Image provided by: Siuslaw Pioneer Museum; Florence, OR
About The West. (Florence, Lane County, Or.) 1890-1921 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1897)
r HE W EST A D V E R T IS E R S YOUR HO HE PAPER SUPPORT VOI. f V ili. TRAVELERS’ GUIDE. STATE OFFICERS TRAVELERS’ GUIDE Steamer O -J L F tlO IlT E R . S T A G E Governor........................William P. Lord. Secretary of S'ate.............if. R. Kincaid. Treasurer...................... Piiilip Metchen Supt. Public Instruction.. ..G. M. Irwin. State Printer........... ......... W. II. Leeds. Attorney General. . , . . .C. M. Idleman. ........... R. S. Bean Supreme C ourt ......... F. A. Moore „ .C. E. Wolverton Judge Second District.. ..J. C. Fullerton Attorney Sbcond District.Geo. M. Brown L IN E . Constipation ----- ---- S A I L S --------- - H. H. Barrett, Prop’r, 1 On the 1st, 10th and 20th o f each month. Leaves Florence Mondays, Wednes Single trip 83.00. Round trip $5.00 days and Fridays. Arrives at Florence Tuesdays, Thurs days and Saturdays. Connects witli Steamer and Scotts burg Stage Line for Drain. Also with Stage Line for Coos Bay. Charge For Passenger and Freight Rates reasonable. Florence to Yaquina. ------ apply to ------- Meyer & Kyle, COUNTY OFFICERS- Florence, Or. .E. 0. Potter. Judge........ S TE A M P r o p rie to r . ER " C O O S ," o —— W ill make’’— Stage leaves Eugene Mondays, R E G U L A R j ;;;;;;; T. Bailey W ednesdays and Fridays at G a. Commissioners Callison nt., arriving in Florence the day Clerk. .............................. A. C. Jennings following at 10 a. in. Sheriff . . . . . . ...................... A. J.Johnson ■ Returning—stage leaves F lor D A IL Y T R IP S — B e tw e e n ----- Florence an! Heal of Tide. Treasurer...................... A. S. P atterso n Assessor. ....................... - D . P. Burton ence on Mondays, W ednesdays School Superintendent......... C. S. Hunt and Fridays at 3 p. m., arriving Surveyor.;......................... C. M. Collier in Eugene the follow ing day C oroner...,........................ J. W. Harris at G p. in. 'Justice of Peace.................F. B. Wilson Constable».^.................. John F. Tanner Single fare _ _ _ - $5.00 Round trip _ _ _ _ $9.00 ■■ - — ....... .............. ORTHERN Pacific, Ry. * Tickets for sale at E. Bangs’s livery barn, Eugene, and at Hurd & Davenport’s office in Florence. rY OFFICERS. 0 . .F. B. W ilson President... O. W. Hurd Win. Kyle Marion Morris S le e p in g C a r s C. C. Behnke .......J. C. FLINT, Proprietor........... E le g a n t F lo r e n c e , O r e g o n . .Drew Severy ...J . A. Pond D in in g C a r s J. R. Weddle OUR AIM — To furnish the best T o u r is t MORRIS *** HOTEL, Board of Trustees Reconfer............... Treasurer.'........... Marshal................. accommodations prices. SECRET SOCIETIES. at S le e p in g reasonable, C a rs ST . PAUL M IN N E A P O L IS DULUTH Head of Tide Hotel, F. A A. M. Florence Lodge No. 107. • Regular communication on second and fourth Saturdays in each month. A FARG O TO W . W. NEELY, Prop’r. GRAND S. L. K obkuds , W. M. Tables furnished w ith all the delicacies o f the season. W ild game, fish and fruit in season. Best A. R. G eneral Lyons Post, No. 58, accomodations for the traveling ■ meets second ami fourth Saturdays public. Charges reasonable. of each month. CRO OKSTON I. G. K kotts , Secretary. C Bb'TTKnriKi.i), C om m ander. J . I.. F u u x isii, A d ju tan t. H O TE L E U G EN E. FORKS W IN N IP E G He was brevetted second lieutenant of the Fourth infantry affh ordered to re port to his command at Jefferson bar racks, St. Louis, after a short vacation. The entire army of the United States at that time numbered less than S, 000 gestion, bad taste, coated n ■ ■ men, and the supply of officers was em tongue, sick headache, In- -In barrassingly large. It w as the custom, soinuia. etc. Hood's Pills IR Q therefore, to brevet graduates second cure constipation and all its ™ results, easily and thoroughly. 25c. All druggists. lieutenant. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. He graduated twenty-first in a roll of The oui y Pills to take w ith H ood's Sarsaparilla. 89, with a fair record in all things— a good record in mathematics and engin eering and a remarkable record as horse man. Moro than 100 had entered with him, but one by one they hod dropped ont till only 39 remained. VINCENT WALTON, Apparently Grant remained markedly V . H E M IN W A Y .) ( successors nnmilitary throughout the four years’ course. He served as a private through out the first two years. During the third year he was made sergeant, but was dropped (promotions at that time were made for soldierly qualities and had no A Complete Line of Drug exact relation to excellence in studies), and during the fourth year he served Sundries and Toilet Articles. again as private. The first year he took up French and .......#*»......... mathematics, and though the course Corner 9th & W illam ette Sts. wus severe, including algebra, geometry, trigonometry, application of nlgebra to Eugene, : : : Ore. geometry, etc., he stood fifteenth in a class of 60 in mathematices and forty- ninth in French and twenty-seventh in TE R M S S T R IC T L Y CASH. order of general merit. The second year he climbed three points in general merit and stood twenty-fourth in a class of 63. Ho stood tenth in mathematics, twenty-third in drawing, but was be low the middle in ethics and French. In his third year he rose in his di awing to 19, and was twenty-second in chem istry and fifteenth in philosophy, which was a very good standing indeed. Ho OF THE rose to 20 bi general merit, 16 in en gineering, 17 in mineralogy and geology, but was a little below the averago in ethics, artillery and infantry practice. In general, it may be said that ho left the academy with a good average record as a student and a very high record os a man.—Hamlin Garland in McClure ’a Hood’s CHRONICLE TUB CHRONICLE ranks with U>. (ro.tete newspaper« in the United states. THE CHRONICLE has no equal on the Pacific Coast. It leads all In ability, enterprise and newn TIIK CIIRONICLK’H Telegraphic Reports are the lrAest and most reliable. Its Local News the fullest and spiciest, and Its Editorials from the ablest pens lit the country. THE CHRONICLE has always been, and always will be, the friend and champion of the people as against combinations, cliques, corporations, or oppressions of any kind. It will be Independent la erarythlng neutral In nothing. H E L E N A »‘ »'1 BUTTE' THROUGH TICKETS TO C H IC A C O W A S H IN G T O N P H IL A D E L P H IA Perpetua Lodge, No. 131, W. Oj ZEIGLER, Proprietor. 8 . meets every 1st’ami 3d Saturdays each month. Members and visiting E U G E N E , brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. I. G. K kotts , M. W. W m . K vue , Recorder. - * - OREGON NEW YORK BOSTO N A N D ALL P O I N T 8 E A S T * ’><» S O U T H Elk Prairie Hotel. Ileceta Lodge No. Ill,m eets »Wednesday evening in Lodge Bnce, Oregon. Brothers in T w e n t v - t h r e e ling invited to attend. M ile s W e s t W. H. W eathhson , N. G. ■«" M arion Mourns, Sec. For inform ation, tim e card», m ap . and tickets, etc., c all on or w iite R. M c M u r p h e y , General Agent. Rooms 2 and -1, Shelton Block, EUGENE, OREGON. A. D. C H A R L T O N , of Eugene. A ssistant General Passenger Agent. 255 Morrison St. Cor. 3d. P o r t la n d O r. RCH DIRECTORY ON E U G EN E AND T h e F u n k ]& W a g n a lls FL O R E N C E D ictionary STA G E R O U T E . Standard TERIAN CHURCH, Florence, . Sabbath service: Sabbath- o’clock a. ni. Preaching 11 , m. and 7 p. in. Sacrament of ’s supper on 1st Sabbath of April, July and October, ly is welcome to all the services, quests Christians to make known. I. G. K notts , Pastor. I"’ Of The M o n e y Saved By P a t r o n iz in g it. Tonsorial Parlors. A. C. ARTISTIC HAIR CUTTING. RAZOR HONING A SPECIALTY-JR. A ttorney a t Law, O r e g o n . fIR S T ms 7 and 8 McLaren*« B uilding, n iio n given to c o lle ctio n s and pro- . N A T IO N A L OF I PAIO •50,000 UP 0A3M CAPITAL, SURPLUS ANO PROFITS. AOOOUNTS OREGON EUGENE, NOTARIES. B E N E D IC T , BUTTOLPH, I R N E Y - A . T - L A W . Oregon. Notary Pablic. Surveyor O regon. P lo r s n o s , ÄTENTS itearoi co o .lw ted far M a tea n te Pre*. . 4 m o d .l.d r » « ln » o ip h o « a . W aatevlroft* ita b l* fm o f chars«. On r f a .n o » da a till« i t i . rowarot. A A te n te le « •'“ «>• *®,°t« SM .au," or u r n a l a tha C. • « p i oou&trlro mb » fraa. AddRaa E A. SNOW A CO. . Faresrr Or*»««. WaGMtvnTDW. O . C -A CHARLES GETTYS, NOTARY Only $ 6 . 7 0 a Year. The Weekly Chronicle PUBLIC. SEATON. OREGON FRANK B. WILSON. NOTARY PUBLIC, FLORENCE, - - - OREGON .m i /». Appendix of 4 7 ,4 6 8 E ntries $ 1 . 5 0 a Tear (lucludlng postage) to any part of the United Stales. Canada and Mexico. THE WEBKLY CKROXICLK. the brightest as follows: S tormont «, 50,000; W orchkster and most complete Weekly Newspaper In the 106,000; W erkter (International), 125,000; C en - 1 world, prints regjlarly 81 columns, or twelve TUnr, (six volum es, com plete,) 225,000; 1 pages, of Mewa, Literature and Genera* Inform»» tloa; also a magnificent Agricultural Department. STANDARD, over >00,000; SAM PLE C O P IE S YOU SENT W ANT FR£E. TH E C H R O N IC L E AG ENTS W A N T E D . • 6 0 OOO S O L iI O I T H J D d a il y Tha Greatest Weekly ia the Coailry, Cost over > 960,000 ------ > . ■ . E A K IN . : B u ild in g . B y M a ll, P o s ta g e P a id , Sample Page» F ree............ j D O EUGENE. T. Q. HIMD.IOKS. *"««. ir n e « At the Court H oiim . 533 Readers for Quotations 3000 Illustrations ßA N K l ie s « . • • • . . . . Attorncy-at-Law. . . . KUeXNK, OREGON. >47 Editors and Specialists The fu ll number of words and terms In different dictionaries for th e entire Alphabet Is S h a v in g an d C h r o n ic le ■ 301,863 Vocabulary Terms flARION HORRIS, Proprietor. WOODCOCK, E. O P O T T E R . the S U C C IE N T A U T H O R IT A T IV E )PIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH P ro p . _ 'ic e . Preaching at Glenada Geo. H a le and Acme two Sundays of each month. 8abh*tb-S<l.... 1 every Sunday at BUSINESS CARDS 10 a. m. Prayer meeting every Thurs day evening at the church. Everybody ordially invited. G. F. R ounds , Pastor. ATTORNEYS The ENGLISH LANGUAGE CO M PLETE Ë . D . B R O N S O N & CO, Pacific Cosat Agents SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 9J3 Market St. SO Y t A R S ’ S X P B R IS N O * . P atents TRABS HARKS, B C S IO M S , eoevRtcMTs Ac. Anyone waten* . ahteri, and dearrlptlon ma, nolrkl, wwrteUa, f w . »hrth -f an ln».otl-.n if proo.i.1, patanUhio. CniamunkatUiiu atrbtl, eenaariaul OMw*. w an e; fur aerurln» patent. til Amanea. W* ban ■ W a W w -te -ime.. Patente u n en tkronab Maaa A V . rooter* ***86IEirrÏFIC AMERICAN, MUNN A C O M I R ra a d n a r. R aw v a rb . A P S A L M O F L IF E . A Good K eoord a . a S tu d e n t a n d a H ig h R ec o rd a . a Otaa. CORNER DRUG STORE. STAGE LINE. E- B a n g s , O. U ,W . SWSLAW’S ONLY PAPÏS. 4 O P P O R T U N IT Y □ NO I t. GRANT AT W EST POINT. Causes fully half the sk-kuess in the world. It retains the digested food too long in the bowels and produces biliousness, torpid liver, hull- Robarts EUGENE-FLORENCE ■ ’ F L O R E N C E , O R EG O N , F R ID A Y , J u ly 30, 1897. GENERAL DIRECTORY J. I, t T ] Reversible Map? TESTING A WATCH. B o w K n g ll.h T im e p ie c e . A r e T r ie d as to T h e i r R e g u la r ity . There has been watchmaking at Cov entry aa long ns there has been a watch trade in England, which is for tho last 200 years or thereabout. There nsed to be three centers of the English trade, these being Liverpool, Coventry and London. NiAv there are practically hut two—Coventry and Birmingham. Tho test of a good watch is tlint it should obtain a Kew certificate, and of tho watches that go to Kew 76 per cent are from Coventry. A t Kew no watch has yet succeeded in getting the 100 marks which signify perfection, but Coventry hasoomo near est, with 92. and is always well to the front. The Kow test is no light one. The watch is tested in every position and its rate registered, not only per day, but per hour. It is hung by its pendant, hung upside down, hung on each side, placed dial down and back down and at any number of angles, and to finish np with is baked in an oven and frozen in an ice pail. No wonder that a watch with a Kew certificate is a comfort to its owner. When it is considered that it makes 18,000 vibrations an honr and must not vary a second a week, while a quarter turn of its two time screws, meaning the millionth of an inch, w ill mako a difference of 20 seconds a day, the deli cacy of its adjustment w ill be appreci ated, ns w ill also the risk of intrusting Its repair to any bnt skillful hands.— Jewelers' Review. F le h ln g F o r T u n a , S a n ta C la ra . The filth ranged from 4 to 0 feet in length and from 76 to 300 pounds in weight, judging from their size. Like wolves they hail rushed in from the deep sea and were moving down the coast, stampeding a school of smelts and flying fish and driving them out of the water, snapping at them and following them np into the air. Moving on, we fonud the school of unfortunates, a brownish patch of solid flsh in tho water, into which the tunas were charging. I have fished in the haunts of the tar pon and taken almost every game flsh to be found in American waters, bnt from thia exhibition of the velocity and wonderful power of the tnna I did not believe it coaid be captured with a 24 ounce rod or a tarpon outfit. We baited with large smelt and began trolling throngb the school. I sewn had a strike, and, whilo not nnused to surprises, I lost 800 feet of line and the tip of my rod so quickly that I hardly realized what had happened. My companion had his fine rod jerked from his hands, and I believe the flsh was of the largest size, which nothing coaid stop.—Sportsman's Magazine. R aake B r e a a e . A well known untliority on dreams B H O W IK 0 and dream boo Its says: "To dream you The United States, Dominion of sec snakes or serpents shows that you w ill be imprisoned and encounter many Ganada and Northern Mexioo dangers. If you are in love, your sweet O R O N E H ID E , heart w ill be false. To dream yon kill a A n d th e snake shows yon w ill overcome diffi culties and enemies and be successful in love, trade or farming, bnt unsuccessful o n T H B O T H E R S ID E . at sea.” M ap o f th e W o rld R en d S 3 a n d O e t th e M a p a n d W e e k ly ( h r o n lc la fo r O n e Y a a r , p o a i a g o p r e p a i d o n M a p a n d l * a p ., r . T k e FropM aal o f th e F n t o r .. CHARITY FAIRS. Through th e w ild babel of our fever'd tlm o A a A r g a a t e a t to Skow W h y T h e y S h o u ld The iK,us of Ilonier couieth, s ra veaad stem . U e S a p p r e s . i l . With tid in g , from tho w o r ld ', frosh, healthy • prim e— Charity has been defined os thia state T id in g , w hich our w orn, w earied age con of things: That so soon as A is in trou cern. U nchang’d, through all th e long, nnnnm hcr'd jrenro. The voice of Homer s in g , tho song divine, Which t e ll, of godlike to il., of heroes* tear* A nd o f th e punishm ent of Priam *, line. The battlo In th e plain i . raging y et; The w atch Ore. blase; the Leak'd ships line th e shore. For n . the too In grim array is .e t. Ah, but d o w e fight a . th ey fou gh t of yoret For w e, too, lik e the heroes long ago. Must w age .lo w w a r. and .a ll the b itter eea. Fierce 1. th e conflict, loud tho te m p est, blow. And th e w a v e , roar and rage unoeu.ingly. » till m u st w e w ander o'er tho Htormy main, 'T w lxt n m k . and w h irlp ool, a dread ptmsago make, S till ju u st tho .Ir o n . .In g to uh la vain, HtlS from th e to il, of C irce m u.1 we break. , Turn, th en , to H om er', psalm o f life and ik - u How th ey endured wliwa- pilgrim age 1. done A nd hear thoniceieigo they haru le ft for thee— Only by putieuoe i . tho victory won. —Haomitlun'a M agasine. INCANDESCENT LAMPS. How th e D a r n e d O a t F ila m e n t M a y Be R e p la c e d a n t R e n e w e d . It has been generally supposed to bo a fruitless task to attempt the renewal of a burnt out incandescent electric lamp, although there appears to be some eco nomic fallacy involved in the destruc tion of what is except in one small if important particular a perfect piece of apparatus. It is not intended, os a rule, to give in this column descriptions of Americun devices or achievements drawn from foreign publications. This subject hus, however, been taken up by the English jouruul, Industries and Iron, and, although it states that an American process for renewing these lamps after the filament has been bro ken has been developed, it does not give the name of inventors nor state that the process has come into anything like gen eral applieution. Its description of the operation is therefore given for what it is worth. It states that a commercial success has been mudeof a process for renewing burned out lamps which renders possible the use of the old bnlb at a very slight expense. By the new method tho collar, or b a n * nd, of tho lamp U not disturb ed, the old filament being removed and the uewouo placed through a small hole in the liunp bulb mudo by removing the tip. The siunll hole is subsequently clos ed exactly in tho same manner as in the cose of the new lamp, leaving nothing to iudicute in the finished, repaired lamp that it had ffi'cr been opened. It is stated that some 400,000 lamps havo been repaired by this method, tho filament being inserted through the small hole referred to by a skillful twist of the hand uud secured in position by u special carbon paste. The block deposit on the inside of the bnlb is removed by fitting the lamp to the holder and re moving it in u gas fnrnace, while im mediately following this operation a small glass tube is fused to the opening made in the bnlb, through which the lamp is exhausted. When this has been doue and the last trace of air and gas absorbed, a blowpipe flume is directed upon the throat of tho tube, which is melted into the point exactly in every respect a counterpart of the originul lump.—Providence Journal. ble B begins to consider what C ought to do for him. All charitable fairs, for instance, are based on this principle. Yon go and bny something which you probably do not wont in order that the profit made on it may go to some good cause. In case you had really wanted what you bought yon would have per haps bought it somewhere else, and the regular trade thus suffers from the loss of your custom. In case of very large fairs, like the "sanitary fails” in war time, the ordinary local trade unques tionably suffers, perhaps for a whole year, and the community is thus impov erished to a degree in one way so that it may he helped in other ways. For a great national object this can easily ho endured, although, to he sure, we never have known juat what the regular dealers thought alxrat i t But when wo consider that the same thing is doue to some extent in behalf of every local or sectarian enterprise, it is evi dent that the principle of the affair is not quite satisfactory. Suppose, for instance, that we were all to ngree for a single year to havo all our shoes and hats mudo by amateurs “for sweet charity’s sake,” and to have a single church or hospital take tho valno of them nlL Then sweet charity would make an npparent gain no doubt, but all the ordinary hatmakers and shoe makers would starve. Or, if they did not starve, they would he supported by their kindred, who perhaps are not far above the starvation point themselves, dr they would bo supported by sweet charity, »«<1 the last condition of things would bo worse than the first It is Hot really the fact that the evils of society can be greatly helped by dressing up young girls prettily and having them take money and give rather inaccurate change at a bazaar table. One dsy, per haps, when the luws of trade are better understood, wo shall look at charity fairs os wo nlrendy look at lotteries, which were once regarded as one of the highest forms of sweet charity, but which are now prohibited by law.— Harper's Bazar. U rb a n D e v e lo p m e n t I n t h e S oo th. Tho rural south, especially in tho old er portions, is, economically speaking, far from progressive, and what was once the single occupation of the southern gentleman is now the last that he would voluntarily assume. In the rich valley and on the grazing lauds of southwest Virginia in part i of Georgia and in the hlno grass region of Tennessee fanning pays fairly, owing to the greater thrift of the inhabitants and to the fertility of (he soil, hut, on the whole, tho progress of the new sonth, like that of tho rest of tho country, certainly has not taken this direction. It is through its urban de velopment only that the section has justly corned its sobriquet. New cities like Roanoke, V a, have sprung up on ground that 20 years ago was parceled into farms. Antebellum villages have become large cities, as in the caso of Atlanta and Chattanooga Old towns like Nashville and Richmond havo taken u fresh lease of life and be come rich and progressive. A new rail road has made the fortune of this place, a now textile or other industry has cuuscd (he growth of that. And all this T h e W e l l D reroed M a n . progress has been due to the abolition of There is a certain professor in a cer slavery and to the destruction of prop tain university of the United States who erty caused by the civil war. The south once, at the beginning of one of his lec erner of tho last 80 years has simply ture« on flue arts, got on the subject of had to work in order to live, and, like the kind of pins worn in the neckties of tho rest of the world, ho has preferred young college men. He was a good lec the town to tho country.—W. P. Trent turer uud was always interesting, bnt in Atlantic. this lectnre was the most interesting of his coarse to tho 800 boys who beard A M o n s te r M u s ic a l I n . t r a m e a L him, nud the whole hour was spent on The most gigantic harp ever con uecktie pins, thoir use and misuse and structed, as far as the record goes, was what they suggested. Tho gist of what that mnde by Veritan, tho provost of he said was that there was no more Burkli, near Basel, Switzerland, in reason why a hoy should wear a horse 1787. Thut was a long while ago, bnt shoe with a whip across it all in gold the fame of M. Veritan’a gigantic thau that houses should have sieves for harp was such that it is still occasional roofs, and that as it was extremely ly mentioned by writers on the rare and foolish to put a big sieve on your house the wonderful, just as tho sea serpent, for a roof so it was quite as foolish to bloody rain, live mastiulons, etc., ore. wear horseshoes on yoar neckties. The ] M. Veritun's colossal musical instru principle of this is that you should have ment was 820 fett in length, and, on a rnuson in what yon wear as well as in that ucconnt, wus constructed in on open other things and that senseless decoru- lot instead cf in a harp factory. It was tious, like horseshoes on neckties or most simple in construction, consisting neckties ou horseshoea, are silly and un of 15 wires strung tightly between two becoming to a self respecting person. poles. These wires were ot different This particular example was only one sizes, tho largest being ono-sixth of an to illustrate a principle, which is Ibat inch in diameter and the smallest onc- nothing unusual, qneer, ont of the or twelftli of an inch. They were stretched dinary, is in itself a good thing—that, north and south uud inclined in snch a in fact, most things that are qneer and manner as to form on onglo of from 20 out of the ordiuuty are likely, in the to 80 degrees with tho horizon. This question of dress, to be in bad taste. A qneer instrument was not intended as man's dress ought to be quiet, but it on exaggerated toy, lint wus constructed must be clean and well taken care of in for the express pnrposo of foretelling every instance. The best dressed man is changes in the weather, which wore the man who, in whatever company lie calculated by Professor Veritan accord finds himself, is iuoonspicaous; who, ing to the different tones tho instrument yo^reulize in an indefinite way, is well made when tho wind was blowing appointed, though yon cannot well tell through it.—8t. Louis Republic. wby.—Harper's Round Table. U a U M h e ld E c o n o m ic*. "I don't see, Elin, how yon manage with yoar house money. If I give yoa n lot, you spend a lot, hut if I don’t givo you so much you mciiu toget along with i." "Why, that's perfectly simple, Ro- dolph When you give mo a lot, I use it to pay the debts 1 get into wbeu yoa don’t give me so mach.”—Fliegende Blatter. She— Perfectly lovely club, isn’t it? W h e r e th e T r o u b le la He— Are you a member? "It isn't a bit cf tronblo to get mar ASDBRRS She— N a Only married women are ried,” said the airy young person. M . : a. «te Yonrers. eligible. Proprietor a F Chronic»., “ N o,” spake the sednto one. “ It ia BAM FMATClarXI, CAI. He—Ah, would yon allow me to— in being tnurrird that the trouble is.”— make yon eligible to ini mbeiship?— Indianupolis Journal. Ixjudnn Fun. There tire 22 allnsions in the Bible to There is nothing purer than honesty, Ilio east wind, 19 of Ihein being of a ANTED—FAITHFUL MKX w nothing sweeter than charity, nothing lisparugiug character. warmer than love, nothing richer than sponsible established honse in Oregon. wisdom, nothing brighter than virtue The largest American fly is a little Salary |78O anil expennrs. Puaition and nothing more steadfast than faith. •ver half on inch in length. permanent. Reference. Enclose self- The oat plant is in Italy regarded -ts addreaeed si sniped envelope. The ' A bushel of plasterers' hair, when emblematic of ninsie. Kstiosal, Star Insurance Bldg., Chk-sgo. wtl) dried, equals 16 pounds. A Ilo y a l R id e r . queen Henriette of Belgium, by birth an Austrian archduchess, continues, in spito of her know whito hair and rank as n grandmother, to occupy her timo with circus riding. A your agosho gave in the riding school cf tho royal palace at Brussels a aemipnblic performance, in which sho and her daughter Clemen tine put (heir horses through all kinds . of fancy paces and trick riding with tho : skill of profesaionala They leaped their ' horses through burning hoops uud over flamiug hedges, and her majesty jump ed a pet horse over a dinner tatlo cov ered with flowers and lighted candela bra. Then she (lrovo a team of 30-in- han<l herself, mounted ou her favorite mare. B y S pecial P e r m it. “ HereI Wbut does this mean?” shout ed Wbooply as bo foaud bis yoaugest ridiug a broomstick over (be top of ths plana “This is all right. Mammasaid if I'd stay in I could play ou the plana— De troit Free Press.