Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, March 22, 1895, Image 1

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    TMl4HIIltHlllllrflIITMt-l1ll1 mT
1 I
;
I The persi tent vouia lover
Is the obc who gets the maid ; 1
And (lie coa-iant advertiser f
! Gets the cream of all the trade. j
3
Miian ii in i in i i.i i 1 1 1 1 i t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i.i m i n ) ic
OFFICIAL
PAPER
II l-IHH lilt I ll I II I 1 1 II I I I'M M WIM IWM M l4lMiafllig
..., J
j The man who tries to advertise I
i With printer's ink consistent, j
1 One word must learn nor from it turn, 1
I And that one word's persistent . 1
9
$
5 m i ini 1 1 ii ii m uii 1 1 ipi 1 1 1 1 i tin miii i n a i rttctitiiii
THIRTEENTH YEAR
HEITNER. MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1895.
WEEKLY NO. 628.
628.
320.
SEMI-WEEKLY NO.
OF v.
SEM I WEEKLY GAZETTE.
PUBUHHKD
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
W PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY
At $2.50 pnr year, $1.2") for six months, 75 eta.
.or three irm.ifcits.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The "EAS-IiE," of hong Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, in published by the nme com
pany every Friduv mirnlnir. Siihscrintinii
price, ?'2per year. Fors'lvprtiitne nttcs. a'lr1res
Xi. F-A-TTOSiaSOST, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette."
Heppuer, Oregon.
THIS PAPKR is kept on tile at E. C. Duke's
Advertisini! Agency, HI and 65 Merchants
ExchanRS, Ban Francisco, California, where C0u
racta for advertising can be made for it.
iUnioh Paofic Railway-Local card.
So, in, mined leaves Heppuer 9:4" p. m daily
except Sunday
HI, " ar. at Willows Jo. p.m.
9, " leaves " a m.
' 9, " ar. at Heppner 5:00 a. to. dail
except Monday.
East bound, main line ar. at Arlincton 1 ro h. ir.
West leavei " 1:21 a. rr.
West bonnd lo-al fr'ih leaves ArlinRton 8H5
. m., arriv is t The D'lles 1:11 p. m. Local
passenser laviTh' Oi'hMa: t-M p. m. arriv s
at PorClanclat7:00p m.
OFFICIAL 3DI330TO3STr.
United States OHli'iaU.
President G rover Clevel and
Vice-President Ad ai 8ivnson
Bec-etary of Slate VVa'ter Q. Grealmm
Bncretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle
8r.retary of Interior H"" Smith
Secretary of War j.'nmei h. iinniont
Heeretaryof Navy Hnry A.Hcrlwrt
Postmaster-Gnneral William L. Wi son
Attorney-General Kieliiril 8. Olney
iSecretary of Atrrionlture J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
(Governor W. P I o-d
Secretary of State H. It. Kineaid
'Treasurer Pliii. lctrhHii
"8 p. Pnh'ip Instrnction i. M. I win
Attorney General C M. Id email
u , IN. W. M.-Knil-
Senators J.T. II. Mitch. II
I Hinirer Hermann
Congressmen y ij m,,
iPrinter ' W. M. Lt
( K, S B an,
Supreme Judges F. A. Mio-p,
I C. K. W.iIvjHod
Seventh Judicial District.
'Circuit Judge V. L. Brad-haw
Prosecuting Attorney A. A. Jayno
Hnrrow County Oltlcial".
joint Senator
Bepresentative
ounty Judge
' Commissioners,
J. M. Baker.
" Clerk
" Sheriff
" Treasurer
' Assessor
Surveyor
" School Sup't..
" Coroner
.. . W. Rowan
... J S. Bt-HiH)
..Julius Kcithlv
. . . I. It. Howard
.T. W. Morrow
..G. W. ll'irnnvton
Frank UiMiain
J. f. Willi-
Gff,. Lord
Anna Hi'sige"
T. W. Ajrorn. Jf
.... JlppliSIIMIMrilWTOSIW. "
Mayor Thos Morgin
C iiraciluiew O. K. Varnswort.h. M.
Lic'itenthal. Otis Patterson, T. W. Aysrs, Jr.,
8. 8. Horner, K. J. Sloouin.
f 'order F.J. MslWk
Treasurer E L Fre"lsnd
Marshal N. 8. Whetstone
Precinct (Mirers;
Justice of the Peace E. I.. rWlanrt
'unstable N. 8. Whetotone
United States Land OIHceni.
TBK DALLES, OR,
J. F. Moore K"Hstr
A. 8. Biggs UeceiT-fr
LA GRANDE, On.
B. F, Wi'son Relter
J. H. Kobbins HreWr
ee:bst societies.
KAWL1N8 POST.NJ.m.
G. A. B.
Meets at Lexington, Or., the lt Saturday of
4ach month. All veterans are invited to join.
: C. Boon. Gko. W. Smith.
Adjutant. tf Commander,
LUM I5ER!
IITK HAVE FOK SALE ALL KINDS OF UN
V dressed Lumlrcr. 16 miles of Heppuer, at
what 1 known as the
SOOTT SA.WMIt.Tj.
PER 1,000 FEET. KOUttU,
CLEAK,
- 10 00
- 17 60
TF DELIVERED I.N HEPPNER, WILL ADD
x ta.uu per i,uou teet. aodiuuuai.
L. HAMU.TON, Prop.
I . A. llfi in II toi, Mau'ifr
The comparative value of thete tweearda
la known to most peraona.
Thejr lllustrata that (riater quantity la
Not always most to be desired.
These carda eapreaa the beneficial qu si
lly of
RipansTabules
At compared with any previously koowa
DYSPEPSIA CURB
Rlpant Tabulea 1 Price, 30 "nt
Of drug 1 leu, or by maU.
IIP1NS CHEMICAL CO., 1 0 Sprue It., B.T.
33
Simplest. Clt
oiid lv4ivWf3M
f f -'vr. Cocnre:i
i.t Voders and prcrresl.e
li.U f lAiiJ.N nUU AU.M3 CO.,
( 4 HwAt Nkti
w ft m mmMm
oh U MM YJMmw
E. McNEILL. Receiver.
TO
G1V1!3 TUB OHOICR
Of Two Transcontinental
3EiLC "d T 3E3 &
GREAT
NORTHERN Rv.
UNION
PACIFIC RY.
VIA
VIA
Spokane
MINNEAPOLIS
Denver
OMAHA
St. Paul Kansas City
LOW RATES TO ALL
EASTERN CITIES.
Ocean Steamers Leave Portland
Every 5 Days For
SAN FRANCISCO.
For full rlet'iils chII on O. R.
i!' lit at llef ptier, i r mlilress
& N.
W. H. nURLBURT.
Gfti. Pasa. Atjr..
Poktland, Oregon.
TII13
WISCONSIN CENTRAL
Run Two Fast Trains Daily
Between St. Paul. Minneapolis, and Chicnpo
Milwaukee and a I points In Wiscouidii making
connection In Chicago uith all Hues running
Efist and Smith.
Tickets sold and baggage checked through to
all points In the United elates and Canadian
Provinces.
For full information apply to your nearest
tleket agent or
J AS. C. POND.
Agt., M.hvaukce. Wis,
Oen. Pass, and I'Kt.
If.
WJI. PENLANI), ED. It BISHOP.
President. Cashier.
'HANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLI)
ilfcTPNEK. tf OREGON
n C 11100 wth of lovely Music lor Forlj
III rintl. rnnc.tln nf . .,, "Tf
wiu" r. -. "A."1 :"'
full size Sheet Music of Wit
TlZ selections, both vocal and Instrumental.
gotten up in the most elegant muuicr, In-
J; eluding four large slie Portrslls. -J
JT- CARMtNCITA, Ihi Spanlth Dancer,
f AOERCWSKI, tin Great Pianist, T
T- ADtLIHA PA Til and
52 UlNNIi 8EUQMAN CUTTIfJQ. rS
THE NEW YORK MUSICALECH0 C0.
Broadway Theatre Bldp., New York City.
E CANVA88ER3 WANTED. 5!
Known
F.vcrywhpre.
Sold livcrywhore.
Crown Kven-whcre.
RRYEEDSj
A6 ynir ! uir lor li.-m. -. nil for J
tfm'm el Annual for l"M.
InVHliiMtilelostl HHlMHfssnl lovers
of rtite V 4ttiln. sun H'lltlful ,
t low em writf tor It - r ree.
it. m. rrttu a to.,
c? uiolc Tiivxrj t
San Ironoiisoo
nd sli points In alif..mi. i Mt. Hhtts
rout of tle
Southern Pacific Co
Vhm mmt Mrhwar lhrMrh 'hf.mi In '
poln's rt an.l Mmih. imn't Hrnlr ltHit
Of the PaiAe I'imi. Pnilman Mnffet
hle-p-f Hxyi1wlitM hlMtpare
Attwfiwl Innrnai t ruins, nrt.dins tntwrv
anentsranrlittlims fur kmmdlM pcr.
fi mtee. tlrk. slt.li.t nr rrTtlons
le. ruil etm nr n Mnn
H KoF.HI.rK. Ms srer. R. P FO'iEIW, Ami
0n. t 4k V. agt.. Portland. Orron
JT. JAC035 OIL 13
1 EE 1
NEURAI
! f0R?crtrcuR3
An agreeable Laxative and Neote Tonic.
Bold by Drucrrista or sect ty mail. 25c, 6O0.
and $1.00 per partings. Samples free.
The Favorite T0CT3 TOWETia
forthoTeeiiiand Ercath,;o.
For Ble by T. w. Ayerf, Jr., Dmggbt
The tlmmb if an tmfalllnfr lml
of clia iicler. '1 Uc t-ijUi.it- i pt m-
uuau'S a sir' iig wm. ltu'I e
aiul firiunoss, ( Iom'I aiiit ir is tli
bplUllIjlU'll 'I'vpC. lliC tilt. II. L O! UA.r
of mivutifoii iiUsis uml ln,'tit:-
anility. lJutli ct thiu 1 n 1m toi;(.
to thu unsy r.i,:n or vom;-n; nnu
Dfiiiurt'si'u Family Jila.?.int pre
prirt'S t'i'Cfi-lK l'4' pndt pi it'( i- 0
whole voluiiu! of ra w itie: K. con
riconl of il.e wliolu world wink
ftr a nioiilH mny In; ri mi in hasf im
hour. The Conical rJ i;t' n (lui ti'fe
rctluemcnt, cultun-. uwi a love or
miiMc, io tr-, am. fit-tion. A pern n
with tlii t pe of thumb will thor.
onlily ciijny ll.c litt-fM-y atiiartior.i
of Di'iMiir I'd Jliipiy.ii.c. The Ar.
f.n'. Tyt o ii i iriiti s a hive of
hramvaiid nrt, ititti will thu.1 rare
pletiMiru in llic n.apiiiH'ciit oil-picture
of iomi1. K(J.j x2l inclu-H, repro
duced from the original paintinir by
IV i-ionjipiii, the iuoil ceUbraU'd of
livhiif llowtT-pnintci'p, which will
he given to ev ry t-uhenber to
D niorcst's Muyazitie for 1K'5. The
cost of tuis pupurb work ol nrtwaa
?3&0.00 ; and the leproduction
cannot bfi diht'np;nil)ed from the
or yinal. EcMdrs this, nn i;.Nquttg
oil or water-color picture i; )ub
lisln d in each Jiumbcr of the Jiaea
zinc, and the art clcs art! po pro.
iiii-clv ami Fiiperbly lllntrati d that
the Magazine is, in reality, a port
folio of art works of the l.tulie-t
order. The Philosophic Type in the
thumb of the t'dnker and inventor
of ido f, vho will ho deeply inter
csicd in tin 'fo developed monthly
in D'-mnn &V& MaLr:'Zine, in every
one of its numerous depai tmei tt,
wh eh cover the en1 ire aitif-tic ana
s iei, title field. ( bnniii-iinjj every
fact, fancy, and fail of the day.
)en)"ti f'B i" dimply a perfect
F'-nidy WaErnyinc, and wps lomj ago
c-i'Wned (Jmcn of the MonthiieH.
heml in your pubKTipthni; it will
cost onlv rU.00, aid you will have
n dozen Man'iicR in one. Eddie's
V. JhNNiMis D sUoiikht, I'lthll-hr.
1 Kat Mill Street, New York.
'I h'UK'h not a fashion n'apazine. iti
peifi-ci fiifhion payi'H.tmd itarticlca
on family inn domestic matter!, will
hi; of Hipcrlntive iUeirt to those
nmi skIi e the Fi ntinine Tvne of
Thumb, which lin icatec in its smalt
size, rilcnufiiiCKs, soft ta!l, ana
snio'ith, rounded tip, thoho traits
which belonc e-tei'tiallv to the
rentier pct. evorv one of v oin fhould subscribe to
Oiinoiet'Bj ; m. hie. If von tire unarmiatnted wtib
in merits, ci nd for a spt-cimcn copv (fleet, and
'oil wPI admit Ibnt aiuing Iheno TliI'MlfS hut put
'-a In tne way of itiv'n r.ioerv iv fllini in i e
,I:i'ii.iim evi r tiling Lo nuLiisfy the llUauiy wuul of
hu uhoie family.
I t:: 1 W:T-AV. ..i:.'f-.i.V''' 'V'-
This extra
ordinary Re
Juveiwtor la
the moat
wonderful
discovery of
the aire. It
his b- en eri
t'ors. d lytha
n.en of
Kurnpo aiid
America.
Hutfyan is
purely vege
Uole. Hudyan stops
Priniaturcneis
cf the (lis.
chari-e In 20
aarr. Cures
'F.OST
MANHOOD
i-V'4
Falling Hen.
satlrns.N'r ry
ouitwilclilng of the eyes
and other
paits.
Rtrergthcns,
invigorates
and lotus the
cn'lroi yidem.
Hudjnn cu is
Debility,
Nurvoustjeui,
i.m I ss Ion a,
enddcveloiKi
and n.Uns
wesk i t(,'rs.
P. Ins In the
bscn. lo ma
by clay or
liiklitstopptd
i.i''i"t'
q;'!'k!v. Over t.yX) (nrtoserfents.
Prciuot".ren,.s infrm Iin-iotimy in i lie flint
rWc 1 : Is a yip "m of " inl"sl wen. tuin
a id ban i nnc . i Lo JiivjxjJ lu leu days
b II. 'j tuujof Hudyan.
T.c" i i ', cry v ii tnrc' 1 y the
Istiofthc o'd Li'ioi f IIlu on Msdical Iniliiute.
it 1.1 the s'ronc j't vi aiiii r 'aie. H Is very
ocil d, hot l.n nl'H 'old lit 81.00 a rek.
awrl jeg.s for r'.O0!plslnsel'd loe).
Wr '.leu gnarsuiee inwu for a euro. If yon buy
Hjrhox.uu1 are lot entl'rly cnml.ula tnoto
vtl'l t-exenl U i Ir. c ii'ail charfi .
H'i lf r fir'-u sr-.it.d ui.moTilsls Ad lrers
t;riH(ii hiklh:i. inmtitiik,
Jb action Moi'Ut tn, .lurU. I A I liiafsia.
stall I rjiir.ti u.l al.
T ( DiHl llHliVM.
TIjS nnilfrsiKned hnvini; Len reatorxl
10 lifHltli rjy annul., mean, all' r milT-r
Inif for acvcral veiirx with a advert Inii
HfT'Ctmn. an l that ilreal iliicum., Cm
urn j.t n.ii. is hi. (nut .i mnke known ..
file feiLi anfT'-'i-r t mesnsuf nr.
To fll( Slho (elr it. Iim wi i ,eerfil
ly alnl, frfa (if rlmrtt. a rupy of fhe pre
snription nsel, wlncli f,y mill fin. I a
iire O'ltn for ('iitiiirniti.i'i, Aetliui'i, (Im.
lardi, I'.roticliitis and all lirm ni Im n
rosls Ilea. H lixpt-a all sufT. rcrs will
ns- Ida remedy as it l inv.iin.d.li. Tlir,.
d siruitf li presrrij.li.iii, Lirn will n ol
ttiern ti'' 1 1 1 1. 1. and ny r.ve a LI u.f
will i.Un.(. k l lr. I y EIMV SUIt A
WILON. iJr'xiV l n, N. Y. juull .
A sure enre for the liipor In Int.
cnr no tny. For fil pHrtfnUrs and
'rmsrall on T. W. A).r, Jr., ( it)
I'riiif !-"( r. a if.
ifce Perfect CURE for
it
W
m
m
tea
I ,",V .J. t. 4
A
AMiiKICA FUijK-SPEECH.
Old English Words Appear In New
Guise Here.
Loral Rustle Dialects Are Composed Al.
most Entirely of Older Forma of
Words Now Obsolete Some
Queer Phrases.
The English of book-reading1 Ameri
cans differs from that of educated Eng
lish people, Writes Edward Etfgleston
in Century, only in those superficial
traits that are the unavoidable result of
a different environment and the fluctua
tions of fashion. But along; the shore
of a stream the current moves more
slowly, and suffers eddies and backsets.
Much old English of the days of Crom
well, some that goes back farther even
than to "Queen Marie's daies," will be
found in the dialect speech of rustic
neighborhoods in America. There are
facts in the history of English words
that will never be known until some of
the younger American philologists go
afield in search of the living forms that
grow in the soil about them, and that
are not less instructive than the dia
lectsof England assiduously gathered
by a multitude of observers, or the
patois of the French country to which
Littre was not above paying his re
spects. Disavowing any pretension to be
a philological expert, I propose to write
here as an observer of American folk
speech. On that portion of the history
of the English language which has to
do with its conditions and changes in
this country, and on that alone, I may
claim to speak with some authority, if
the life-long habit of studying the
people's speech, exceptional opportuni
ties for observing it in many widely
separated districts, and an extensive
acquaintance with writings of all sorts,
printed and manuscript, of the colonial
period, call give authority.
English travelers very early mention
the differences between colonial speech
and that of the mother country. This
arose partly from the great number of
new objects and processes that must
have names and partly from English
provincial words adopted into general
speech in America. For example,
"swamp," with a far-reaching Scandi
navian ancestry, and no doubt a long
provincial use in England, had to be
explained to English readers, though
its use appears to have been general in
the American colonies. P.y 1070 it had
passed into a verb in common use in
Massachusetts; thus Ninigret, the In
dian chief, is said to have ' swamped
himself" when he had hidden in a
wooded morass. In 1730 "swamp"
formed part of a compound word;
"swamp-law," in Maine stood for cer
tain extra-judicial methods of attain
ing justice known to all rude and pio
neer lands. The word "Mvuinp," like
oiuny other provincials of the tune,
bett3J its forti nes by immigration,
and was received into good English so
ciety when it went back.
There are indigenous words in our
folk-speech, but our local rustic dia
lects are composed almost entirely of
words m tlieir older tortus or older
senses, of English words now quite ob
solete, and of words from provincial
English dialects. When first I hoard
farmers in the Lake Oeorge region call
a "cowslip" a "eowslop," I smiled to
think how modern the corruption was,
and how eusy to imagine that the
name had something to do with the
feeding of a cow. lint rash guesses in
etymology are ever unsafe; "cusloppe"
is given as a form of the Anfclo-Suxon
.viir.l nine eenturies ujjo. l.ie etymol
ogists miss the history of this word,
and of the word "slop," by not know
ing that, both us noun and verb, "slop''
refers to any liquid or semi-liquid food
for cattle, und this over bo wide a re
gion of America as to make its an
tiquity certain.
Take unot her expression thut seems
strictly American. "She is in a perfect
gale," one says of a little girl or a
young woman in a state of effervescent
mirth. It is easy and natural to sup
pose this to be modern, and to derive it
from a seafarer's figure of speech. Hut
the Dunes who settled in Englund
spoke a tongue very much like the
Icelandic, anil there is in this speech
the word "gall" with a long vowel
meaning a "lit of guyety," so that
Anglo-Jluuish ladies in the court
of Knut probably "got into u
perfect gulu" as our American wom
en and girls do now. In New
England they have the verb to "train''
(or lo romp. For this I can find no re
mote Biicestry; it may have come from
the New Englund "trainin'," with its
rum, cider and ginger bread, but I do
not Cilnk it wi recent as thut.
i have given enough examples to
feliow thut the most ancient and least
mutable part of a lungiiugu is the
residuum the folk-speech. Fashions
muy change, but the country man i;-
slow to give up the ways and words ol
his forcluthcrs. If the world'achange
knock tin; sense out of a word, he will
put unollier ineaniiig into it with ut
little ultcration as possible. Some ol
the provincial English (icoplc any "lull
lowday" for holiday or holy day. Hut
New Englund hullow. d no holiday,
and kept holv no holy days hut the
Suhbutii. So from holiday, or the broad
sound of hallow-day, koiiih of our
northern farmers get "hollow-day"
that is, a day w ith no work in it. They
attach quite am-thcr m-iim- to ' hollow"
whi n they note the condition of the
atmosphere in whiih sound Is easily
carried. "The air la ao hollow that I
can hear a train ten miles off," one will
wy.
DANGEROU3 COASTINQ.
A runny
Incident of a Trip llosra Kof
ay Mountain.
The Norwegian kjcrdke are queer
little curriairea about ai feet Ion,
mode for the drvceot of snow-clad
mountain. They rarely eiccd a foot
In width, and arc ralvl toioe elht or
ton Inches on runner. In Ll right
hand th rider carries a lon-r polo.
ur)itisf from twrNo to eighteen feet
in length, with whWu he Is aide to
' The !", e?r "I "A Winder Jaiin
coasting, which is always dangerous,
but seldom as funny as in the present
case.
A gentleman was riding his kjoclke
down from Ilolmcnkollen, and before
him on the road he saw a lady and
gentleman walking. He called loudly
to them to get out of the way, but
either they did not hear or his pace
was too great, and they did not move
aside.
As he rushed madly on, his little
kjoelke, before he knew what had hap
pened, whipped up the lady, and there
she was sitting in front of him. What
was his astonishment to find that he
was conveying an utter stranger down
the mountain-side at this breakneck
pace! lie was too busy and too breath
less to speak, and they sped away.
The lady knew that she must sit
quite still, and after the first shock she
tucked her feet away and remained in
quiet bewilderment until they reached
the bottom.
There they stood aghast. Each
bowed to the other. Each apologized,
the one for being in the way, the other
for bearing off a lady so unceremoni
ously. All reserve soon wore off, and
by the time the lady's brother arrived
he found them chatting and laughing,
the best of friends.
ASHAMED OF THEMSELVES.
The Quter Effect of Photoarraphlne; Upon
Some Siberians.
"I have witnessed a good many,
amusing incidents in the course of my
career," said a New York photographer,
the other day, "but I think the one
that struck me as the most ludicrous
occurred while I was in Siberia a few
years ago. I had my camera with me,
and spent considerable time in taking
pictures of the people and surrounding
country. I had engaged the services
of two native servants, and one day,
having nothing better to do, I induced
one of them to sit for his photograph.
The fellow had never seen a mirror in
his life, and I dare say had no concep
tion of the degree of ugliness exhibited
upon his countenance. At any rate he
manifested no delight at seeing his
picture, though his companion ap
peared very much elated, and could
not rest until I had taken his picture
also. When the latter sa w his picture
he also seemed depressed. The
portraits appeared to have brought to
the minds of both strange revelations,
and they retired to their tent in a
thoughtful mood, each trying to
smooth down the bushy locks which
crowned their heads. Presently one of
them came to mo and borrowed a pair
of scissors, and shortly after they re
turned with scarcely a vestige of hair
remaining on their heads and implored
me to take their pictures again. The
fruit of the camera was to them like
the fruit of the tree of knowledge."
; What He Wauled.
At the hospital ihe other morning,
says Life, one of the patients was just
recovering from an attack of delirium
tremens, and, as is usual in such cases,
desired to dress and go home more than
anything else. It happened that one
of the young ladies connected with the
flower mission saw him, and, approach
ing, said: "I have some beautiful roses
here. Wouldn't you like some?" No
response. Again she said: "Wouldn't
you like to have some of these roses?"
Slowly his head turned, and, slightly
opening his bleary eyes, he said, much
to the cmbar ssment of the young
woman: "I'd a blamed sight rather
have my pants."
SAVING TIMBER IN MISSISSIPPI.
Stringent State Laws for the Preservation
of Forest from l ltliutlon.
Timber depredations, according to
the New York Evening Post, have been
htopped practically in Mississippi by a
law which punishes offenders severely
There ore largo areas of forest land
there la-longing either to the I'nited
States government or to the state, nnd
the temptation to settler in remote
regions to enter upon them and
help them' elves to wood was often too
strong to l.e resisted. When driven
from fedi ral land by deputy United
States mr-r ,!iiilM, the timlter thieves
found r fi'"e in the state forests,
which were not ho well policed, and by
moving fri :u the one territory to the
other they contrived to escape arrest.
The federal oHIeers finally became so
vigilant that timlter stealing proved a
dangerous business, and the thieves
transferred all their operations to the
state lands. The legislature thereupon
passed the law referred to, and It hnr
in proved the morals of the people so
much that some districts which former
ly were the scene of wholesale depre
dations are now utmost frpe from the
raids of poaching woodmen. The stat
ute imposes a fine of two dollars per
acre for each acre in every forty-acre
sub-division of land upon which any
trespass is committed. For the pro
tection of private owners It also pro
vides that for every tree cut down
without their consent a fine of fire dol
lars shall be paid.
A Cockatoo's Peculiar Wlihn.
In the exhibitof Mile. Muriska Mik
losy, attuclied to IhlgenU-ck's trained
animal show, there Is a cockutoo thut
apM'ura to have an aversion to Old Eng
lund. (me of the features which help
to iniike Mile. Miklosy's trained cock
atoos a Welcome item on the pro
gramme consists of the hoisting of a
iiumU-r of national lings. Tin; third
Hug to be hoisted Is that of re;tt Jlrit
aln. I'ntil recently the patriarch of
Mile. Miklosy's llock, one "ringolrr,"
did the hoisting. JU-rently, however,
another cockatoo, named "Vert-Vert."
has Is-cn doing the work IriMcnd.
"Vert-Vcrf does his work splendidly,
except in one Instance. At every per
forir.nnrn he jxisitivcly refuses to hoist
the English "1,'nion Ju:k.M Neither j
threats nr lrites run Induct him to j
elevate. John Hull's banner. Ho run ;
the rtA, whita and blue and the red, I
white and bUck aloft wita neatnesa ,
and dir.po, tch. lie. sends the start and
stripes tipwart In gallant hiipc, but
when he gets to the flatf of Enflijd hei
Strike sk.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
THE CHINESE LANGUAGE.
It la Not So Monosyllabio as Is
Commonly Supposed.
Nor Is It as Difficult to Learn as a Hear
ing of It Would Lead One to
lielieve The Slothod
of Study.
There are about sixty thousand char
acters in the Chinese language proper,
but the average Chinaman no more
learns all of these characters than the
everyday American learns the one
hundred thousand words in the Eng
lish language. The Chinaman, howev
er, learns on the average more than
does an American in a similar position
in life. A Chinaman who can neither
read nor write is a rarity, according to
the New York Evening Post. Chinese
is not a moncsyllabic language, as
many suppose, aud it is impossible to
utter in Chinese any but the shortest
Sv-ntences in monosyllables. In writing
the Chinaman makes one complicated
but integral character for each word,
but that word may be properly spoken
in two, three or four syllables. His
syllables are divided by no longer in
tervals than are his words, and that is
what makes the language sound to a
foreigner like a sing-song jargon. We
do not know whether lie is telling a
story or attempting a song. The Chi
nese perhpps thinks the sumo thing of
an American who bites off his words
and swallows them or telescopes one
into, the other, liusiness men thrown
in contact with Chinei-e merchants
who speak pure Chinese say that it is
not difficult to learn. Instead of
twenty-six letters, not including the
useless &, the Chinese have five hun
dred or six hundred syllables, and
these are combined into various forms
to make the sixty thousand words in
their "dictionary." These syllables
vary in meaning according to the tone
in which they are spoken or t lie stroke?
used in writing them.
A Chinaman can unite any two of
the six hundred syllables and make an
intelligent word. This is not the case
with the English language. This
flexibility is perhaps owing to the
shortness of their words (seldom more
than three syllables) and the tone oi
atretics belonging to the Kj'Uubles
when spoken or written. A syllable
may mean one of a hundred things,
and its particular meaning is limited
by placing another syllable of similnr
significance before or after it, using
its particular tone, or stroke when
writing. Sometimes the syllables are
uttered in such rapid succession that
they seemingly form one word, but the
trainect Chinese ear notes the tones,
and he is easily understood the
marvelous subtleties of accent convey
ing the expression to a nicety. lie
does not huve to state a proposition,
and then, in order to make himself
clear, restate it by the usual "or, in
other words." There are no "other
words" with the Chinese. The tone
gives the meaning. The Chinese have
a s: tern of two hundred and fourteen
radicals, having various strokes from
one to seventeen, which are combined
with the characters. Each radical has
a separate meaning, generally denot
ing the simplest object, as man, sky,
earth, water, king. The student first
leui.is these, which answer to the A II
('; he next studies the syllables, or
combinations, and thus he has learned
to read and sMdl. (irouping the
syllubles into words depends upon his
powers of speech or of composition in
writing. Whut is lHipularly known as
"slang" Is not known to the Chinese.
Their language is sufficiently copious
without resorting to the brutal forms
of speech. The most withering con
tempt or the keenest of satire may be
expressed in the politest terms.
Uoineslle Dialect.
There are many wonderful dialects
In existence, as renders of modem lit
erature, snvs Harper's Magazine, have
Only SOc. Head
THE
III
stock I np, gloret, children's clothing, etn., eUi." 'I ho why to t r ol con. .my.
Ol'R SPECIALTY. ;:MT.'',h.T;.I,'.1, n0.,!"W.,1 r-t n e.,n,,,Vte .lt forfmrn
w id lo fW il. A.l Ii.j fTinUrlitl, e . lo Vim nhtt. t imh rtiti in if fitivuivif Jul
how lo U, m tt, flW..lU. lUU iuU Will b WuftU 1.U llUi'. tho tuf U.4) r;l tcrl.iUoIl
tu tUjf f ulli.'
GREATEST OFFER
A srylniif of the following; stsndnrr! hooks, Ixni' d In I M. tiw
larse , . ier. ad sent free) or the i.iUcrn iiicl t sn. ( n of iiiid
cost y ( to ",,. i uh n a .lore, delivered frse In Hiiy nit f H.e I nl. ' ' laicn's,
tf you send et once twenty f)VN g,,( gtAm(l4 frrf a De,y yearly sol's. r tl'.n. v . ..- u hiv hy
this, hut ome a shim, ritier alwavsa s'il. flir i nn srin. t tin (.dlu.ru any tiu.u. IkuUmi
the nurulera of Uie boots you want, bou'l malt 'till Us too lulc
I Th V.l in Ms -WilVI. Collies
S I'. '.!'. tea tll'ld-Mil (.!.
I 1ms o, ro.'HiS -M... M I H(..l.t s
4 1ms IkM blouM-tniKl) fas
(.((fl-Mn MnCfUrK.4
1s Vjcl.s ri iso -ch. ri,,,,. sf s.sias,
It SB SMt( or A Sim ( h.rlll. M -,-- T
PI as ,.e ll. nri'.a -Is Muvti.
TeS If. ." ! i.mN(H "
ta. -(c,ttli.rHDlci4stfcr.fS r1 U.
II I .r t,m thi Ifr.tol I . l (.,..
II A v i. .,( r.i.t, - M,v I .1 i ,r
I M.i ' ' t c.r..M I lu... I) 1.rml4.
1 I AlllLI I . S -II.JM ..(,.,
!
UsVl liQM. nr. ri.Lll I. 1 II,,
A'Miws. 1111; M.CAI.L t(.,
Pkof Dolbear says electricity pos
sesses no virtue as such for the cure of
disease. It will make as bad ulcers as
it will heal and destroy life as compla
cently as strychnine or the guillotine.
It is not likely that earthquakes ever
result from electric disturbances, and
it has not yet been proved that they
ever give rise to any such, though when
large masses of reck are displaced, as
in Japan in 1S91, Blight local changes
in magnetic curves have rosulted.
PnoF. Asa Gray Baya that the Wash
ington elm at Cambridge has been esti
mated to produce seven million leaves,
which would make a surface radiation
of about five acres in extent, and give
out every fair day in the growing sea
son seven and three-fourths tons ol
moisture.
PRACTIC
PHI LAN I HROPY.
Institution
for tlio Train lug
of Jewish
Vnutli nt Ilimovcr.
A novelty in practical philanthropy
is described by W. C. Fox, formerly
consul to liruiifnviiik, Germany, who
has just returned to Washington.
"During my visit to Hanover," said
Mr. Fox in the course of a recent conver
sation with a St. I.oiiisli'.olie lleiiiocrHt
correspondent, "I examined an insti
tution for the training of Jewish
youth. Tho institution is something
entirely new. It has been established
by Alexander Aloritz Simon. Air.
Simon is tho American vice consul at
Hanover, where lie is also a prominent
banker. Those who have knowledge
of the situation in Russia and Germany
to-day fully understand thut one of the
chief causes of the unti-Somitie move
ments in tiiose countries is that the
jyvvs are
solely dealers and traders.
This is because children naturally ac
quire a taste for and follow tho occu
pation of tlieir parents and other rela
tives. "Mr. Simon told mo," continued Air.
Fox, "that in his visits to the United
States in !Hti:3 and 1MI0, he remarked
the distressing conditions of the Jew
ish Immigrants, arising mainly from
the fact that they were unable to per
form such work as they could obtain
from labor. Knowing no mechanical
trade, tiicy were of necessity driven to
puddling. Air. Simon, some time ago,
became convinced that if many of the
Jewish youth in Russia and Eastern
Persia were properly taught trades, it
would be the best answer to tho chief
argument of the anti-Semitic agitators.
Actuated by this belief, he founded
this institution. He has purchased
some seventy acres of hind near the
city of Hanover. The necessary build
ings have been erected .' o Hint sixty
boys can be ueeominoiluUd. 'l ho prime
object is to tench agriculture, garden
ing and fruit culture in all tlieir
branches. Carpentering, loeksmilhing,
hhoeintiking, baking and other trades
will be taught. The movement and
the inslitul ion have already received
the hearty indorsement and assistance
of prominent Israelites in Europe.
There is every evidence that the ex
periment will prove successful and pio
neer tho way for similur institutions in
other purts of Europe."
The emperor of Russia had up to a
short time ago a double in the person
f a banker of the name of Carlsben In
Copenhagen. Ciirlsbcn was introduced
some time ago to the ear, who himself
remarked the extraordiuury likeness.
This proved unfortunate for tho
'milker, who henceforth drove In a car
riage and four, and was only too
-ileased when he was taken for the em
peror of all tht Russius. As a result
Curlslien went insulin on tho subject
und recently died in a madhouse in the
firm faith that he w.is the cur.
Tun lie licet'., Iiiamoiid Alining com
pany of South Africa has paid itsshare--holders
an average of about "5 per
ccnl. yearly profit during the past live
years. It paid V'.'i per cent, for the
first half of last year, and had over
SMO.ono.iioo worth of property credited
on lt- balance sheet. Its capital is
This All Through. 5
Newest fleilirns. f-rtdliT Ptvles. perfect Patterns
for Lidlca. Miwes and ' hiWicu. Superb liliininilum.
Ka-hioii Sulci. II 'ilili anil Ileum v. rumy Vmk.
Iti-autifiilly Muitrnli d Suit (lions. Sinrl.-.. I hllilrcirs
I'sire. Prw'tlnl I'ai,'". Pi-tctlcal. ii.-fiil nnd economical
lilnt. of ell kinds. J'rc.cniinr'ftl. tn J..i-Mimi .lonintil
fur the niillii'ti. A saluaUle, clean household pjpsr fur
enl sue. a year.
QUEEN OF FASHION
tllUGTIUTINiJ
Tbi Celebrated I'cfcll four Pullers!
ElUblUhetf Ten! Fl Yean.
Toil way think you eannof nfford sent e-pi-vo. Yon
rannot alf .rd to bn will t It 'I ns y " Kins
Will actually save you (".in liftyto Ion hundred linn
f0 cents hi It i h'nt. " ll.w lo muko i.vt-r mJ drtwM s.
U A -v.
A -v,- ,'s I i.s W, U. r-t"..
iV sii.fs 1 1
I iw ii.k Sen i -1 Tt.rrsdts.
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