Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, August 03, 1894, Image 1

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    Suit 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 i n rnw 1 1 1 ''" " '
TWELFTH YEAR
n.,pm MORROW COUNTyToREGON- FRIDAY. AUGUST 3. 18M.
WEEKLTrTO. M5.)
j 8EMI-WEEKLY NO. 864.1
SEM 1 WEEKLY GAZETTE.
1 uesdsys and Fridayb
HIE PATTERSON PUBLISHING
ALVAH W. PATTERSON Bub.
oTIS PATTERSON
Hanaget
. .Edito
At 2.50 per year, $1.25 for .11 month., 75 oti
for three mou una.
Advertising Rates Made Known 01
Application.
The -E-S-XiE," of Long Creek, Grant
K ire l per year For advertising rate., address
fUUUtva", '
Hi ppner, Oregon. - . . .'
Tniw' WaWiSRiekept on tile at E. 0. Dake's
AdJeng AsTcy.M end 65 Merchant.
met. for advW-aig oan Be uiuue
yvov Mcnc mrW-ioCii. Mm
, j i.. Hammer 9:45 p. m. daily
N tO. Il!I-' wo'"
except Banday8tW.lluwBj0i pm.
.t. Hnoner 5:00 a. m. daily
oicept Monday.. Arlinaton 1:26a.m.
Kast bound, mam H"Ve. l-a- m-
West bound 1-alfreigh-leave. ArUnton
t "'JLriSvJifh" Dalle. at :0u p. m. arm, .
it Portland at 7:00 P -
"As old as
thehills"and
never excell
ed. "Tried
and proven "
is the verdict
o f millions.
Simmons
Liver Kegu-w-
lator is the
j"f-p o n 1 y Liver
X-iCC and Kidney
medicine to
which you
can pin your
faith for a
cure. A
mild laxa
tive, and
purely veg
etable,, .act
ing directly
on the Liver
and Kid
neys. Try it.
Sold by all
. 1 1 Ti T
1 ru twists m Liquid, or in rowaer
. i i taken dry or made into a tea.
THe King of Liver Medicines.
1 have used yourSimmons Liver Regn-
tor and can coiiBcienciously say it is uim
r oi till liver medicines, i couniui.-i
Seine chest, in it.seii. wjso. vy. ua
, Taconm, Washington.
KUY PACKAGERS
tins llif Z Stamp in red un wrapper.
Than
THE LAND QUEEN VIC.
London was the first city to use
coal. 1 - .
The population of London Increases :
at about the rate oi iw,uuu .....-
The oldest building, not a ruin, in
the world is said to be the Tower of
London. It antedates Cmsar's con
quests.
In England some striking forge
workers recently decided they were in
the wrong, and, besides going oac
work at once, voluntarily pam
employers 25 indemnity for the loss
caused Dy tneir sinning.
Keeps were in common use
fifty years ago in the norm oi
for'addressing parcels on brown paper.
rr,,. o bnld. strolls writing, such
as no quill or steel pen cauK.vc. '.
common bnlrusn wir.n a unci ..- ,
the reed used. ' .
Ot Eng.. has a furnace ior toe
'snakes used to walk.
At Least Bo Sayu a Smithsonian
Expert on Reptiles.
Tha Python Ha. Ft-A HlMtratlon of
tha Sarpanf. Power of Locomotion
-The Snake Move. Llka a
Man Walking Id Bat:.
The good housewives of New Eng
land, and, perhaps, in other parts of the
country, are wont to meet the ques
tions of inquisitive youngsters with
pvp Lunation: "cm: simite s ioun
the
an expression like "hen s teeth, and a
"side-hill badger," denoting the im
possibility of a thing. The snake's
foot, nowever, is hiiuw"
a nonentity, and the story of the ser
pent in the Garden of Eden, that was
doomed forever to crawl upon its belly,
des r t on oTt'he town's refuse which is only partly, if it U at all, true
Ha hp-t arml ed to raising pwam, oi uk " 7 . -
furn 'hcssX lentpowerto more than who called at the Smithsonian inst.tu
oovor "e cost of the collection and. tion. The wise men there who are
covci t.ie cost. 01 - Bkilled in anatomy of animals have re
timing of the refuse. T received la big python that siek-
A superstitious idea of the middle c ffi?1? gw YorU. His
ages still exists in many b
land that when the death of a person
is imminent the fastenings of the door
of the death chamber hinder the de
parture of the soul from the body,
thus making final dissolution doubly
painful.
OFFICII DIBEOTOBT.
..'Grover Cleveland
fieuldent a.1 ai SiijwenBon
Vice-President ur.it or Q (iresliam
gecelary of " " "."....John Q. Carlisle
Booretary of 1 reasnry HokeSmith
Secretory of lnttrior ;;i)Bnld 8. Lnniont
MeoiBlary of War mi. Hnrhert
liocretary of Navy. Wilson 8. BieU
Posunaster-tteneral Kichard 8. Olney
Attni-ney-lieneriil. j uterliug ilorlou
Secretary of Agriculture J . oteruug
state nf Oregon.
. ..B. Pmmoyer
(.overnor. Q. W.McBrlde
Secretory of Htaw phil. MoUchan
TreaHnrer. E. B. McElroy
onpi. ruuiw ( J. H. Wilctiel
j,, IJ.N.Dolph
1 Binger Hermann
Congressmen W. R. Ellis
Frank C.Bakel
Printer t P. A. Moore
1 j .... W. P. ra
Supreme Judges ( li. 8. Ueun
a .ntii imiicial District.
. W. I.. Bradshaw
Cironit. Judge.... a. A. Jayne
n..,.,.ow Conntv Officials.
.0 - .... A. W. Gowan
oini J.8. Boolhrjj
Bopru.iMii.il") Julius Keithly
. ..uoiy . . . . J. R. Howard
1 M U.lr.r.
, ""- J.W.Morrow
yeT . ti W. Harrington
Htienii... j. R oiniam
" TreasuMr TV Willli-
Auseesor ; fl
.Ts'uo'i Anna Bilsiger
Baliool Sup t ,p w Avers, Jr
Coroner
nwDowWR TOWN OFF10KBB.
P. 0. Borg
J, ,'". O E. Farnsworth, Mi
Lm&;WrAn, Julius Keithl,,
W. A. lohnnion, p j Hallock
Uacorder '.a. Al. ttonii
I'roiiBurei
Marshiil
p.-ocinpt Office rp.
... ., R. Li. reeland
JuRtice ottne rew .,".. N. B. WheUtune
United States Land Officew.
thk DALLES, OB.
. UcsciBtrPT
j. a moore Beceivar
A. a- OlBB"
t.A ft RAND'S. OB.
j, 11. iifiw
BOOIBTIEB.
Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meet, ev
ery Tneeduy evening at 7.80oolock u
their Castle Hall. National Bank build
inir. Sojourning brot hers cordially 111-
' vitol to attend. A. W. ATrsRsoi., l,. ,
W. V. CllAWFOlW, D.. 01 MM. u. w.
X
NEWSPAPER WAIFS.
mottled hide was drying in the sun at
the time in a sequestered spot Detweeu
the Smithsonian building and the wood
en shed where the taxidermists have
their workshops. It is an uncanny
place, and the man who chances to
glance in there may behold anything
t, th nureass ol an ourang to that of
Lucas, wno nau
I a r.,ifFnln. Prof. 1. A.
AUNT"'Well, Bobby, what do you thg remains ol the twenty-foot snake
want to be when you grow up?" Bob- lrQm the east ln charge, was asked if
by (remembering private seance in the snakeg had feet.
woodshed) "An orphan." Texas Sift-, oh yeg gaid he and he took ,jown
ings. . 1 the skeleton of the python, which had
Teacher "Karl, can you ten me me h strinned of all the tlesn so tnai
Th comp.rativevalue of th... twocarda
I. known to moat per.on.
They Illustrate that greater quantity la
Not alway. moat to be desired.
The., card, expre .the beneficial qual
ity of
RipansTabules
A.comp.redwlthany previou.ly knowa
DYSPEPSIA CURB
Ripan.Tabale.: Price, 50 nt 110
Of druggl.t., or by mall.
RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 1 0 Spruc St., H.Y.
symbolism of colors green, blue ana
red, for instance?" Karl "Hope, mod
esty, and socialism." Fliegende
Blatter. '
"Johnny, what is a kiss?" asked the
teacher. "It's a thing which you can't
describe with yer tongue, but yer can
express it with yer lips," said Johnny.
Harper's Bazar. '
He (anxiously) "1 you think your
father would ever consent to our mm
riage?" She (carefully) "Idon'tknow.
Papa is just like all other men so I
suppose he makes mistakes sometimes."
Brooklyn Life. '
Tir.T.ir.ra for concentrated inaccuracy
of statement nothing can surpass the
following sentence, whicli occurreu m
an account of a burglary given in a
ow.n.npr: "After a iruiuess searcii,
nil the money was recovered except
one pair of boots. " lid-nits.
PICKED UP IN EUROPE.
Tim
WISCONSIN CENTRAL
LINti
Run Two Fast Trains Daily
Between St. Paul. Minneapolis, and Chicni
Milwaukee and ail points In Wisconsin makl"
nonnection in Chicago with all lines runniii.
EaBt and South.
Tickets wld and bagcage.ehecked through t
all points ln the United States and Canadiai
Provinces.
For full information apply to your nearec
tieket agent or JAs. C. rw".
Gen. Pans. andTkt Agt., Milwaukee Wt.
'
pres.;
Portugai. is the most illiterate coun
try in Europe.
Wise is frequently usea lnswuu. u.
water in Spain in mixing fhoe black-
incr.
An enormous gorilla in tne Benin
armarium takes a bath every day, ana
when eating uses a knife, fork and
napkin.
Gr.ANUt.ATEn cork ant oituineu
into blocks is used lor paving
the (.tracts of London, elasticity uciub
its chief recommendation.
The average length of life is greater
in Norway than in any other country
on the globe. VMs is attributed to the
fact that the temperature is cool and
uniform during the entire year.
W l'aris they first utilUe rats to
clear the flesh from the bones of car-
then kill the rats, use up the
fr tvimminrrs. their skins for
i .. i,i thifh hones for tooth-
picks and their tendons and bones for
gelatine wrappers.
AND INTERESTING.
the frame work of Dones laswueu
with cartilage remained as perfect
as life. It was coiled up like a
bunch of rope and as light as a kite. It
was surprising to know how frail a
structure of bone could make a very
supple snake, able to give an eiepnam
a hard tussle. ,
"Yes," said ' Trof, Lucas again,
"snakes have feet, and the best exam
ple among living species is the
python." He pointed to the skeleton
of the python, which he held in his
hand, and showed two long ribs on
oach side of the body well back to
ward the tail. Those are the remains
of the snake's feet and legs. Like the
vermiform appendix in man, the snake
has no earthly use for them now, and
can tret along quite as well as he is.
All the hio- snakes have these remains
(.,rm.r tent. esDecialW the boa con
strictors and the anacondas. Prof.
that the bones of the legs,
which have withered and shortened in
the ages during which big snakes have
BTilnved existence, are found in some
small species of snakes in this country,
although it is not common. The best
Vnnwn snecies is the glass snake of
Florida, of which so much has been
BALKING THE UMBRELLA THltr.
A Wa.litntton !t!n ! Invented an Auto
matically Ki turnable Bain Shield.
Another long-felt want is about to
be filled. Drawings for the invention 1
were received at the patent oflice only j
a few days ago, and the man. who, ty ,
the way, is a Washington ian, is prepar
ing to build him a new house in the
most fashionable part of the city with
the prospective funds from this inven
tor, Tt.is niithintr less than an auto
matically returnable umbrella. That I
is, one that will make its own arrauge-,
,-tc rotnrn to its owner when
mcuta iui ivo w .
J - - UJ ,,m Vtl-ullRK '
lost. The nomauic uaumu. "
especially when left unchained in the
neighborhood of a crowd, has long
been a subject of comment, and it has
been a serious question whether the
trouble were altogether with the mor
als of the umbrella, that would go off
ir,Q itself, or an innate depravity
of the umbrella-using public that made
findings keepings without much in
quiry as to the identity of the loser.
The new, non-losnble umbrella does
not differ essentially from the ordinary
article, says the Washington Post, ex
that, it has a little stouter handle.
Herein is concealed the working part
of the device. It is a compactly ar-
rmured nhonograph, with a multiply
ing " reverberator, enabling it to be
heard for, say, the length of a street
car or in a good-sized hallway. In con
nection with the phonograph is a com
bination lock which sets the machine
for action. The owner of the umbrella
uot.Unir it, down simply switches in
the combination and as soon uii
picked up the phonograph gets in its
work. The remarks can be arranged
according to the taste in oratory of the
man who owns the umbrella and can
range from a politely couched request
not to disturb the rain protector to a
stentorian cry ol "Stop, unci, o.
"This fellow is stealing another man s
umbrella," or any other exclamation
of a more forcible nature, tne sirengiii
of the language being only limited by
the local municipal ordinances regard
ing profanity
LIKE A GIANT CORKSCREW.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report
Baluni
Mfm
1 N jssssspa
ABSOLUTELY PURE
BEAR HUNTER.
by
ri.. no. . monster of old that fre
rmint.ed the waters of prehistoric seas
when the world was young that was
nrobablv the ancestor of the present
snake, ne was called the plesiosanrus,
monstrous dimensions,
Pnnnlar zoologists lime to piubuic
ties in the seas where the water was
made red with the blood of these mon-
..... .nthprsn their triOO. llieir
rwi a ,
i Dpwi win if descendants are tne
nlf mvthical sea serpents. They had
. r,rl the ruaimenis uu
" . . .1 VUI,T,
. .. tl-, remains 01 liiienc. ,
IU.( "V-
n, ,ontilR came to the land to live,
.-.I loomed, for some reason uun..-..
bnrrow in the sand, tney woum uu.
-lovhtorilv lose these. There are miss-
KAWLIN8 POST, NO. 81.
Q.A.R.
v.t8atLiington,Or.,the last Saturday of
ad. month. All veterans are iny.vo.
(" 0. Boon,
Adjutant,,.
fiwo. W. HMTTH,
Commander.
L UMBER !
AJTB HAVS FOR BALK ALL KIN1)8 OF UN
W dressed Lumber, 16 mile, of Heppner, at
what i. known a. the ,
SOOTT 0AWMILI
PER 1,000 FRET, BOUOH,
CLEAR,
TF DELIVERED IN
A
HEPPNER,
15.00 per 1,000 ieet additional.
- tlO OU
17 6u
WILL ADD
Caveats, Trade-marks. Design Patents, Copyrights,
And all Patent buii'ness conducted for
MODERATE FEES.
Information sod advice iven to huentorewltaool
Oharge. Address
PRESS CLAIMS CO.,
JOHN WEODERBURN,
Managing Attorney,
0. Box 46. W ashikoton, D. C
yThl Company is managed by combination of
.1,. .nrt mont Influential ncwpaers ln th.
1,-nitod Utntcs, for the expresi pupoe of prowet
lne their luburrilien agalont uuscrnpuloiu
i...n,.,n.tnnt 1'iuent Aeentn. and earn papej
crlntinguiis alverttsementvouchM forth. responaU
n,..np,h.pwuriilnuComiaiif
Wuty aau i..gu,iKi"J'i ' . -
L. HAMILTON. Prop
Hamilton.
ODD
a TTomcHMAS is experimenting with
a phonograph upon the language 01
hpns.
A flAT.vrcsTON artesian well was sunk
three thousand feet without encounter
ing either rock or water.
Tim mules are claimed to be owned
v., Pinttn Citv (Mo.) man. Twin
mules are of rare occurrence.
A 1 Enirlish watchmaker exhibits an
engine of one hundred and twenty-two
ilictJnpt nieces (not including thirty-
three bolts and screws) which could be
hidden in a lady's thimble.
The Lunatic Oil spring flows
Wheeler Canyon, Cal. It begins
give oil when the new moon appears;
iho moon increases, the supply be
comes greater, and the yield is three
v..,nio o dnv when the moon is full.
The flow ceases when the moon is at
its last quarter.
ing links, however, in
the line of de
Fourteen Time. Around a Mountain Do-
tween Ilaae and Summit.
Tbpre is a mountain fifteen miles
from Tumacacor, but so near the inter
national line that it is not known posi
tiolv whether it is in Arizona or Mex-
ico, but it is believed inni ii i
stains nronertv. Miners, says new
York Recorder, have always called it
n0i.l iiimintain. and it is a most ap-
nmnriat name. It is of a soft sand-
. . . A .1,.
otnne Bud numice ioriuanun, oiiu
wnrk of makinc the road was not a
fliflieult task. The road commences in
canyon of the foothills and.rises at an
easv trrade, corkscrew fashion, going
oo,,nrt the mountain fourteen times
before the summit is reached, me
marl is about fifty yards square when
it, starts at the base and gradually gets
smaller until it is only ten feet wide at
the top. In many places the road has
Wn washed out by the storms of
vears. but it is still possible to talie
horse to the top. In manv places,
where the sidos overnang a little, tne
mrV rf the builder's pick can be plin-
i nn the wall of rook, To ascend
A UHEAT
Five Hnndred of the Animal. Stain
Gen. Wade Hampton.
Mr. Theodore Roosevelt, in his "Wil
derness Hunter," speaks of Gen. Wade
Hampton, of South Carolina, as the
mab who, "with horse and hound, has
been the mightiest hunter America has
ever seen." Ilia special gameims nrr ,
bear and deer, but he has also had the :
fortune to kill some sixteen cougars
the panther of the east, the mountain
Hon of the west, and the lion and puma
of South America. Of black bc-rs, ac
cording to Mr. Roosevelt, he has prob
ably killed more than any other man
living in the United States. Thirty or
forty of these he has killed with the
i.tra
ftul"" - . . 3 AT 4
His plan was, when ne iounu wi
the dogs had the bear at bay, to walk
r, lnsB and cheer them on. They
1,1 inutnnt.lv seize the bear in
1. n,l he would then rusli in and
stab it behind the shoulder, reaching
. . e t.n inflict the wound on the
..r,r,it side from that where he stood.
Ho ..naned scathless from all these
ninnters save one, in which ho was
,,tw severely torn in the forearm.
m Mhor hunters have used
l,i,t nerhans none so frequently,
Gen. Hampton always hunted with
1,,,,. rainka of hounds, managed some
times by himself and sometimes by ins
negro hunters. He occasionally took
t fr-rtv rtoirs at a time. He found
that all his dogs togetner cuuiu i
kill a big, fat bear, but tney occusiu..
ally killed three-year-olds, or lean and
iininnw r, ne course ui uo
himself killed, or been in at the death
of, fivo hundred bears, of which at
least two-thirds have lauen uy ma u...
hands. In the years just Deiore me
war he had on one occasion, in Missis
sippi, killed sixty-eight bears in five
months. Once he killed four bears in
a day; at another time tnree, ami 11 e
quently two. ,.,.,
The two largest ui-aio
killed weighed respectively four hun
dred and eight and four nunarea ami
ten pounds. Most of his hunting ior
bears was done in northern Mississippi,
where he had a plantation.
AT The OAPIlAL.
To avoid paying a license a man in
Washington sold beer as soup, in large
bowls.
TnK new carpet for the house of rep
resentatives will be of a dark-green
design, with a crimson figure, conven
tional in its character, relieved by a
cream-colored star.
George Stephen Regent's Quay, Ab
erdeen, Scotland, sent a very pretty
little Sheltie for President Cleveland.
GREAT ARSENIC EATERS.
Australian Women SacrlHc. Health and
Hair on the Altar of Oood CompLilon.
The majority of the female beauties
of Sidney, according to an English ob
server, have peculiarly delicate com
plexions, languid expressions, fragile
physique and a die-away look in the
eves, which are more suited to the en-
'' . . . . nU nltrillvfl..
ervated tempermeni ui nu
tion than the active vitality 01 a new
Wvwu. It was easy even ior a nova
to detect that these ladies owed a good
deal to their perruquier. The mystery
of this curious comV -nation of pre
mature baldness and unusual aencw-j
of complexion was explained py tne
fact that these women ate arocuit ...
order to produce the aristocratic pal
lor and languor, and found to their
horror that another ettect 01 tne aruK
was to make the hair drop out. Valu
ing their complexion above their nair,
however, they sacrmcea we duo ."
other. What a woman will endure for
her complexion may be estimated Dy
this and also by the fact that these
arsenic eaters rarely live past forty
five. There is no pleasure, moreover,
in the consumption of the poisonous
drug. The arsenic is made up into
dainty looking caramels, which fash-
ionable dames will produce from pre
cious little bonbonnieres and suck
quite openly, just as the American girl
chews gum or the English girl choco
late. The arssnic question, English
men say, was becoming quite a burn
ing one in the antipodes. When a man
married a young looking, lovely crea
ture, adorned with luxurious ringlets,
he was disgusted to hnd after tne cere
mony that she was really a semibald,
prematurely enervated woman, who
was shortening her life to please her
own vanity and was incapable of ful
filling the' duties of a mother to debili
tated children whicli she brought into
the world. Moreover, the suffering
which she would go through in any at
tempt to overcome this pernicious habit
was quite enough to mane ner
down, if, indeed, she could be per'
suaded to bear it at all.
. . ,, j..... il.i...,..!f.l,tlnihfain
the mountain a person must toiiow uie ine pony is jui t.... "J, 7.7,,
..... .... j , .....1. :t 1 .1 1. n4 I'hpmit.ifnl huild.
road, and tins is a two uuys un., .
i ahout thirty miles, as near as can be
W1
PENLAS0. Kll. It KIXHOF.
President. Cashit
IHASSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
HEPPNER-' tf ORECH
..... m .11 .trip, and slrM. lighten,
I., .rirtworktng..afe, simplest, 1
most wscurate. most compact, and most
I modern. For sale oy .11 a
Catalogue, maued zree ny
T1.9 Haxlia Tire Arms Co.,
a ..Mot Hatw Omrg,tP.Si -1
.nr. nf the snake, and all the scien
tists tell about reptilian geneaioKy '
partly a matter of conjecture.
Of the many snakes that live in the
water nowadays the major part are
rapid swimmers and are deadly te
handle. Prof. Lucas mentioned one
ealled the platurus, on account of its
hig flat tail, wnicn swims m iiui..
waters. He says it is accounted great
sport to cath it with a hook and line,
but the danger comes when the catch
is hauled in, and the average man is
very shy of that kind of fishing, as one
bite means death right speedily, and
in the most agonizing form.
There is still another explanation of
th. -..riimentarv foot of modern times
i th snake world, and that is that it
la tha rpmains of a flying dragon.
There were undoubtedly dragons in the
times' of old, and when the dragons
,.t.H tn flv and came to the earth to
nt, an existence, it is not im
probable that some of them survived as
snakes, and that the remnants of their
r,H wino-s survive in the species
that tempted Eve in the Garden of
Vil.n
r The usual method of locomotion with
the snake tribe is rather peculiar, and
hi moriS like walking in a bag than
- .iu in fact, a snake waim-
A practical joke upon John wasn. , doe8 not crawl, is
calculated without actual measure
ment. The lowest road is a little over
three miles long when it goes around
the mountain once. However, this is
very irregular and goes around several
spurs of the mountain. The roughness
of the road is undescrihable. and a
hnrue is of no use for a week after the
trip. The top of the mountain is about
pn thousand feet above tne piam.
Tiioo i nothim? at the top, and the
adventurer wonders, when he gets
there, what the road was built for.
SINCE LAST WE MET.
Eggs disappeared mysteriously from
the hennery of a farmer in Spartan
burg, N. C. He set a trap, and caught
a huge frog, which was very likely the
thief.
' J" -K t.-1
burn, a lad in West Union, u., nas .
a deplorable result. Some men pre
tended that they were about to arrest
the boy, and he has become insane.
rnunriKiri tobacco was a habit; of
a number of boys put in a bag at
a Fourth of July sack race. Prof. Lu
cas was showing theotherday how this
a. The snake walks on his ribs.
Tl. old Germans, or Teutons, as they
George Rose, of Liberty, Ind. He gave call6d .,,he eQTiy days, used to
up several years ago, aim h a warn)C. custom of proclaiming
THE CRADLE OF GREAT NEN.
A DUtiarul.hed Publicist Hay. tha Wat
I. Their Birthplace.
Th tvnical Americans have all been
i L .... .
western men, witn tne exception,
us say, of Washington. Washington
had not had much of European culture.
The qualities that made him a great
pm,miinder and a great president were
qualities which would have made him
an equally great frontiersman. You
pannnt imacine Hamilton, or Madison,
nr Livingston, or John Adams, or the
PincUnevs living tolerably on the fron
;. Thev are not Americans in the
In which Clay and Jackson and
Lincoln are Americans. We may wish
that the typical Americans of the past
fcnrl had more knowledge, a more culti-
otpH nnnrecintion of the value of
what was old and established,
luster view of foreign nations
! foreifn politics; that they
I had been more like Webster and less
like Jackson; and we may hope that
thA tvnical American of the future
' will be wiser and better poised. Hu
In the meantime the past is to ne un
derBtood and estimated as the
fnetK Rtand. and only a thoroughly
avmnathetic comprehension of these
men who have actually been the typ
ical Americans will enable us to cltec
that purpose. The Tact tnut i-iay
rather than Webster, Jackson and not
John Quincy Adams, represented the
forces which were really predominant
our de
al!
San Francisco
And all point. In. California, via tha Mt. Shat
route of tha
Southern Pacific Co,
rv. t hihar throovh California tn
point. Ea.t and Sonth. Grand Scenic Boat
of the Pacific Coatt. Pullman Buffet
Sleep.. Seoond-claa. Sleepers
attar-hedtoexpreM train, affording .nponor
accommodation, for aecond-claa. paawngera.
For rate., ticket.. akwpiM car reMrrariona.
to. call upon or add rea. B.pj. Aart.
B. KOEHLKR, Manairar, . P. B0GER8, Am.
Sea. F. P. Aft. Portland. Oregon.
v , ... tici WVOtNJ STAMP?
-X,' .:;:dre. if received wiihlri 1
Zf -.-.r-.ag 'days I"1 for 1 year toUly
f:;'. , !?J w - printed on tr'inini'--i
' :"ZiL2i i labels. Only Idrer-l'trj
w' A Zri " cusn.mera ; from piib
ft - 33 && rHbers and Buunite.
kfi.-i:--B". -V2 r.rrnt. torers you 11 nxtivi,
1 1 11 SMI? proiiaWy, thomaiKl. c
i wlmi valuaHlu hooka. paprrn
Sft-H.itrJt- " samplw.magatiDOj-tr
rvi. jTavri. an rr.. ri1 ju-h naro
0( with "one of your printed loldrwi" Urt
muted ihereon. Ktii
' 'SS al, Prl"t prep" poiW(
J Lnn vmir nvel0D?8. bojki, ei-.. t'
. r-n-vvnl thflr bi-lni! lorn. J.A. V
rMJ n 1 Trr,"' ;-i. n.;
, X a"1 "l" a" ''' "'
''JB'f ill. Mr addr y ''.''
ZYJ - ....... .l-liv- i.n vmtiiJ..-, r-(-1;
the
uiaii from all tarts of '.:- iV'
WORLD'S AIR DIRECTORY CO.,
So. 147 Frankford and Glrard Ave.. PhlUdel
ehla. Fa. .
newspaper as a substitute. iw , . Lings,
dpaJ. from the poison in the pnntera ..he,
ink. ' Shields, lifted high above tneir m-aun,
Philadelphia, which has long tn on which the futUre king was elevated.
.a-,,a .a a nltv of homes, where a . .,, ijiv is in all respects like
BUUiit fc n ouwv 111 ft;
family of moderate income couiu inter.i0cked Teutonic sniems. ...
cure an entire house for a residence, ( fefit are Ms ribs, which he is capable
of working bacKwara aim .... no.u,
and at the same time bending them.
Over each rib, or foot, there is a shield,
and as the foot moves the point of the
shield is lowered and digs into the
ground or takes hold of any projection
on the surface over which it is going.
Thus he moves his bulk along. He aUo
curls himself up, and thus he moves
along more swiftly. Grabbing hold
Hh hla front ribs an ugly snake can
,u f.t. while he pulls up ni m"
t,i nthieh in turn takes a hold while
i.nt rrt is mished along. The
ncientlsts do not believe that snakes
can spring, but they do sometime
jump. , .
nnrt distinctively American in
1 , ........ .lup.i pnmirrh nn
The sturdy warriors --l" - makes either of the
their brazen ."f " j --" .,..,
peculiar seciiuns . .....
board the principal or only theater of
American history.
has at last caught
fever in a mild form.
Mrs. Frank Hughes, bride of two
months, of Toccoa, Ga., was called to
her door by a former sweetheart of her
husband. The visitor professed friend
ship for the bride, then dashed some
vitriol in Mrs. Hughes' i'?
one eye, an3 otherwise disfiguring her.
Two lost hogs were fonnd by their
owner at Lone Jack, Mo, tne c.
day in such a place tnai xuey -u..
have been without food or drink since
they were first missed, four weeks
ii. k, aftr their rescue one
n i - thp mother of six
o. .ucu.
healthy pigs.
1
heiizht and is of "beautiful build.
LiiunNDS OF Ivioiiai i-riS. j
A Poa.lble Cause "o7"the Tale. That Sur
vive In English Folk Lore.
Every reader of north-country lore
and legend, says an English paper, is
familiar with the stories of monstrous
"worms," "dragons," "fiery Hying ser
pents" and the like, whicli are said to
have located themselves in various dis
tricts. Scxhow, under the shadow of
the Cleveland Hills, Teesgirt, stocu-
i.n n,l Lnmbton upon tne wear uru
nuances.1 Men hav lan-no'i at uic
torics. calling them "old wives laics,
but forgetting that even these may
nay, must have had, somewnere am.
lometime, some louniiainm u. "-v.
The old storieB of elves and fairies,
which amused and frightened children
in bygono days, miy well, as ningsiuy
points out, have had their origin in
memories of tne iceum ..
tone age who chipped Hints into rune
' and arrowheads, and who lin-
,i in ni,t,nf-the-wnv caves, it may
be, long after the bulk of them had
been slain or driven away into the far
north by stronger and better armed
tribes. So the stories 01 tnese vci ni
monsters may not be so foolish as thoy
appear. Take, for instance, the legend
of the HtocKUurn worm. .
the man who slew it is preservcu, aim
is that of a well-known north-country
family. His tomb is pointed out in the
mined church of Stockburn, where
ilso he lay In eftlgy with the "worm"
at his feet until, the sacred edifice fall
ing into decay, the monument was re
moved to Stockburn hall adjacent
There, too, is preserved the falchion or
uvord with which the monster was
slain, anil which was shown to every
fresh bishop of Durham as he entered
his diocese a custom which only
ceased in the days of Van Mildrct, tin
last of the prince bishops. In a field
kWp bv the stone round which the
"worm" coiled itself is still to be seen.
This story, so circumstantial in its de
tails, can hardly 00 entirely iu"
How then did it rise? "The ichthyo
saurus and plesiosanrus," says S.
I.ang, "gave Tennyson the 'dragons of
the prime." May not some uca.m...
of thes- creatures nave jingei-cu "
mote places, one here and anomcr
there, even in historic times'?
HIS PET PHRASE.
11 Wa. Oood for All Occasion, and Meed
Accordingly.
Tn the "Memoir of Henry Compton,"
published in London some years ago,
there is an amusing story which has an
obvious lesson. Mr. Wntlington was a
man from his birth of an even temper
and an easy disposition. He went
through life with the greatest Indiffer
ence as to its cares and its troubles.
One phrase he used on all occasions:
"It may be so, but then again it may
not."
On paying him a visit one day, says
t,he writer, I asked him if he thought
it would be fine. "Why," replied he,
"it may rain, but then again it may
t
Seeing him reading: "Daniels' rieia
Sports," I inquired if he ever went on
a hunting excursion.
"Why, yes," said he, "I did go once
on a bit of a jaunt of the sort, but I
made a sorry set out of it. I borrowed
n fT of n. frier'', p"'1 ""t"'1 'nr a
day's pleasure, as I thought; but the
horse was a stranger to me, and so,
not having received a regular intro
duction to him, as Boon as tne ennse
begun, off he set at full speed, with
me inside the gig.
"I began to be alarmed. Thinks I,
'There's danger here; T may go a little
farther without being turned over, but
then again I may not.' Well, away he
tore, over furrow and field, leaping
every ditch and bank that came in his
way. Presently I saw we were Hear
ing a horse-pond, and 1 began to say
to myself: 'l may get past this pond
without being dropped in the middle
of it, but then again I may not.'
''However, after running a tremen
dous risk, I escaped a broken neck that
time, and after getting pretty safely
through the remaining part of the
chase, says I to myself, says 1: 'Well, I
may be tempted to goa-hunting again,
but then again, I may not!'"
A 1100 killed at Scio, Ore., was found
to have two perfect stomachs and two
complete sets of intestines. The owner
never noticed anything unusual about
the animal when it was alive except
that it had a wonderful appetite.
A non-venomous South African snake
(dasypeltis. scabra) lives entirely on
bird's eggs. Each egg 1b swallowed
whole, and by a muscular contraction
of the gullet its contents flow into the
stomach, while the shell is rejected by
the mouth in the form of a pellet.
Rnrir. the ieweler. is the man to fix nr
vour wstoh or clock. He keeps a full
stock of everything pertaining
business.
Tha Liou. lu the Uonn.
We always speak of the lines and
spotB on the moon's surface as "The
man in the moon," but it seems that
others have entertained a different
opinion. Bishop Wilkins says: "In
some countries the figures on the moon
are supposed to be two lions in deadly
combat; in most Oriental countries the
picture Is thought to be that of a single
lion. Others will only have it to be
the picture of a man's face, as the moon
is represented. Albertus thinks that
it shows the picture of a lion with his
face toward the west and his tail to
ward the east. It is as much like a
lion as that in the Zodiac, or as Ursa
Malor is like a bear."
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