TffrsfW iiii trf i sBjMMpEMlEI m mS lliM Pendleton is said to be very quiet for this time of the year, though crop prospects are reported to be exceedingly good. J. U. Smith, of Portland, and W. J. Jones, of Port Townsend, have been appointed com mi 3 ioners for the district of Alaska. Tennessee's anti cigarette law not only makes the selling or man ufacture of cigaiettes unlawful in that state, but prohibits their im portation from other states. A general summing up of the receipts and expenditures of Mexi co during the fiscal year 1895-96 shows that the sister republic had a Burplus of $G,126,897.41, after payiDg all claims and expenses. It is announced that J. P. Mc Manus and Ghas. A. Markrey will soon begin the publication of b new weekly paper in Pendleton. Mr. McManus was formerly editor of the Pendleton Tribune. The crop bulletin snys: "With favorable weather conditions East em Oregon will have a most pros perous year. The grain aud fruit never promised more. The range is good, hay crop is heavy, stock fat, wool extra fine, and large per centage of lambs." Monday, Oct. 4, has been desig nated hs Press Day at the Ore gon state fair. The management has placed Albert Tozier in charge of Press affairs for that day and it is desired that each and every edi tor, publisher, proprietor, and newspaper reporter in Oregon honor the occasion with his presence. The republicans in the senate are bo anxious for the prompt pas sage of the tariff bill that they are omitting all discussion, aud even allowing attacks of the demooiats upon the bill aud upon party rec ords to pass unanswered, in order to make as brief as possible the time occupied in the consideration of the bill. Editoiih are as a rule kind- hearted aud liberal. An exchange tells us of a subscriber to a certain paper who died aud left fourteen years of subscription unpaid. The editor appeared at the grave as the lid was being screwed down for the lant time, ai.d put in a linen duster, a thermometer, a palm leaf fan aud a recipe for making ico. Toe wise and beautiful young women at Crown Point, Iud, have formed a "Marringablo Ladies lieauue, "basin! on the resolution to adjure iiintritnony unit's the male suppliant is a patron of his home newnpapor. Por, i.tlierwiae, the league's constitution declares "it is strong evidence of a want of Intel. ligfiice, and he will prove too tingy to provide for a family, edu cate his children, and curouMge institutions of learning iu the coin- inuuity." Ffsiox lxtpea the populists and democrats socuia to t I a thing of the past. Populist lead ers are fwywhor eipressing their digut with the uncertain attitude of the democrats on all national issu'. Not only are large numbers of democrats in ever) sluts where there is a cam. paign this fall refusing to accede to the demand for tba support of th Chicago platform and its doc trines, Lot a Urge comber .of democrats In congress are also doting Ji fretrdi thaory and A special from Havana under date of June 18, says: Private advices from Matanzas tell of a serious riot there. Over 2000 re concentradoes, men. women and children, made deperate by hunger, paraded the streets demanding bread. Private residences were broken into and numerous grocer ies looted before the Spanish with swords drawn succeeded in quelling the riot. The demand for a general re vision of the currency seems likely to be as promptly met by the re publicans B8 was that for a reform of the tariff. President McKinley, it is asserted eemi-authoritatively, will recommend to congress imme diately upon the passage of the tariff bill that a currency commis sion be created before the adjourn- meet of the special session in or dpr that its report aDd plan for a revision of the currency system may be laid before the reenlar bah. sion of congress which will begin in jjecemoer next. Some newspaper men are terri- ble liars. One of them wrote about a cyclone, saying that it turned a well wrong end up in the state of Mississippi: turned a cel lar upside down in Wisconsin, moved a township line in Nebraska, blew all the staves out of a whiskv barrel in Iowa and left nothing but the bunghole; chanced the day of the week in Ohio; blew the hair off of a baldheaded man in Texas; blew the mortgage off a farm in Michigan; blew all the cracks out of a fence in Dakota: took all the wind out of a politi cian in Missouri. Among all the splendid chariots that appeared at the carnival in Paris, the X-ray chariot was the most curious, says the Cincinnati Enquirer. It was in the form of an angry sea, with a big whale moving along on the surface and an electrician perched upon a rock behind. The Boientifio man poiuted his apparatus at the whale in order to discover what was in side the monster. When the lights were well turned on every body was able to see the interior. a handsomely furnished apartment, in which Jonah, seated at a table. drauk champagne, in company with a mermaid. , A Texas editor who had evi dently been inflated with free silver buncombe, shoots off a blank load as follows: "How dear to our hearts is the old silver dollar, when some kind friend presents it to view the Liberty head without necktie or collar, and all the strange things that seem to us new. The wide spreading eagle, the arrow below it tbe star and words and strange things they tell; the coin of our fathers, we're glad that we know it, for sometime or other it will come in so well. The spread eagle dollar, the star-suangled dollar, the old silver dollar we all love so well." Don't judge a man by the clothes he wear Ood made the man and tbe tailor made the clothes. Don't judge a man by his failures in life, for many a man fails because he is to honest to succeed. Don't judge a man by the house he lives in, for rats of ten inhabit the grandest struoture. When a man dies those who sur vive hiia ask how much of an es- tate he left, but 8t. Peter kef ps a different account, lie has a mail's good and evil deeds and that is the accouut ho may have trouble in settling while his heirs are contenting his will. We some times think we may noue of us know anything alxmt the hereafter, aud that it may turn out fardif. ferent than any of UNsuspect Ex. It is now almost certain that the territory of Hawaii will I the next adlitiou to Uucla Nam's family. It is bow known, although no ollicial statement has been made, that a treaty for the annex ation of Hawaii a ill be sent to th senate in the near future, probab ly before the close of th present session of congress. There is very little, if any, doubt of the ratifies tioo of that treaty. th .!. tnent of the seuate, regardless of party IS overwhelmingly in favor of tba annotation of Hawaii; but owing to the difficulty of keeping quotum of the senate in Washing ton after th tariff bill has been passed, th treaty will hardly I acted upon until the regular sea. ion of cvoq jf sdi, Jo at till ItMi-p, ENTERED & PKOTEST. A. C. Ballance and D. 6. Browning Bcora Carrlrsg Siockmea. From the Long Creek Eagle. Messrs. A. 0- Ballance and D. O. Browning, of this valley, who were in Pendleton tew day ago, are quoted in tbe East Oregonian as follows: ''BbeepmeD, cattlemen and horsemen are altogether too oarelesa about tbe manner in which tbey drive tbeir bands through tbe country. I believe tbere is law in Oregon wbioh makes it tbe duty of any one driving a band over a moun tain road to remove the looee rooks tbe stook or sheep have rolled down into the roadway. Immense numbers of live stock have been driven over both tbe Pendleton and Heppner roads this spring and from the indications one won Id be justified in believing that not one man bag done his duty as plainly tnld in tbe law. This is very unjust to all teamsters and we have a valid cluim to the right of protest. In some places rocks as large as a man's body have been rolled down, and tbe grades beforehand good for wheeling, are Dearly impassa ble. I do not know as it will make any difference if we ntter this protest, but perhaps it will. If tbese careless driv ers of bands of sheep would observe our simple rights, we wonld be very glad, and hope some measures will be adopted to enforce tbe plain provisions of tbe law." Tbe above is only , one of many pro mts mnde by tenm-iters on these two ronds. From patties recently parsing over tbe Heppner mad, tbe Engle is in formed tbat that highway is in a fright ful condition, and all owing tothe pimule foot tbat stockmen have utterly ignored the law in regard to tbe driving of stock on public- highways. Road supervisors should in all snoh oases look into the matter and proteot tbeir respective dis tricts against tbese roving berds. For tbe benefit of those who are ignorant of tbe law, the following from Hills' Laws of Oregon is printed : Section 1. Any person or persons driving nr herding, or causing to be driven or berded, cuttle, horses, sheep, or any kind of live-stock along or near a public highway, and csnsing snob highway to be obstructed thereby with stones, earth, or otber debris, 8Dd leav ing the same to so remain for more than 24 hours, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon oonviotion thereof shall be fined in any sum not exceeding $200, snoh fines to be enforced as other fines in oriminal cases, and justices of tbe peaoe of tbe oounty where tbe offense is committed shall have original jurisdiction of all viola tions hereof. LITTLE INK DROPS. A man reads more about love than he sees. Brave men get hurt oftener than oow- ards. Everyone is more of a oraok than he Is willing to admit. There never was a woman who could walk fast graoefully. A woman bandies a man as graoefully as she bandies a fao. Most people not- only grow older every day, but poorer. Shakespeare: Tbey do not love that do not show their love. Everyone believes he does not "get tbe credit" be deserves, A man is always interested In a wo man wbo wears a thick veil. A drunkard's Idea of a smart man it one who doesn't touch liqnor. When a day or a base ball same starts oat wrong, it is bard to reoover. Tbs women are always looking for anmntbing to be indignant about. The greatest Inmry laths world is friend you've never qnsrreled witb. Depend on what yoi know yourself; tint no wbat some other fellow koowa. In a country towo, when a man bays s new suit, people gay him for s week. If you particularly dishks a tohjxot, how often it ooniet op io conversation. V7t would ratber people would talk behind our back than get up a surprise parly "on" ut lo the earns underhand y. Pleaaarea of Hone, Horael-lhe middle word of ha most beaaiifal trio in the English langnsgs Thar is tnnslo In It sweeter than the ttraioa of tbs aoolian barp to the twi light of a summer eveoiog. It is the place where mother livsl; where she rockad ut Iu the oradlt of love and ado ratios; where we remember gating io ber faoa for the first lime; where tbe bud, unpolluted by tin, grew a flower; and where, ofteo good Impressions art made that control the action of man hood tbean, and myriad of other mem nriet almost too sacred for the tip ol man to describe, are tome ot tbe things wbioh classify home witb mother and neavea. o matter whether It la a man-ion in tba eily, or a cabin Iu tba wimkUjIo palace of royalty or io the hovel of poverty; io the farmhouae ot plenty, or the tent by the riverside, it Is home. Mother's pietore baegt on the wall the shadow of beauty of days rnaby;aud ar old armchair It there, the empty tbrnnt of lova't once happy kingdom. Itrnlhart and sisters play there. The birds ting tweeter aud tbt no shines brighter ; tbe moonbeams art softer god (lowers are more heaiiltfol where mother's eyt esu behold them. "Home, tweet home." Hood' are gauung Uvof npxity. a IhlliueM biea sad (9si I k tors carry Uxxa ta wet Ll I S oakeie, earry Ifeea to -arM, m in ewe (Mat la ategietee elwe, rrVrcnU rnieiit Wa he gleeae. a 8irk hai1arhe taobeij'iirkly and sobs ; pli irly eveiem by oirg thoee famutta lulls pills know m 'trwl'a Little jtarll K.wrt,' KIPLING'S SNAKE. Showing the Force of an Ill-Ordered Im agination. A writer in McClure's Magazine tells how he edited a paper in India with the help of Rudyard Kipling, and he men tions as a side issue a peril from snakes which Kipling once underwent. The danger of snakes in Lahore was real enough, and the ple was rich in scor pions. The person who tells the story had been stung by a scorpion in bed one morning, and Kipling aided him in the afternoon in a scorpion hunt. They found 26 under the matting in he ver anda outside the bedroom door, beside a few centipedes, and put the lot into a large tumbler, and filled it up with whisky. One day, when we were dressing in the morning, I heard Kipling shouting, and went into his room. His face wns pale with horror, and he was tightly clasping one leg above the knee. "There's a snake," he gasped, "inside my trousers, and I think I've got him by the head. Put your hand up from be low and drag him out." I observed that Kipling only "thought" he had it by the head, and that really its head might be at the other end, in which case but before I had finished, I saw the horror in his face, relax and give place to a puzzled look succeeded by fits of laughter. Endeavoring to as certain by the sense of touch whether it was the head he was grasping, he had discovered that it did not really feel like any part of a snake at all. In fact it had a buckle, and he realized that his braces had been dangling inside the garment, when he put It on. SLEPT ON THE "SIDEBOARD." A Green Countryman's First Experience with a Folding; Bed. An old, ray-whiskered man, who had lived all his life on a small farm near Batav'a, stopped at the hotel the other evening, says the Buffalo Express. He said he wanted a room for one night. He was sent up to the third floor. Later iu the evening he went out, and didn't come back till midnight. He had evidently been enjoying himself. His breath smelled of whisky. He went up to his room, and that was the last seen of him until early in the morn ing, when a boy went to call him for his train. The boy got no answer when he knocked on the door, and he opened it and walked in. The folding-bed had not been let down. The boy had to look ibout for a moment or two be fore he dincovsred the old man. Then he heard a husky voice from up near the ceiling somewhere. He looked up, Hnd there was the guest curled up on lop of the bed, rubbing his eyes. He was fully dressed, with tbe exception of his big cowhide boots, which were standing on the floor. "Say, mister," inquired the boy, "why didn't yer get into bed?" "B'goeh!" shouted the man, angrily, 'rhere ain't no bed. Here I've been curled up on top of this here side- board nil night without awinkof sleep. Ain't this a nice way to treat a man? Hey?" LOVE LIGHTENS LABOR Advantages Country People Ilave Over Their City Brothers. The countryman has, if he be wise enough to perceive it, good reason to count himself a luckier person alto gether than he whose work is done in town. Forf the "latter, says Dlack and White, unless he be exceeding well off, there are few pleasures easily obtain able in the intervals of toil. Food and sleep are excellent in their way, but they are necessities, and they are usual ly taken under such circumstances a to have nothing of the character of luxuries. The countrymnn is luckier than this. It may be that his toil la tiring and that his wage is a small one, but he labors in such a way that he al ways gets the fullest enjoyment out ot his rest, and when he pauses to take his midday meal it is under conditions that would make a perfect holiday for the city, and to whoRe charm even the man accustomed to them cannot grow callous. He lies at ease among the sheaves that hs has cut, and the sun. whose ardent rays made his toil the heavier, now adds to his delight More over, he eats with the pleasnntet of waiters to see to his comfort j it may b his wife who bring his dinner, or per haps it is some buxom girl from the farm who is not yet his, though she will some day be, as she knows within herself, snd h Is not afraid to believe. Verily, his toll is hard in itself, but he must be a singularly discontented per son if he do not find It light amid theae surroundings and under these pleasant conditions, VOLAPUK HAS A RIVAL. Esperanto Is Us Dam of This Mew Cnl- venal Lc(na(e. Esperanto ! not tbo name of a new liquor or of a new appetizer, nor thatj of a comic song, but it is the name of an artificial language, which is fast gaining adherents in France, aud that Is already able to boost of many fol owers In Europe, the United States, and even In some parts of Africa. A motif tbos most proficient In the language Is a Frenchman, bearing the aristocratic name of D'Eyssautier. He aaya that Kaperanto by no means a new language, nor even a recent dis covery. This Intel national language has Wen in existence nearly ten years, and th-re are at leait 10.000 adherents In different parts of the world. The author or originator of Esperan to Is a liiinaian gentleman. Dr. Zatuen hof, of Warsaw. He says that one may learn its grammar in un hour, and all Its voi-ahulary of words In a few days. Tbe official organ ol the language, the Ksprrantisto, Is utterly oppom-d to the Volapuk organ, for it has literary tendencies. The furt Is, Esperanto hopes to de throne Volapuk altogether. Verees may be written in it, and translations of the Iliad and Hamlet have been pub lished. Like all artificial universal lan guages, the mots of Kapereato are de rived from tbe best known of modern tongue English, French and German theee offering the least difficulty to students. Aa M4 KaflUh Villas. Hiii'kland-on-the-Moor, eM-hiVd village of Ivufjhlre, England, has no public house, rurx., poUta ajea or psu- F ri The qui.e vo U the Uzi, he frm are but fcofitaUe, The farm !aboj-ar 1U la tie aquire'a wtHfrs, Whesi Ihey fall ,irk the squire eeL2Mlr ag as uual. and wlvrm they are n.4l io work any uiwe they sre fouiluurd i the pay Ut, and puller B''ut,dMluj f tlit-y pU-eae, RESTORATION OF OIL WELLS. An Electric Heater Deelgned to Canae the Renewed Flow. The general theory concerning the exhaustion of so many oil wells is that the oil, in passing through the stone, has clogged the porous stones with par affine in such quantities that the fur ther flow is stopped and the well ceases to produce. In many cases, says the Age of Steel, the supply in the earth has not given out, but only ceases to flow when the exit is stopped. The stone through which the oil passes is of a very porous nature, and, as the liquM is in a crude state, the thick matter become as dreg-s, settling in the rock ncaT the edges of the bottom of the well. Tor pedoes have been used to shatter the stone at the bottom of the well, ihur breakingup the clogged malter.but this method is expensive. A new method consists in lowering a pecuTarly-con-structed electric heater into the well. The machine, which is eigfat feet long and resembles on iron cartridge. Is placed in the bottom of the well and th" current regulated so that the heater receives just enough to produce an enor mous heat without melting the metal. By this peculiar construction of the carbon-packed chambers the intense heat is radiated about into the rock in all directions. Thus the parafflne aw1 other refuse are softened and melter1 up so that they run, and when the well is started a fresh flow takes place, juxt as strong as it did when the well was just sunk. Blessing the Fish. Thousands of spectators witnessed the unique spectacle of the annual bless ing of the fisheries, which took place at Folkestone, England, recently. A pro cession, consisting of surpliced choirs and clergy, with cross and banners, left St. Peter's church, and after it had made a detour of the fishing quarter of the town chanting the litany a position was taken up overlooking the sea. The vicar of the parish gave an appropriate address, and prayers were offered ask ing a Divine blessing on the fisherman's calling. Florida Truck Farmers. There are indications of cooperation among the truck farmers of Florida. As a means of encouraging truck grow ing along their lines in that state the Plant system' has called a meeting to consult those who wish to cultivate vegetables, to the end that the people and the railroads may mutually benefit each .other in producing and marketing vegetable crops. The proposition is made by the Plant system that the grow ers shall meet and form themselves into an association In order that they may be effectually benefited, and it offers to furnish the best seeds that can be se cured of various crops that can be grown successfully in that section at cost, without any charges for transpor- "ation. .l.-. .,-.T.,.., MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY Two Sciences That Are Closely Belated and necessary to Each Other. Probably in none of the sciences, ap plied or pure, is a knowledge of higher mathematics so essential as astron omy. Certainly none involves so much mathematical labor. The method of the least squares is one in almost con stant use by those engaged in astro nomical calculation, and the amount of labor often entailed by this process is enough to make the head of an ordi nary citizen swim even to think of. One of the most extensive least square solutions ever made, says the Pitts burgh Dispatch, has recently been pub lished by Prof. Schur, of Goettingen. The helionietric trhingulations of the stars in the cluster Praesepe (the Bee hive) gave rise to a series of 74 normal equations, Involving 74 unknown quan tities. The solution of this set of quantities was effected by Prof. Schur in ten weeks by means of the usual Gaussian method of elimination. Prof. Schur comes to the conclusion that no other method by successive approxi mations is to be compared to tbe Gaussian method, even though it might seem to promise a saving of labor in advance. Prof. Schur mentions as the longest least square solution he has been able to find in astronomical liter ature a geodetic adjustment made by Baeyer, in which a set of normal equa tions with 68 unknowns was success fully solved by the famous computer, Dase, In three months. Ralnllalanvonjr-e Wealth. Rainilairhony, the late Malugassyex prime minister, had feathered his nest well. He left 50,000 head of cattle, 2,000 slaves, 20,000 ounces of gold dust, $!. 000,000 In the Bank of England, $75,000 worth of goods in hl own house, a palace, and other buildings at Antana narivo, tbe land on which the French resident general is built, for which France paya $2,400 a year, three Inland farm, real estate at Tsmatave, and half the profits of a gold mine oonaession mnde to an hnglish eon peny. He is believd to have left beKdes treasures concealed at Atnbohlmauga and other farts ni .Madagascar. THE KAISER AND THE TRAMP. William Gives Vasebond ftoate Money ad flood Advtee. An ancedote of the kaiser and the tramp has just appeared in Berlin pa pen, says the Pall Mall Gazette. Kaiser William was. It seems, lately staying at tne jagdaciiioas Hnbertstock, near the Angennunde, and wss one day snooting in teat nriguhorhood. A tnnnp dem-ried him from afar, and, not Knowing it way the emperor, accosted him with the usual German request for unteratuuungor fjiianciul propping un. and also wished to be directed as to the road to Angermunde. The kaiser com pliel with both reqneaU, converged with him at length as to his personal and prnfeaaional views of life, and dis missed him with a wlah for a pleasant enu io ins aoy a journey. The pleasant end was in the police station, for one of the kaiser's servant, who seemed to be of the Scotchman's opinion that It was "an awfu" like btuineaa for pulr a asa . as ... . iouk tee juik at a niuf. imagined that the emperor had been Insulted and tele graphed for and wide for the arrest of the pilgrim, with accompaniment of tHimla, fetters, handcuffs, and so on. The wanderer was run to earth at An gerrauiide, when he learned several thinr that Le did not know before inter:!, thai he fcd been spoakiof "its the kaiser lad-wit railty of high treaaoa. anarchism, tad the &e. 'er4. lee t4 eer, he tti speedUy released by an Impeiuoue telegram from the em poror, who ordered that he should be ted. comforted end have a free ticket to fuihareo, "where be told me he wanted to ro," Cummings & Fall, PROPRIETORS Ot the Old Reliable Gault House, CHICAGO. ILL.. Half block west of the Union Depot of C. B. & Q., c. M. & at. P., c. 4 A , r. rt. w. s t;., and the C. St. L4P. Railroads. RATES t9.oo PKH DAY Cor. W. Madison and Clinton Sts., CSIIC.A.GI-. ZXjXu WOOD WANTED. NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THET THE 6chool board of District No. 1, Heppner, Or., will receive bids for the delivery of sixty (60) cords of wood at the school premi-es at Heppner, same to be opened on Juiy 3, 1S97, wood to be delivered on or before Sept. 1, 1897. The board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD. Attest: J. j ROBERTS, Clerk, Dated, Heppner, Or., June 14, 1897. 553-58 Notice Of Intention. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, May 20th 1897. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE followine-naraed settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before uounty Clerk, Morrow uounty, uregon, at Heppner, Oregon, on July 3rd 1897, viz: ANNIE WILLIAMS, formerly ANNIE CRUMP, T. ' No. 2256 for the NU NEK Ntf NWJ4 Sec, 22 TD. 1 8 R 27 E W M. He names the following witnesses to prove nis continuous residence upon ana cultivation of. said land, viz: Robert F Hvnd. William B. Barratt, John Williams and Elmer Gentry, all of Heppner, Oregon, B. F. W1L80N, 847-53 Register. SHERIFF'S SALE. VTOTICK 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT UNDER Al and by virtue of an attachment execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Multnomah and to me directed and delivered upon a judgment rendered and entered in said court on the 14th day of June 1897, in favor of John Borwick, f laintlfl, and against A. Taylo and Christy lakes, defendants, for the sum of One Hundred and Fifteen Dollars with interest thereon from the 14th day of June, 1897, at the rate of 8 per cent per annum, and the further sum of Twenty-Five Dollars with Interest thereon from the 14th day of June, 1897, at the rate ofS per cent per annum, and the further sum of Ninety Three and 45-100 Dollars, costs and disburse ments in which judgment it was further or dered by the court that the property attached in said action on the 23rd day of Januarv, 1896, and hereinafter described, to-wit: The North East Quarter of section Thirty-One (81) Town ship Two (2) South Range Twenty-Six (26) East of the Willamette Meridian in Morrow County, regon, be sold to satisfy ssid judgment, costs and accruing costs I will on Wednesday, th 21st day of July, 1807, at 2 o'clock p m of said day, at the front door of the court house in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, sell all the right, title and interest of the said A. Taylor and Christy Oakes in and to the above described property at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash in hand, the proceeds to be applied to the satisfaction ot said execution and all costs, ad costs that may accrue. E. L. MATLOCK, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. Dated June 17th, 1897. 54-63 For Bale or Trade. If yon want Heppner property don't fail to consult J. W. Morrow. For tbe riabt person, one wno wants to garden milk a few oows, raise chickens, eta, I have a fine proposition to offer one. Once developed will produce revenue of $1200 yearly. Will be sold on easy terms, would not object to takinir 160 acres as part payment. 623tf Jot SffiffiKeTi mm 'Si waj ICoU Lead ELY'S CREAM BALM Is a positive rare. Apply into the nostrils. It Is quickly absorbed. 60 cents at Drneglsts or br mill : samples 10c by mall. KLY BKOTUKKS, AS Warren BL. New York tit. THIS m York fee With tba close of tbe Presidential campaign THE TRIBUNE recognize, the fact that the American people are now enxioni to give their time to home and business btereat. To meet this condition, politic, will have far les. gpace and prominence, until another Btate or Agonal occasion demands a renewal of the fight for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its Option to the present day, and won its greatest victories. Every possible effort will be put forth, and money freelt scent to make THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE pre-eminent a ' National Family Newspaper, interesting, instrnctive, entertaining and indispensable to each member We lurnlsh "Ttie Gazette" and y. Weekly TrlDone" one year lor $3.00. OANII IP Afldreas all Orders to M Ik, c. U ., Ttajj . u, U.B frlca la irplu( vttk Ik iAbm. TUQM PSON & HINNR, QUEER SETTLEMENT. Hornets and Birds Become Friends and the Former Guard the tatter's Nests. On the broad, brown salt meadows that skirt the Housatonic river, just above its mouth, is a vast colony of marsh wrens, relates the St. Paul Di8 patch. In the acres of tangled tules and cat-tails the nests, which are as large as one's head, are so compactly constructed and so thoroughly thatched as to be entirely weather-tight. As a rule the thrifty little chattering wrens prefer not to occupy a last year's nest, so there are every season hun dreds of empty ones. They are not al lowed to remain vacant long, for there are too many creatures seeking just such snug quarters. One specimen of field or meadow mice take possession of a great many of them. Big spiders, too, love to nest in the abandoned basket-like abodes and live for many sea sons in them. The most desirable ten ants of all are the big black and white hornets. By far the greater number of the old nests are inhabited by tbese fiery fellows, and, odd to relate, they are the best of friends with the land lords. As if by agreement with the wrens, they keep a perpetual guard over the new nests, as well as those where they live. Let a dog, an unconscious rail or snipe-shooter, a bird-egging boy or any creature whatever approach the nests without warning, a cohort of winged warriors will fall on the intruder, ana flight is the only safe course. The wrens seem full conscious of the value of such sentinels, for they take care to build their nests always very near to the old. The birds are themselves entirely defenseless, and, their nests being easily located on account of size and the noise made by the wrens, they have been in some localities entirely wiped out by egg Collectors. The boys have learned to give this colony a wide berth. OF POLITICAL IMPORTANCE. Rapid Increase of Population In Germany Meed of an Outlet. The rapid increase of population in Germany, due, it is believed, to the in crease of manufactures, is becoming of political importance, says the Specta tor. According to the corrected return of the census, taken on December Z, 1895, the empire now contains 52,244, 503 inhabitants, while France contains only 39,000,000. The Germans, more over, add at least 5,000,000 to their number every ten years, while the French may be said not to increase a t all. As both countries train every available man, the German army must always be greater than the French, and in another generation will be greater by more than a third. Again, it is doubtful whether Germany, which is naturally a far poorer country than France, can long sustain it3 population, which must, therefore, either emigrate in increasing numbers or burst out in some direction into lands less over full. It is believed to be a clenr per ception o( these facts which makes seme ruling men in Germany so eager for a dependency into which Germans might swarm. They would not swarm even if they got one. The idea of the German emigrant is to escspe official dom, not to replace himself under it in a country beyond the seas. King Humbert and Bis Soldiers. King Humbert, in the name of him-' self, of Queen Margherita, and of the princes of the royal family of Italy, has given to the government for the fam ilies of the dead and wounded soldiers In Africa the sum of 4,000,000 francs. This sum is to be" distributed without distinction between the Italian and the native soldiers, who fought Bide by side against the Abyssinians. King Hum bert has also expressed his Intention of furnishing, if necessary, another sum of 1,000,000 francs, in his name and that of the queen, to be divided among the wounded. , sly Tribune FOR Farmers and Viliaoers, FOIl Fatners and Mothers, FOIl Sons and Daughters, FOll All tne Family. ADVANCIt. THE GAZETTE. Do You Want a Rig ? Don't You Want a Place to Put up Your Team" ? Are You in Need of a Saddle Horse?