Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, October 24, 1893, Image 1

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    wmm GAZETTE
OFFICIAL s1 PA TEH
HEPPNEH GAZETTE.
NOTHING FilSKtUD,
NOTHING MADE.
Themau who adve.-tlses, gets the cush
Notice It.
1
XO RISK,
NOTRADE.
The manho doesn't advertise. doesn t
get the cash.
i
I 3
Dime
i
If
W ' gfttfette.
u
4
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i
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4
ELEVENTH YEAR
MiM I WEEKLY GAZETTE.
I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1893.
PUBLISHED
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY,
VALUABLE
WEEKLY WO. 6,55. J
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 173.
Al.VAII W.PATTERSON Bob. Manager.
OT18 PATTERSON Editor
A' 2.5:1 per year, $1.25 for six months 75 cts.
(or three muiicns.
Aduertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The "EAaLB," ot Long Creek, Orant
County, Oregon, is published by the same coin
pnuy every Friday morning. Subscription
price, I'Jper year. For advertising rates, addreBS
OTIXltf Xj. X'.&.TrElxasoiT, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette,"
Heppuer, Oregon.
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS
Tm8 PAPElt is kept on tile at B. 0. Dake'e
JL Advertising Agency, HI and 65 Merchants
Enchangs, Han fcraucisco, California, where con.
raots for advertising can be made for it.
THE GAZETTE'S AG iNTS.
vyi.gner,
Airlingtou,. . .
Lnnj; Creek,,
Echo
Caimis l'raiiie,.
..B. A. nunsaker
. . . Phill Heppuer
The Eagle
Postinuster
. .Oscar De Vaul
Nye, Or., H. C. Wright
Hariliuau. Or I'nslniaster
Hamilton, Grant Co., Or.,... Postmaster
lone, , T. J.Carl
1'rairie City, Or K. K. McHaley
Canyon City, Or H. L. Parrish
Pilot Kock, G. P. Bkeltou
UiivviUe, Or J. E. Snow
John Day, Or., F. I. MeCalluin
Athena, Or John Edington
I'enilleton, Or Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or Postmaster
Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Flett
Fox, Grant Co., Or J. F. Allen
Eight Wile, Or.,. Mrs. Andrew Alhbaugh
fpper Rhea Creek B. F. Hevland
Douglas, Or Postmaster
Lone Kock, Or K. M. Johnson
Gooseberry J. It. E?teb
Condon, Oregon Herbert Halntead
Lexington Jas. Leach
AN AGKNT WANTED IN EVERY PHEC1NCT.
iiy a special arrangement with the
publishers we are prepared to furnish
FEEE to each of our readers a year's
subscription to the popular monthly
agricultural journal, the Amebic an
Fakmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
This offer is made to any of our sub
scribers who will pay up all arrearages
on subscription and one year in advance,
and to any new subscribers who will pay
one year in advance. The American
Farmer enjoys a large national circula
tion, and ranks among the leading
agricultural papers. By this arrange'
meut it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re.
oeive tue amkrioan farmer lor one
year, It will be to your advantage to
oail promptly. Sample copies can be
seen at our office.
BILIOUSNESS
Who has not suffered this misery
caused by bile in the stomach
which an inactive or sluggish
liver failed to carry off.
THE PREVENTION AND CURE IS
The OrlKlnal
.Umon Pacfic Railway-Local card.
daily
INo, 1U, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m.
10, " ar. at Arlington 1 '15 a.m.
, " leaves " iiU p. in.
"' i), " ar. at Heppner 6:20 p. m.
wxcept Munday.
JCast bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :26 a. m.
West " ' "leaves , " 1:2b a. in.
Day trains have been discontinued.
raster's Unabridged
IllCTIDNRRY .
United States Officials.
t'lHmdent
VictvPreHKient
Seivtt'ary of Btate
HiHiiemry of TreaMury....
Hcrnlary of Interior. ..
5eoretr'y of NaVy. .
Grover Cleveland
Ad ai Stevenson
. , . . Walter Q. Greeham
Jotiu ti. Dariislo
Hoke tiuiuh
. r..HUJ - tnionr
Sr .VVrdVolne
Attorney-Ueneml. Morton
Swreutry ol Agriculture
State of Oregon.
Governor. ... .
Secretary of Stale
Treasurer..
BupU Publio lnstrnction..
S. Pennoyer
..G. W. JloBride
', Phil. Metachan
.IS. rJ. mcniroy
. H. Miumeii
Senators..
Congressmen
Printer
Bupreme Judges..
( .1. H. 1
1J. N.Dolph
1 Binger Hermann
w. a. uiu
Frank O. Baker
F. A. Moure
P. Lord
8. Bean
l F.
.1 W.
li.E
Seventh Judicial District.
j W. L. Bradahaw
Cncnit Judge w H wiIb n
Prosecuting Attorney
I'onntV OUicial".
uenry mauu"
,(,oii Senator...
Kepreseutative
lotinty Judge
C miimseioners,
J. M.. Baker.
I'ierk
Sheriff
Treasurer
Assessor
Surveyor
" School Sup't..
Oorouer
Henry BlacS
.I N. Kniws
'. Julius Keithly
Peter Brennei
.1. W. Morrow
Geo. Noble.
"' W. J- Ij ezer
. .R. L. haw
lsa Brown
,.W, L. Haling
"" T.W.Ayers.Jr
BY SPECIAl. aKRANUEMKNT WITH THE
publishers, e are able to obtain a number
oi tp' a Dove oooa, ana
copy to each ol our subscri
II
propose to furnish
101
es
scnooi auu ousinesB nouse. it nils a vacancy.
he dictionary is a necessity in every home,
and furnishes knowledge which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply. Youugand old, educated and Ignorant,
rich and poor, should have it within reach, and
refer to Its contenlB every day in the year.
As some have asked if this is really the Orig
inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are
able to state we have learned direct from the
publishers the iact, that this is the very work
comolete on w hich about forty of the best years
ot the author's life wore so well employed In
writing. It contains the entire vocahnlarv nf
about 100,000 words, including the correct spel)
OOOatirihAllA Gf'WOiLOl.MUUivand u
bound In CIOUl nan muioww
Until further notice we will furnish this
valuable Dictionary '
First To any new suDscriDer.
Second To any renewal subscriber.
Thirrl To anv subscriber now in arrears
who pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, viz:
Full Cloth Douna, gut siae ana uai-r
stamps, marbled edges, $i-oo.
Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back
stamps, marbled edges, $1.50.
Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled
edges, $2.00.
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
are to Heppner.
rm-As the publishers limit the time and
.ST, nf hnnin thev will furnish at the low
prices, we adviBe all who desire to avail them
selves of this great opportunity to attend to it
at once.
BEFPNEB town offioebs.
...J. K. Simons
JlairW" o' E. FarnBWorth, ti.
K"itl",
W. A. lonn.ton, J- Keager. & Roberta.
iteoorut'l y (. ulocum
rreHSuiei j iff . Kismus.
Uarslial
Precinct Officers.
u F. J. Hallock
J uslice of the Peace ( yi. Kvohard
Constable
Uultd States Land OrHcers.
THE DAIAES, OB.
Bemstet
1. W. Lewis Beoeiver
T.S.Laug " '
1A GBAMDE, OB.
., Register
B.t, Wi'son ...lteceiver
J. H Bobbins -
filLVKK'S UHiMPION
IHE
1 tocky---Mountain -:- News
THE DAILY-BY MAIL
Subscription price reduced an follows:
line. Year tbv mail) : : $6 00
Six Months " '
Three Months " 1
One Month "
liquid or powder, which gives
quick action to the liver and
carries off the bile by a mild move
ment of the bowels. It is no pur
gative or griping medicine, but
purely vegetable. Many people
take pills more take Simmons
Liver Regulator.
"I have been a victim to Biliousness for
years, and after trying various remedies
my only success was in the use of Him
mons Liver Regulator, which never failed
U relieve me. 1 speak not of myself,
alone, but my whole family. " J. M. Fill
man, Selma, Ala.
a-EVERY PACKAGE'S
Has onr Z Stamp In red on wrapper.
J. II. ZEIUN CO., Philadelphia, JPa.
QUICK TIME S
TO
San. Francisco
And all points In California, via the lit. ubaats
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
rhe great highway through California to ail
points Bast and South. Grand Hoenio Route
ofthePaoifio Coast. Pullman Buffet
Sleepers. Second-class Sleepers
Attached.to express trains, affording superior
accommodations for second-class passengers.
For rates, tickets, sleeping oar reservations.
eto., call npon or address
R. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS. Asst.
Oen. F. 4 P. Agt. Portland, Oregon.
01
r.
WM. PENLAND, ED. R BISHOP.
President. Cashier.
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
Made on r avorauie j-erunsr
PRIZES ON PATENTS.
How to Get Twenty-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing.
The Winner has a clear Gift of a Small
Fortune, and the Losers Have Patents
that may Bring them in Still More.
Would jrou like to make twenty-five hundred
dollars? If you would, read carefully what
follows and you may see a way to do it.
The Press Claims Company devotes much
attention to patents. It has haudlcd thousands
of applicatious for inventions, but it would
like to handle thousands more. There is plenty
of Inventive tallent at large In this country
needing nothing but encouragement to produce
practical results. Thatencouragementthe Press
Claim's Company propose to give.
NOT SO HAKB AH IT SEEMS.
A patent strikes most people as au appalling
ly formidable thing. The idea is that an in
ventor must be a natural genius, like Edison or
Bell; that he must devote yearB to delving In
complicated mechanical problems sad that he
must spend a fortune oa delicate experiments
before he can get a new device to a patentable
degree of perfection. This delusion the com
pany desires to dispel. It desires to get Into
the head of the public a clear comprehension
of the fact that It is not the great, complex, and
expensive inventions that bring the best returns
to their authors, but the little, simple, and
cheap ones the things that seem so absurdly
trivial that the average citizen would feel
somewhat ashamed of bringing them to the
attention of the Patent Office.
Edison says that the profits he has received
trom the patents on ail his marvelous Inven
tions ave not been sufficient to pay tne cost
of his experiments, But the man who con
ceived the idea of fastening a bit of rubber
cord to a child's ball, so that it would come
back to the hand when thrown, made a fortune
out of his scheme. The modern sewing-ma
chine is a miracle of ingenuity the product
a hundred and fifty years, but the whole bril
liant result rests upou the simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at the point in
stead of at the other end.
of the toil of hundreds of busy brains through
THE LITTLE THINGS THE MOST
VALUABLE.
Comparatively few people regard themselves
as Inventors, but almost every body has been
struck, at one time or another, with ideas that
seem calculated to reduce some of the little
frictions of life. Usually such ideas are dis
missed without further thought.
"Why don't the railroad company make its car
windows so that they can be slid up and down
without breaking the passengers' back?" ex
claims the traveler. "If I were running the
road I would make them in such a way."
"What was the man who made the saucepan
thinking of?" grumbles the cook. "He never
bad to work over a stove, or he would have
known how It ought to have been fixed."
"Hang such a collar button I" growls a man
who is latejfor breakfast. "If I were in the
business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip
out, or baeak off, or gouge out the back of my
neck
And the various sufferers forgot 'about their
Tmtcnrvvvtf.rtni.q, , - ... .. .
windows, saucepans and collar buttons into
dred dollars.
The responsibility of this compauy may be
Judged from the fact that its stock is held by
i"i'hl ii ""ndred ""he leading uewspapers
Address the Press Claims Company, Joh
Wodderburn, managing attorney, 618 F streel
N. W., Washington, D. C.
. A. R. NOTICE.
We take ttiis opportunity of informing
our subeoribera that the Lew oomrnUv
eiouer of pensions has been sponinted
He ia an old soldier, and we telinw
that soldiera and their heirs will re
oeive justice at bis bands. We do not
anticipate that there will be any radioa!
changes in the administration of ponsioi
affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that D. 8.
soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take
steps to make application at onoe, if
they have not already done so, in order
to aeoure the benefit of the early filing
of their claims in case there should' bf
any future pension legislation. Suoh
legislation is seldom retroactive. There
fore it is of great importance that ap
plioatious be filed in the department at
the earliest possible date.
If the TJ. 8. soldiers, sailors, or their
widows, ohildren or parents desire in
formation 111 regard to pension matters,
they should write to the Press Claims
Company, at Washington, D. C, and
they will prepare and send the neoessary
application, if they find them entitled
under the numerons laws enacted for
their benefit. AddreBS
PKESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Weddebbubn, Managing Attor
ney, Washington, JJ. U., p. O. Box 385
tf.
THE WESTERN PEDAGOGUE.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
A. NEW DISEASE.
It Is Known as " Typewriters
Insanity,"
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD practical' shape, and then apply for patents
they might nna tnemseives as iuubuuCu,
HEPPNER.
OREGON
Free
Medicine
A Onlden .Opportunity for buffering
Humanity.
Physician8Glvc their Remedies to the People
nn vnil eilFPrB Write u at once, explain-
IIU 1UU OCU Ln t
Inv vniir trouble, aud we
J.i A WWW tW HAKKfl.IUU CUUfoC
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
your case, we waui. jum ,cv."...
We can cure the most aggravaiea oisease. m
both sexes. Our treatment tor an niseases "u
i.i. mrwiorn nd stdentitlc. acquired
hv manv year's experience, which enables us to Hons:
Every competitor must obtain a patent ior
wealthy as the man who invented tne iron
umbrella ring, or the one who patented
he fifteen puzzle.
A TEMPTING Ol'I'LK.
To induce the people to keep trackjof their
bright ideas and see what there" in them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
inze.
To the peraon who submits to it
I he simplest aud 11101 promising
invention, from a commercial
point of view the company will
irlve twenty-live 11 11 , 1 : "" -
In cash, in addition to reiunains
the fee for securing a patent.
It will also adverune the inven
tion free of charge.
This offer is subject to the following conui-
We are in receipt of the May number
of our state sohool paper. It exoeed
any ot the former numbera ic value.
The paper this month oontains many
new and valuable features. The illus
trated series on the schools of the state
is introduced by a paper on the Friends
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon.
These papers cannot fail to be of great
value buth to the schools aud to the
publio.
There are also several fine articles
by our bast writers and the departments
"Current Eveuts,""Saturday Thoughts,"
"Eduoational News" "The Oracle
Answers, Correspondents," etc., eaob
oontain much valuable reading for
teachers or parents. The magazine
has about 50 pages of matter, well
printed a4 ...j -'-
tbe WeBtv e ot our readers should havt
Hni rrit tbey are at all interested
in education. No teacher school direc
tor or student can get along well with
out it. We will receive subsoript.ons
at this offioe. Price only $1.00 a year.
When desired we will send the Western
Pedagogue and tiazette one year to one
address for $3.00. Call and examine
sample oopies. Teaohers, direotors and
parents, now is the time to subscribe, tf
NIGHT.
And Affects Those Who Manipulate the
Typewritrr-Vt'lmt 11 Learned Dot
tor Si,v Ue!.'iirdlng the
Alteetion.
Pretty typewriters in danger of losing
their reason! A new mental disease
has been noticed by many physicians in
the pu:;t few years, and it has increased
with the use of typewriters in all de
partments of commercial and profes
sional work.
It usually begins with a slight but
persistent headache. Then gradually
the memory fails, so that persons af
fected become absent-minded to such a
degree that they are scarcely to be
trusted alone. Dyspepsia, with all its
horrors, follows, and finally the patient
becomes unfitted for all mental exertion.
This is a description of typewriters'
insanity given to a reporter of the New
orlc MoroinL' Journal bv Dr. Charles
Higgins, of Urooklyn, who has had
several such eases under his charge.
I he disease is as real. as writers'
cramp," the d.u-tor said, 'although
when its cause was first hutrtffKted to be
the use of the typewriter it was
laughed at as absurd. 'People laughed
at writers' cramp in the same way
twenty years ago."
How can tins use of a typewriter
cause dyspepsia'."' asked the reporter.
Well, to explain thuV said the doc
tor, "I should have to go over all that
we know of that marvelous telegraph
plant which every human being carries
about with him, known as the nervous
system. Specialists who have studied
nerve diseases discovered years ago that
there were, what we now know its re-
rinaraiitee a Cure. Do not despair.
N B.-Ye have the only positive cure for Bp
Ilepsv (fits) and Catarrh. References given,
Permanently located. Old established.
Dr. Wilmamr Medical asp sokoical Insti
tuts., 719 Market Street, Ban Erancisco, Lai,
ARL YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ?
..i iiU. -. . .
wire is made useless by the induced
current from an electric light wire.
Perhaps the most familiar example 01
this is the fact, that a piece of grit or
dirt in nn eye will cause the other to
1 become inllamea tnrougn
BRAIN WORK AT
Chles It Is
It Should Be
9BCBBT SOCIETIES-
Doric LodgeNo. 20 K. ol IF.
W. B Potteb, K.ofK.&S. "
KAWLIN8 POST, NO. 81.
(1 A It.
,,,.etaatLexington.'0r.,the last Saturday of
-,acK month.
!. U. Boon,
Adjutant
his Invention through the company. He must
flrstapply for a preliminary search, the cost 01
which will be five dollars. Should this
Beach show bis Invention to be unpatentable,
he can withdraw without further expense.
Otherwise he will be expected to complete ni
application and take out a patent in the regu
lar wav. The total expense, including the
Government and Bureau fees, will be seventy
The genius who Invented the "Fifteen' puz- 0ir F0r this, whether he secures a prize
zle, "Pigs In Clover, " ana many omem, u i"- or uoti tne inventor will nave a paiein ui
vented a brand new one, which 1b going to be ought t0 De a valuable property to him. The
the greatest on record, mere ib ids, prlze wln be awarded by a Jury consisting m
tion and entertainment in it. The old "d ti,rec reputable patent attorneys of Washihg
learned will find as much mystery in 11 as me ton Inteuned competitors should till out tne
vniin and unsophisticated. This great puzzle
THE WEEKLY BY MAIL.
One Year in Advance) : f 1 00
The News is the only consistent oanrpion of
silver In the West, and should be In every home
in the West, and in the hands of every miner
and business man In Colorado.
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
THE NEWS,
Doiivor. Colo
-horn It was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the
great puzzlelBt, to be sold for the benefit of the
movement to erect a great nome mr newipapei
workers In New York.
tf
Geo. W. Bmitb.
Commander.
pBOrBSSIOlTAii.
A ROBERTS, Reftl Estate, Insur
oil Collections. Offioe 11
-Jounoil Chambers, Heppner. Or. swtf.
A
S. P. FLORENCE,
LUMBER!
..ITK HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF ON
v dressed Lumoer, inuu"'
vhat Is known as the
5COTT SA-XrVJVtlljXj.
EK 1,000 FEET, KOUOH,
" CLEAR,
- W00
- 17 60
I submit the within described Invention in
Generous friends have competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar
given $25,000 In prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTO sent 10 tne --rress v,uiu
n,,iMinir and Chrrlty Fund," Temple court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mail.
DID
YOU TRY
"PJOS IN CLOVER"
Prize offered by the Press Claims Company.
NO BLANKS IN THIS COMPF.TION.
This is a competition of rather an uuusal na
ture. It Is common to oner prizes ior uiu m
story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the
competitors risking the loss of their labor and
the successful one merely selling 111s ior inc
amoun of the prize. But the Press Clalmt
Company's offer is something entirely differ
ent. Each person 1b asked merely to neip min
or the "FIFTEEN PUZZLE.
Well the man who Invented them has just ,eif, and the one who helps hlra self to the
.r. MHivrnitn IK
I tfi.oo'per'l.OOO feet, additional
HEPPNER, WILL ADD
D. A.
L. HAMILTON, Prop.
Hamilton, JVI,r's:
completed another little playful mystery for best advantage Is to be rewarded by doing it.
young and old, whicn is selling ior inn ibhi-1 The prize is ouiy "" .-
for the boneflt of the iuna 10 ereci m mu mat woum De wen nuim
newspaper workers in New York. This puzzle Tne architect whose competitive plan for a
Is the property of the New York Press Club clai, h0U8e on a certain corner is not occept-
rt onerous friends of the club have donated ed has spent his labor on something of very
aver 26,0O0 to provide prizes ior lucay peupie, llitie uc to mm. But tne person putcuu, a
., nlrl. who solve the mystery, j nere m 1 simple and useful uevice in me 1 runs v.i.iu
' . . . ..-.. I., U I. ' ..J I .,,.!( H
lot of entertainment ana iinirucuiiu ..v. company s competition. m uv ..
oj Himo nd net the souvenir puzzie "j fail to secure a prize. i:e nus a i''
return mail. Address "Press Club souvenir,: result to show for his work-one mat wn
j,emple Court.New York City. . command its value In the market at any
time.
The man who uses any article In his daily
v.. 1.. Kutfar nnu, ttl Intitrfivtt It
:r ---,,'.' l-.iV-;. "i .' j? .'. 5i " JPJE than the mechanical' expert who studlcB It
Z-iS'..!. 1. "" ti. from the theoretical noint of view, f.i't
Imperative
Avoided.
To the imaginative young writer
f.here is a fascination about the quietude
)f uninterrupted night work until much
if its mischief has been done. If he
ias a fixed daily occupation, or is pop
ular among his friends, the night offers
the best chance for continued applica
tion by its quietness and peace. This
very cessation of life's turmoil and the
resulting feeling of ease should tie ac
cepted as nature's preparation for rest.
Unless it is imperative night work
should be avoided, says a writer in the
Herald of Health. It must be impera
tive to the staff of morning papers, and
the question thus assumes importance
of accomplishing the work with the
least possible expenditure ot vital iorce,
While bv working during the day per
sistently and deliberately an enormous
nmnnnt of eonv can be, thrown off, that
fter midnight absorbs the
best nart of the writer's vitality.
When he should be in the prime of hie
faculties he is nervous, suitors from in-
sonmla, and his overtaxed nervous sys
tem cannot rest, even in artificial slum'
ber. The natural temptation is to ap
nlv the whin of stimulation to the jaded
brain: but till i is dangerous, una at mr
best only a transient and uncertain
remcdv. The imagination answers fit
fully to this kind of forcing, the next
day's critical judgment of the result?
olmnst. eertninlv will bo unfavorable,
and the mental excitement thus inducec
will nrobablv be extravagant. Try tc
0taln the. brain under such stres
rathr than to excite it.
STOCKRAISER
HEPPNEB. OltEGON.
Cattle branded and earmarked a. shown above,
ir on right shoulder.
.VISC0NS1N CHNTKAL LINKS
(Northern Pacific R. R Co., Lessee.)
r.ATF,ST TIME CARD
Two Through Trains Daily.
L ... r trinnonnnliHA
l2.4Spmi 47pm '"""' p , ..ArlK.0iiaml6.00pm
..Duluth
1 -K,rml7 ,lim l.V
'y-fnTfZmXv ' : Ashland ..Aria ntn
7.16am w.5amAr... Chicago
1
irlfl.40ams.4r,pm
ArlK.0naml6.00pm
.Arill. 10" 17.36pm
.Lvl&.OOp
11.45"
"Tickets sold and baegaue checked through to
eket Mentor, cblctJ0( fo.
.-j.i ia i-nt'f stamps
ti'i-;'.i:;if pric; - v.) .'m -
i'tliVr-K il 'VtVtVtjtJ Wtlhlil :K
U iiv mil I- lor 1 VWiI' bulilj
j5 KUnrimU-eliiK 125.000
TaJ1:!,V llshem and B.uni-lUc
r ."ill turers you 11 ivw
llMli vrolmbly, thouflanrts M
jU.wJfc' vluttblelKK)ki1)ain'(H
Zmm- iK-nip.e,mflK",,1M"- i
"jni l"L ah r.-- ami nuch oarre !
iilh ene'of.vourpiel
,il thereon. t.XIBAI V ll I
aiw prim ana in-ej r ,
v!t ib . r,' fjirwr. h-i ro-.r.-fi" nw
t--,'y "rTl!'1',.''A'-;:''.,''"'"'i
aw WORLD'S FAIR DIRECTORY CO.,
L-..i,t7.ra md Olrard Ave... Psdlailel-
phla, Pa.
MIL
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rid of the Idea that an Improvement can be too
simple to be worth patenting. The simpler I tie
belter The person who best succeeds In
combining simplicity and popularity, will get
the Press Claims Company's twenty-live hun-
Thompson & Binnsown the buss which
goes to and from the Palace hotel, but
.,,11 null fnr nartios desirinB to go to train
;n ,m nart of the citv. iieave orders
at City hotel.
Bocklen's Arnica Salve.
ThA hnat aalvfl in the World ff CUtl
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblain"
corns and all skin eruptions, and posi
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is guaranteed to give perlect saliefuctiou
or money refunded. 1'rioe 25 cents per
box. For sale by Slocum-Johnson Drug
Company.
USJiPowder:
smart anu
sympathy."
Here the doctor produced diagrams
of the keyboards of half a dozen of the
prominent makes of typewriters.
Now, as you see, "t-u, um,
these keyboards consist of round or
hexagonal keys, about half nn men in
diameter. They are white with black
letters in the center, imd they stano
out against the DlacK nnciigrmiuu.
Many of then- kcybivrds are ei:'iueen
inches long by a fool, fleop, ana most oi
them are larger then t'.io ptnre ot an
ordinary book. Now I will make a little
diagram to show you where the great
strain on the nervous system
from." ....
Here the doctor drew a rough sitetcn
of the human eye in section and of the
keyboard of a popular typewriter.
You can easily see that m tne ci-
fort to perceive, all the. Keys at ouce,
when working rapidly, the eye endeav
ors to nil just itself to a locus mat win
.,,,rihn entire keyboard. But this is
impossible, so the mirror at the back ol
the eve. called the retina, is constantly
changing the lenses in lront oi uie ey
so that it can get the objects distinctly
impressed upon it.
In the diagram 1 nave oiny suowu
four different focuses, continued tne
doctor, "but when you multiply them
hv the. number of keys on tin; tour rows
and count that the spaces between the
keys are. about an inch lower than the
tops of the keys themselves, you can
Imagine, the vast mmiiier oi loeuses unt
reach the eye and the. amount of work
the lenses of that delicate organ must
do to keep pace with them.
Prof. Haves, the expert oi i niii-
delphia,," Dr. Higgins went on, "has
estimated that in five hours' work on a
typewriter an ordinary export operator
will have to change, tin; focus of the
lenses of the eye. at least forty-seven
million times!
"Now, the human eve was never in
tended to do this," asserted the doctor,
"and the strain on the. little, muscles
which move tlictx! lenses is enor
mous. It soon has a redox action on
the nerves, and this finally irritates the
brain to such a degree that It produces
typewriters' insanity."
"Is there no cine for this trouble,
doctor?" asked the roixirtcr.
"Oh, yes:" he rejoined. "Rest will ef
m.rfee. enro. ii lid sometimes a
pair of eyeglasses, suited to the eyes
that are, ' miturally perfect, afford a
great relief."
"Could you suggest any improvement
in typewriters to lessen the strain on
the eves'.'"'
"I t i n t I could, ' concluded nr. nig-
gins. "A typewriter with a keyboard
like a piano or something approaching
it would be a wonderful thing for this
trouble. Pianists become, expert on a
straight Hat keyboard, and I can see no
reason why typewriters should not"
AFRICAN HAIR-DRESSING.
it Is Often Very Elaborate, Involving
Much Time In the Work.
A limited wardrobe, such as befits the
climate, may in a brief manner be
stated as the general characteristic of
African dress, says Peoples of the
World. What little they wear is, how
ever, in many cases peculiar enough to
merit a few words, and is sometimes
combined with an extraordinary furor
for improving c? nature by disturbing
their otherwise not particularly hand
some countenances. Among the Man
ganjas, for example, it is the head upon
which the greatest elaboration is be
stowed. The most favorite form of
dressing the hair is to tako a couple of
pieces of wet, pliable hide, and shape
them into the form of ox or buffalo
horns, after which they are allowed to
dry. They are then fastened to each
side of the forehead and the hair trained
over them and plastered into positiou
by means of grease and clay. Two
horns are the favorite ornament, hut
sometimes only one is used; in the latter
case the wearer looks like a black bi
pedal unicorn.
Others vary this style of hair-dressing
by twisting up a number of locks all .
over the head into the shape of minia
ture horns, so as to cause a porcupine
like appearance in the practicer of this
extraordinary style of head dress. Pig
tails, so far as their short "wool" will
allow, are also in vogue among some of
this tribe. The women, as might be ex
pected, are also by no means without
fastidiousness in dressing and ornament
ing their hair, but this is quite over
shadowed by another effort at beautify
ing in which they exeol. namely, in
wearing the. "pel;le" or ring of ivory,
metal, or bamboo, which is of consider
able size, in their tipper lip, the orifice
for its reception being gradually en
Jarged from early girlhood until it can
"SXtUHiB Ur$Ufi4 rin..r.iiiflh..w
and render;, it impossible for the women
to pronon.ic.i the labial letters. Hence
a woman in this tribe speaks differently
from tin? men. Some of the women
even tattoo, but owing to the darkness
of their skin this mode of decoration
cannot get shown to advantage and is
not very popular. It is not pleasant to
record of a nation so fond of dress that
they seemed to be entirely uneonscioui
that in civilized eyes cleanliness is a
virtue which ranks even higher than tat
tooing. They are iitthy in the extreme.
One old man denied that it was tme
that he had ever washed himself; he had
really done so once, but it was so long
aovj that In.- could not trust his memory
to say how l.vuiy years bad elapsed
since that notable event. It is almost
supcrlluou.'i to acid that skin diseases
arc, in consequence common among
them mid exhibit most persistent and
virulent forms.
"WATCH AND WAIT,"
ICvery Croat Achievement I Hie) Bernard
of Corresponding Patience.
"Patient waiting no loss," has been made
the subject of aa instructive volume; and
"let patience have her perfect work," was
one of the many admirable suggestions of
ancient wisdom, Bays the New ork Ledger.
The hisicry of every great achievement,
and the realisation of every grand idea, i
the record of a corresponding patience on
the nart of the hero and the thinker. But
for tho large possession of this sublime
quality, humanity must have succumbed to
a thousand obstacles which have been glo
riously overcome, and man, instead of dem
onstrating Progress to be the providential
law of his being, would have sunk lathe
embrace of fatalism, more helpless aud
wretched than the beasts of the field. The.
discoverer, the rcfoi mcr the benefactor of
whatever class has each In turn, since the
world began, learned through his own ex
perience the truth of tho poet's line:
" They nobly win who watch and wait,"
and the story of any one ot them is mainly
the story of all.
Kepler, gazing Into tho "upper deep,"
and discerning for the first time clearly the
unitv and harmony of the planetary uul
verse, could only from the depths of bis pa
tience have cried, as he closed the narra
tiveof his mighty discovery: "The die if
castl The book is written ; to bo read no
or by posterity, I caro not which. 1 mat
well afford to wait a century for a reader,
as God lias waited these six thousand years
for an observer." And Columbus, seeking
vainly from city to city, and from court to
court, for some sympathizer with his vision
of tho New World or when treading the
deck of his caravel, beset by mutiny that
would have daunted any other man what
does tho world owe to his patience, which
doubled the earthly domain, and tenfold
quickened every civilizing element of the
human race.
Patience is a lofly attribute. Wisdom
alone begets It in uum, for wisdom per
ceives how trivial are most things over
which men are most impatient. What it
they be unaccomplished--will the sun for
get to rise, or tho rain to fall! Will tha
seasons lose their order, and seed-timo and
harvest failf Nuyl Our Impatience is
begotten of nothing, and our patience is
born of the nobler and more enduring
thoughts and deeds.
Let us but be patient in well-doing, or
even in seeking to do well, and we shall, la
the sight of conscience and of God, be vlo
lorioiu whether we win or lose!
Stole From 111. Wife.
A Superior (Wis.) man is on trial for
stealing a gold watch, a pair of dia
mond barrings, and two rings from his
wife
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Amtuouia; No Aluta.
Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard.
Tf von want to buy groceries, and
bread stuff obeap, go to the Enterprise
Grocery. Kirk & Kuul, proprietors, a
Heed the Law.
Under the laws of every State in this
Union the man who shoots another man
who may bo stealing his fruit or robbing
his hen roost can bo prosecuted for
manslaughter. The idea is that you
shall go out and argue with him, and ii
argument won't do whistle for an officer.
14
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