Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About The Port Orford tribune. (Port Orford, Or.) 1892-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1919)
0 O lV r w h ic h , w hen ia v e stia a tr ! inevitably lead to tt » tject" « f the Smith Premier- - O H F O R D . «H Œ U O N J U L Y A single motion is quicker to makt than tWQ. -■< . ■ Only one motion is needed to make any character desired on the com píete, ¿traight-line, key-for-every acter keyboard of the * Risk* md luftCarruga ReUws — -1 Ruck V ^ ir r e J lto w c S r iR ib u « Cew W w Cirri««« R jh to e C ostroll. . b o « t i ^ b e s t U N IN H A BITED ISLANDS. VanaMs sod l u « « l Lisa Spsew DoS Cuaui Back Spa« Lww P a rte d C s ra s re Rstw dsv ImyraTart Mw^MlAMga Escapement, Speediest ever devised C o m p le t e , S tr a ig h t L in e Keyboard and Key for Every Character. ' 3 ‘X S l l T « Aew T S „ « x » 4 i O» T h e m 1 « t h e tu d la a O e m « . a Model 10 if yon should w ant sa'IahtetM -ttot is, , an uoluiiablted Island - f o r the iaui">ae ot occupying it stono , Roblnsoa Crusca like, or to use It tor romantic action or for any other purpose, to thè exclusion s f a ll others In the world, you need bare no trouble In finding one If you see fit to make a journey to the ladina ocean. In the waters between Madagascar and India you can find more than 18,000 o f H ie«, where there la not a human be ing and where you can. I f you w i l l to i aiouareh o f a il you survey. A n English traveler has recently bees among t>? small Islands th a t dot tbs western end o f the In d ia » ocean to make an inventory of them and re ports that be counted 18,100 and found suly about 000 of them Inhabited. Now. there Is a good ebanea for any one who may w ant an Island. There partleular Islands are not Inrga, is Islands go, bnt very many of them are sufficient for the purpose o f a Rob inson Crusoe or any other novel hero or fo r eves a small colony o f ship wrecked mariners or other persons who might be cast on one of them or seek for the purpose of making a home pret ty much out o f the busy world. gome of them are only an acre or two. well elevated above the tide, while ethers are a quarter o f a mite In diam eter and running from th a t up to a mils ar tw o ia length and a quarter or less of the length la breadth. Many of them are grnnltlc structures that rise •tre p iy from 23 to 100 feet, well cover ed w ith rich sell, through which small fre^h w ater streams hurry to the Dea. a h i« -b they reach a fte r flowing over heaciiea o f gliateaiag twlcareous sand that are begirt by c o n i reefs, which (orui walls about tto Islands. A T h e Smith Premier Typewriter C o , Syracuse, N. Y . Wsoskss « « y w k s w lac. cr.haslthy c ondì tion ■-< the kid- oe; s; -»( » fa its your linen it Is evidence of kid ney trcul-'s; tes frequent desirata pass It or pets ia the heck is also ¿on..i«j:r.g proo. that the kidneys sad blad- ierere nytof oroer. and Look in the g b s s — you will see the effect— Y o h can’t help puckering— it makes you pucker AVOID ALVM Say plainly- For R oyal is made from pure, refined Grape Cream o f Tartar—Costs more than Alum bat you have the profit o f quality, the profit of good health. D O X T O.K' i t ) vonetanption can V« cured. N atu ra akme wen*! do ft, it needa help. ro!,<’- • t tbe ,op N othing h at ever equalled it. N othing c a a ever surpass it. Dr King's Haw Disco*«» a«s<r rti» « M a QÄj N early 5 0 .Vcaret th è w o m s a w h o tu r a I » m o n th fcr esrrser fcw»- loos, lor p sttem s, tor veoaornicsi h s v io ^ for o n e r r.eedteworfc, for a n « etarisn—las pisnours, tor help, for M r«. t k C A L L P attnrna f t ktcCAu.'S nvhry Scarcely to o much ca a the apple be ex to lled sjoce it h as b e e c a l m oat en tirely the creation ®t man. S ta rtin g w ith the crab ap, p ie « , Europe, man baa produced a fruit that ha* no comparison w ith it s original. N atu re conhl only furniah th e germ inal and is n et given to m aking Imjwovr nienta, saya the St! Ixiaia Globe D em ocrat. W hen Ru,M«rtatendent Htimann o f th e pom ology depart m ent o f th e w orld’s fair nays “There ia no doubt th a t ap ples are a cure for the drink habit, th e to bflero habit, th e ‘Indian’ habit ami m any other« th a t m ay be called objectionable,” w» appreciate deeply w hat th e apple haa done for man and ntlll more deeply w hat mau haa done for the apple. Prof. Htimaon adds: “A p p le se le v ate the m o r tis of persons who ea t them and if the U nited S ta tes were a grea t apple-eating coun try w e w ould have le s s crime and few er'w oea. W hen yon w ant to sm oke ea t an apple and you w ill find th e desire in a m easure satia- Aed. IX» th e sam e if you want a drink.” It w ill be seen th a t the apple is the enem y o f th e saloon and of the vice o f sm oking. The moral effect o f apples has been too much neglected. W e have tried to re form en tirely w ith tlie go»|iel and moarl su a sio n . Had we gone Into the h au n ts and hotbeds of vice and erim e w ith an apple In one hand and the B ible in the other we n ig h t have had b etter success. M r.Sthnson sa y s th a t ap ples nre good for tl»e “ Indian” habit. This is som ething th a t tuts never been tried in all th e e ilo r ts to reform Bt. Loots p olitics. The “Indians” have not had apples enough. Bar’ls have been opened in plenty, bnt not apple bar’ia. C layton con ven tions w ould be im|>os«ible on a diet o f apples. H erea fter the sturdy fa n n er should go to bis convention w ith a doxen apples in one pocket— and a w ell-oiled .44 In the other. ,rhlch 1,Ted ° * IU 'ahouli have tto lamented Professor Nettleship, Now. SOc. a u d it, sir«. I the bitter had a large yellow dog that pla hot tie et this i look the usual cr.nlne delight In seeing f ¿ C l. , rate s a i l o r and Bee. and. Ito better ta pounce on them when tney were steollhlly crnaaliig th * Mrect. he would I perch himself on the tonf of the pro- 1 « * * ■ • cunlen wall. snri-oi:nd.-d and h alf hidden In the foliage. As (to trw ant maidservant passed beneath him he ratight sight of a Cat In the middle of the rood itDd. making a spring at It, collided w ith her and kuoclted tor M A O A Z IN B down. She picked herself up and ran scnn nt lug borne, olmoet mad w ith ter F a t /¡ ¡ o n ror. because, os she sntil. the devil had JuMoW /r/ xfiSé- Jumped on to r back and tbrow s to r down.—International Monthly MÇCAI-ES J IO 1O fa r you w ill find tt a I moat Impossible ta extract t to oceupant alive otherwise and y o u w i ll see w bat you may be par- : doned for supposing a m iniature lob- • t e r . b u t which In r e n ilt y b elo ngs to an I other distinct aperies—namely, the her m it crab, l ’agtirus bernhardus. Wheth- | ar he has obtained occupancy by force of arms or merely through decease of The reeaat affttaUoa of the bond- ■ the original tenant ta a moot point, bnt ‘ the first supposition la highly probable, tears da era, o r private distillers, of as be la a most belligerent little cus France, against the proposals of M. Houvler, ths m inister of •nance, to tomer. An amusing scene may to witnessed tax th e ir franchise bae disclosed the by placing several herm it crabs depriv immense power of thia vested intereet ed or th eir shells In an ordinary soap among the peasantry. I t is estimmed i pinto, w ith a little sea w ater and soma that no few er than 1.000,000 to 1300 000 empty sheila—few er shells than crabs. famines avail themselves o f the privi The flgbting and struggling to secure lege to distill from the pears, apples, I houses Is ludicrous In the extrema. Ona damsons and cherries o f th e ir orchards I may to seen almost successful In moor spirituous liquors fo r household eon- ing himself w ithin a shell, which, by sumption, ssys a Ixindon paper, iiul the way. Is effected by means of the i as every hectoliter of noncxempt liipuii I shelly plates at the extrem ity of hia ' — w orth, perhaps, soutr S10—is taxed soft and tw isted' tall, when another j io the tune of XM. there ie every induce seises him by the nape of -the neck, as ment to the enteri>rieiiig peasant to It were. and be Is dragged reluctantly I d is till more than his household ran forth. The evleter still holds him strug- ■ consume, in order to do an ilbeit busi gllng at claws' length, nnd not until to ( ness w ith his neighbor, and in this wuy I himself is safely ensconced does be r e - , some «30 000.000 to »40.000.000 per an lluqulsh bis grasp.- Chambers’ jou rn al. nnra escapes the treasury. In the or- rhard laud of Norm andy the privstrly distilled liquor is. indeed, quite a te e - | T h e B e lie f l a * D e v :t. ogaized medium of exriwnge. and the A ’ miV'laervant belonging to one of 1 the women's colleges had toen out bouilleur de eru often pays his work men. his ta ilo r his butcher, and his u-tth her lover w i.hout leave from tor nlta, reM nIKj wag returning late along land in term ao f alcohol. « th a t unpleassat died to go often k up rrsr.y ibref ! caa ine « Irs . np-Root lx soon ai « e l t o r c m ? W to think o f tasting i t -*■ Ry the ute of so called cheap Baking Po-vders you take this puckering, injurious Alum right into your system— you injure digestion, and ruin your stomach. IO , Ton most have courage, my boy. Na matter whnt band «if circumstances a r W y tbemselvcs against you. if you» purpose 1» right yon wtrt succeed. L ife lu a beautiful th in g The chance to light ia a great blessing. No matte* how hard the siiui tlon may seem, keep en doing right, lira re ly fare the future. Set your stsodard hlkh. work and w all, be patient and thaukfob and yon w ill win. You may never to rich as ths world goes— not rich In money nr rich lu power—but yon may to rich la tto knowledge o f tlie tritlh th a t you tovs wade the best o f your chance to to a man Don't set your standard by tto men who hare uehlevrd great vraalth. That ia nothing compared to the rictos that belong to him who has struggled to enlarge and ennoble the circle of Ufa In which to In cant ■thsulm ariar WORKSHOP ROTES- Z V u n ilx r K I« d y —Some) Whst mes, p rs jT Man—Single mee.— Plek-M e-l’ n. Q RLAT PHENOM ENON. D a ll y J o m r j • » » t o S un I-u»xl<-<l Iterl— ta P iir n j K rro n e o u A T h e o rirts . Strange ns It may seem In this «lay and age, the rising and setting of tto gun was the greatest of natural p to nomena to the ancient scholars. They were greatly puzxled to know how the aame sua which plunged into the ocean at a fabulous distance in the west could reappear th«- newt m o w in g a t an equal ly great distance in the cant. And, as S ir Robert Hall points w it, a number ot remarkable theories were ndvanced, and every one ot them wrong. "The old mythology asserted that after the sun had dipped in the western ovens nt sunset (th e Iberians and other an cient nations actually Imagined that they eould hear the hissing of the waters w hen the*glow ing globe was plunged therein) he was selred by V u l can aud placed in a golden goblet T hii strange craft w ith Its astonishing car go na»¡gated the ocean by a northerly course, so os to resell the cast again ia tim e for saurlae the follow ing morn ing. Among the more enter pbj sictets ot old, as we are told by Aristotle, it was believed that In sonu manner tlo- sua was conveyr-d by night.neross the northern regioua, and t h a t d a r k n e » * was due to Infly mountains, which T rw n ril off the sunbeams during he voyage." Another theory was that the mi actually pursued M i course Iwlow Ito solid north during the darkness of light, aud philosophers taught the -ante about the stars that roue and set. These are'but samples of many a theory th a t m ig h t ba named w ith regard ta t to phenomenon of sunrise and sunaat. A ll children who preueat t hcmselvesal Hie te a t for study are received, i t ia not ever required th a t th e ir parent« bring th e n oraend them, suya Popular Science M onthly. The newoomrr chooses h!s proie$u0r, nnd. If aew ptrd, t i—'n s s t once to study under his direc tion, installs himself in liip coll o r In the school l ull, and I. ccouk h his servant. I f the professor has a I rend y too manv pupils, he. refuses tile now p it pll and adviaea him t-> cluxme nootto" ttaeher; sou itiim t- n u ales his choice, iKrccting I d i n to a ter who has few o r no^ pupils, or In him In tto su perior »» ho t t ill select u teacher for him. The choice of a professor is always a grate affair, because It is to ld I a t a n . Iiodin, ns in all Euddhiat luid llrnlimp I io couuiries, thut piotessm mid pupil nre bound by strong ties of spiritual a f finity, and th a t the pujiil ought tv re spect his master us to dues bis father utnl mother. The law ifilbets tto same penalty upon an offense of the pnpll against his master as an offense by s sou agaimd his fath er and mother and it pr< scribes th a t in eertn'ti eases tto pupil mu.v W t o i i o f bispiofcunorv to n lie has cured for him or su ,,01-ted Inm or serveil.hini tt lirn ntnd.vii« under his direction; not only » fam ily bom' hut a religtons bond. *IS>, is intahHslie.l b e tween them, lor the j in fiw n r mnki s his iMWlagns t j lesei: his pu,..l li.e com 1 ■ by which lie may corn newe pdvantn- geoav reincarnation anil n ueh tto S.:r« vnnn, and tocoanrs bis spirituat guide. The world's proflstetion o f lead H E R C '3 A C O O L H O U S E . amounted in 18M to 777.000 tons. Paper teeth are alleged to to supe A O e r m a n I n v e n t o r < o u e eive s 1 Sv h e m « t s K s s p Y o u D o iu fo e tu n ie iu S u usm nr. rio r to any other substance yet em T t o hoiiae of the wiitx-t tubes is the ployed. Ordinary bicycles ean be changed remarktililc. bulldiag freak of a (ievmut into tandems by an Illinois man's In Inventor, wbc claims that he bus nolvc the problem of a constant tcA peratup vention. During 189« Brockton (Mans.) th a t may lie regulated a t w ill, and inc shipped 529,277 cases o f shoes, a gain itentplly secured n structure that co- him t t t o elements ot stteugth. comf of 37.203 eases over 1898. The experiments made In England mid beauty-. He first put up a skeleton of for the production of a smokeless coal have met with entire satisfaction. The house, tto fram e for walls and fioi composition of the new product is 93 being o f w ater tubing. cont r cled »• per cent. pH coal duet and sevsa per a |lam ping nnd to ile r system in I I - cent, a m ixture of Stockholm ta r and tosrm cnt. Aranml this skcl -ton. sc. the New Y o rk Journal, to put up lii- caustic lime. - Not long ago, at Cramps' shipyard, ionse In the ordinary way. The tuber there was an enormous pile of soft uvre w ith in tto wnlls nnd ls-twn n t I Torn nnd ceilings. In tto s t im r t e - coal, and a crowd of enltured looking ime thia tubing is connerterl « 'Ik tto men were going over if and selecting vjfulnr w ater snpply. and n stenth certain lamps. T to eoal selected was -trenm flows thsough the pines in ti- for use in the tria l trip ol a new msn- 1 alls and under »to floors, etrenlaftr 1 of-Vrar. Wise and talented men were inter i rcssitrc. absorb'ng the hint < ebooting the coal, because success de he walls nnd floors an It flows. Du pended largely on the quality of tto ng tto- long end seven- w loter the tuh» fuel. ,- r —' ng Is connected w ith the to lle r, and Paper may to rendered fireproof for nter tonteil to 100 degrees forced making flashlight reflectors or for other brough the etrealt of pljies. The wa- purposes by moistening with the fol •vr nt »to nnttet Is found to to ie dr- l o w i n g solution: Ammonium sulphate. •Iliscd to 40 d e g r e es, the r e m a i n i n g Of ' • parts: boric arid. 3 parts; tiorax. I 'igrecs hsring lawn diafrihnteri, parts: water. I N parts: sodium tang- 'ironghout the house. The s-eed of ntate eao alto be used, and s soldtfon be circulation o f w ater can to rcfru- of common alum is o tte r -Clesetous. n»nl so as to nltnw thvfixin g and main., bnt it tends to loosen sad disintegrate icaaaee o f a certain tem perst*»» the paPe r- 'hrowghoot tto bu'ldhag.