar.' " And the mail bag has gone to "Peculiar, Cass county, Mo.," ever since. If Mr.' Bissell doesn't have a run on "Short" post offices daring the coming months, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, it will be because ' the American sense of humor ' is temporarily short. There are already three Shorts in the united States. There are a Short Beach and a Shortburgh, four Short Creeks, one Shorter, and a Shorterville. Then we have Short Falls, Short Hills, Shortly, Short Mountain and Short Off. North Carolina contributes the last mentioned. Hut variety in short com bination is not exhausted. Claims have been allowed on Short Creek, two Shortsvilles, a Short Tract and a Short- ville. Mr. Bissell says one-syllable names will be preferred hereafter. The post office department has accumulated quite a collection of monosyllabic of fices. It has two Arks, eighteen Baths, five plain Bays, with numerous combi nations like Bay City, Bay Centre, and the like; seven Belbi, two Bulls, and two Ball Plays. -Indiana has a town named B; it is in Tippecanoo county. Tennessee has named a pout office A II C. One hundred and twenty combina tions have been made with Big, ran;?, ing from Big Bar to Big Wcotls. with such originality shown as Big Bug, in Arizona, and Big Patch, in Wisconsin. Eleven Bisnells leave no room fur fur ther honors to the postmastcr-gcnerul. Ten Bellcfontaine:i ure spelled In al most as many different wtiys. The Tennessceans seem to be fertile in the selection of unique numes. They have got a Y Z post oftice, a Yum Yum, an Ipe, only one Jackson, strange to tell; a Let, an Ai, an Andy, a Ben, a Bob, a Boy, a Bud, a Cute, un Ef'o, a GUIm.', a ath, a Ho; a Ken. a Loo, a Nancy, a Xotlme, a Number One, a Scg, a Sill, a Tung, a Tut, two Whigs, a Zach. Missouri runs sotuewiiut to syno nyms. She has a l eculiur and the next thing to it, an Odd. She has a Freedom and a Ltlicrtyvlllo. Missouri hits her share of homely names for post ofllces, such as l'ulltight, Dutchtown, Dudcnville, Jiuitown, Drynob, K)-n- OMsr. Combinations wltli Utmc seem to be popular in that state. There are Lone Kim, Lone Jack, Iono 1V11, Lone Oak, Lone Spring, Lone Slur and Lone Tree. The present congressional dele gation has liecn well rememliereiL Missouri has post ofllces called CiK'krell and Vest, also Dockcry, Burnt-, Joy, Ilobb, Uyan, Hatch, Hall, Tarsney, lllsnd. Missouri bus a (irovcr In one county and a Cleveland In another. She has a (iresham, also an Iniralls. Who but a printer nould have chosen for Missouri post offices such nsnies as Jeff and Htet? Consider the phase of human nature which prompted the se lection of Braggadocio as a post office address. Prohibition Is neiirhlior to Rolling Home, l'nrudise Is not fur from Tribulation. Missouri has a Nlsh nabotna, n Osrkrum, n Nirvana, i Mis, a Liupus, an Arnica, a Jon, n rhlrgeton, n Black Jack and a Iilootn lug Uose. Adam Is in Georgia, Eve is In Ken tucky. Cain In Kansas, Abel In Ala bama. A letter addressed to Canaan may go to sixteen states tofor it ft nils Its destination. The long roll of t ofllces eon tains a. greater variety of saint than the calendar. . Virginia has a KL Tammany's, M. Ann, bt. Anne, Nt, Anna, rit Annie. HL Anns are all poet offices. One rt. Jo, five St. J and eighteen K. Joaephs attest the popularity of thst saint and the Irrev rrrrn of hi latter dsy admirer. In Alabama ther I a bamt' htor and In Mlsslssipl tbrr I n Hsint's Beat Texsa and Iowa hav New Yorks. ( in rlnnsti la found In sis atates. Ther sr four Chkrag.ai and seven lXllsd.-l- phis. HL Louis I found in Michltfsn and Montana, a well a In Missouri. Center I th name of a post office la twenty-two alat. The Cenlertowns, Ceatervllle and other combinations with 'Center number on hundred and thirty -seven. la Ikrlawsr eminty, Ohio, a pt ofllr La named Africa. Vistula has Negro Arm and Negro K.ait. North Carolina ka Nrrro Head, and Arkan aa ha tirgm lillL The Acre I In Weal Virginia. The Hay I In l-nil ana. Other tat effixr with tlw artkrlea am Th llt-axl. Tit t-r( Th IMUUm. Th t ails. Th. t orke, 1 1w (leyaer. Th ttlen, Th tirove, Tlie tlnma, Th Hollow, The plains, II llidg. Th II.k, The Spring, The Nr, Th Weirs. Ther I no rt oftic nsmetl Vul Dam, although many pvopl think ther U. Tia has n Yutto, and ( alk f.nia ha n Yubat ity. Mk hlgan and North Dakota hav Itrvll Lake There am thrn Tsrlffs on In Ohio, hW-lt la qsit tl; on In West Vlr- glala, and a third In North Carolina- "I it imwvihrUtt, inmtjuilgmtn rsWW tAerp smwrr rveelce tin Untflt frxm Ik inrif of no , , , . Whftkrr hi d" or dttrt of natire re troJ." -1 rtrict frtim wA nf II iiiajav J, fr,.is) ff f. a cf U-ft rramiant-f n-f. th ( hH aru Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report D)OLQJTEIsY PURE A GIDDY PROCESS. The Slste r of Italy's King Outs s Osper on Wheels. In Consequenoe of Which th Trollo some Larty Is PUead Voder th Ban of Royal Displeasure and Sent to Coventry. ' Bicycles caused no end of bad blood in more senses than one, it is to be feared before finally obtaining the right of citizenship among orthodox vehicles of the , road;" and, universal though they have 'now become among ordinary mortals, they have still a deal of up-hill work to accomplish before acquiring a status among the surround ings of royalty. - Of ccurse, a prince or king may bestride a ."wheel," and do anything but break a record or his neck; but were a princess so far to for get what she owed to her house, her dignity and her long line of ancestors as to patronise this democratic means of locomotion, the whole civilized world would be expected to stand aghast at the desecration of royalty implied by the act. -And this is the horrible deed that has just been announced by the telegraph, and has thrown Italian court Circles into ceremonial convulsions. The catastrophe, says a Rome corres-. pondent of the London Telegraph,' oc curred in Turin, and the heroine and victim the lady is both ia the pretty, accomplished young widow, the duchess of Aosta, who Is staying at the castle of Stupinlgi. Princess Maria Loetizia is a sister-in-law of the present king of Italy, she having married in 1RH8 his brother, Prince Amadeo, duke of Aosta, Who died in 18U0. This lady, who is a Bonaparte, is not merely accomplished and pretty, but is brimful of life and fun, and takes a positive delight in tramping upon the rigid court ceremo nial of past acres. The last of her frolics was executed on n bicycle made for one. She set out a few dsys ago on one of these tabooed vehicles, accompanied by a maid of honor and two court cav aliers, and after a long ride the part; were flying up one of the shady ave nues leading to the palace of the dukes of Aosta, when a company of soldiers commanded by a major met them half way, glanced at them furtively, and perhaps a trifle too curiously or crit ically, and marched on without making sign. The duchess, rendered more sensitive than usual by the conscious ness that the was transgressing the bounds of court etiquette, felt hurt at not being saluted In the approved fash- Ion by the major and his soldiers. This wss perhaps humsn nature, and, a such, excusable. But the lively lady went much further; she actually com plained of the conduct of the major, who hail, she affirmed, culpably neg lected to salute her. The commsndaut of Turin, Ocn. d'Onclsn de la Batin. at once summoned the officer to appear lfi-e him and explain his conduct. The major said he waa guiltless of any offense, as h did not recognise the high-born lady, oddly dressed and tested lietween two wheels, and would neer have permitted himself to think of her highness as n sever bicyclist. lisil ha known or suspected it was she, of course he would have, etc., etc. Gen. de la liatln, uncertain what course) to take, appealed to the Holomonlstie wisdom of th war minister, to whom he forwarded a detailed report of the whole occurrence, asking for Instruc tions as to the punishment to b meted out to the msjor. whom he meanwhile kept In arrest. The minister of war, if not precisely a fvi'mnoii, wa at least quite shrewd rnotitfh to see that the ground ha wss treading wa eoartly If not holyand Instead of taking the responsibility upon himself demanded an audience of th king, Isrfore ".limn ha luUl the r. tiort of th coiiimait.luiit. The monarch rut the Oonlian knot lu twinkling. II sent a telegraphic order to Turin rrlesalng tha major from arrest and entirely exonerating blin In th matter. This, however, wss tli solution of only on half of th queationt the remaining sorty con cerned tli lively youna- widow; and th king sent his blcyrle-lovlng sister- in-law an order forbidding her to at tire herself in reel eowrt coatam for th ape of two calendar months, a prohll.it ion whlrli I eoaivslf nt to atrial domestic arrest f that prrtl Th princes la therefore absolutely in. vlalbl to th g'd eltlseu of Turin, who rf wont to watrh and aalut her two car tlire time dally, a sh i ral or drov or walked about Ota ptrvrU tif th hlstorla old city. Th liibahilanU consul Utemarlva by gscing f .r h'i rr. through th win d.rws of th pb'rtogr pher' shnjst, wl.afeaaerUe .f ten triaf njfWnl por trait In various p. ail lion a and naiaiwi attract Imndredaof loyal eymptrlier I poar lesrn thst sasterv has also la-en pronounced on on nf th curt ravalters who aeeoipiikad th ilif!,a tm her bleyrling esprdltlon. Tli mar ptlsof Monerlvello baa ta-en nmm trily rtletnlaard from his ptatt by or.lar of th king, who la said to b eitremely an no) e at th l'tat deUrmlaafion i.f bis slater In law to put all traditional ewdl'sna of Court tlttelt at lianglit, and to hav announced his InUetton to punish asur sovtrrly all ftr trsner greealon. h;lt IT P4ISOS. Ties will Knt b Blle I satnn aftr Ja'y l.l. AH fa-e failtep- M par by h oik i I eseti noli nefeafl'f .,! Int nt tfl, Htrrssa Liuar WstiR C. OPPOSED TO ALL PROGRESS. Chinese Aversion to Kail roads Manlfaeted In Curious Ways. v Engineering' enterprise In China, particularly in so far as regards rail road building, has had, and is still having, a good deal to contend with in the way of native prejudice, cupidity ' and superstition, says Cassell's Maga zine, and the tales are many that have been told of the peculiar difficulties encountered in that country by European engineers and engineering syndicates in the course of their opera tions.1 When, for example, the first railroad was built, a number of years ago, the necessary land, it was stated, was bought from several hundred different proprietors, all of whom wanted .additional bounties for the disturbances of ancestral graves, which, as may be known, abound in what the "foreign devil" would be apt to consider rather unusual localities. One proprietor claimed to have buried on his strip of land no less than five mothers-in-law, for whom he had to be paid. Satisfying him naturally re sulted in a marvelous multiplication' oi dead mothers-in-law, who thus soon became the chief item in the cost of the land. Another curious example of the difficulties of railroad construe. tion in the celestial empire has morn recently been mentioned, and has been afforded by the conduct of the Tartar general of Moukden, the capital of Manchuria, in connection with the surveying work of the railroad from Kirin, another large Manchurian town. to Newchwang, the seaport of the province. According to current re port it was proposed to make a Junc tion of this line for Moukden at a place a short distance outside the city, but the general got a number of geomancers to investigate the effect of this selection upon Moukden. These sages reported that the vertcbrm of the dragon which encircles the holy city of Moukden would be broken by driv ing the long spikes of the railroad ties Into them, and accordingly th general vetoed the decision of thn engineers and directed them to carry the railroad in a stralirht line from Kirin' to N'ewchwanir, without sir proachlng Moukden at all. This, while a shorter route, would compel the crossing of a low and marshy tract of land, llnble to floods and only spursely populated. REASON IN AN ANIMAL. A Ks'a Horse Th-t YV ild Kot Tak Klud'y l rrcparaloiy iVnrk. "It is a mi' IhUcm iileu Unit none but hnnmn iicif enn rcrriri and that dumb tin :nl Imvc not lhat power," said Prof. Albert A. Palmer, of Buffalo, toaSt. L'ltilHtllobi'-Detnoerat man. "I am fully prepared to dcinoiihtrat that the utiiimiU inferior to nuin have rea poll i ill faculties, Httd thnt what Is gen erally termed Instinct pluys an Impor- ' tant part in their dolnirasnd actions. "Iet me give you a single example. I have a friend named iK.wnltig, who owns a string of vslnsblp rnc horses. In his strinif is a horse known as pipccilwcst. A day or so I m-fore a rae In which the horse Is entered he gen erally sends him out on the track mounted by a stab) boy for a little prrpsrstory work. The horse will not tak kindly to his work, and no amount f persuasion with whip or spur ean get him away from a common ranter. I noticed Ibis peculiarity in the animal, ' and on dsy suggested to Ikiwnlng that perhaps the horse knew thst ha wss not exH-eted to race, and for thai reason eonld not understand exactly ' what was required of him. I prevailed upon him to dress the stnbl ly In the colors Usually worn In a rsce and try th hors sirs in. He did so, and lh boy was plseed in front of th animal for a moment thst he might seat h col ors. The result was thst when the boy mounted again the hors t.rok at th word of commend ami set oft at a long, swinging gallop, which h In creased to a run, finishing the work nn der a strong p'UL Another stabl by waa put np without th colors, ami th hors refused to lesv th lopittg gait ht which b started out A second tlm the colors were need and again th animal set out at a rat of speed calculated to break a record. "What do yon rail thst, iastinet or resaolilngT I contend thst th flora had a rational faculty which b tier, deed at will. IU knew thatwllh.rut th colors h bsd nothing In particular to gain by estendlnir himself to a swift run. W hen the robs vti re put on the hi r r r ssoiir .1 thst tin re wa a mi oh Jert In View, IU reasoned that ha WSS already prepared for a race and ansd hi pace) a so'diny ilbuut lerlbf nrgad." t'nw I m . i are. Pills it ii pot ear r.sh.eli..B. Tbf "tily --'avaaU. KsM's Clue l4 Tee site parleet ranlsrity 4 the el. 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