Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, April 19, 1895, Image 1

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I The persistent wooing lover
Is the one who gets the maid ;
I And the oonstant advertiser
1 Gels the cream or all the trade. !
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ciininiltfltllfll lll:tlllll (fill l nwiittllil Bin
OFFICIAL
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I The man who tries to advertise
I With printer's ink consistent,
1 One word must learn nor from it torn,
I And that one word's persistent
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THIRTEENTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1895.
WEEKLY NO. 633
SEMI-W EEKLY NO. 828
.SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE.
OibfERS UP TO DATE.
CYCLING TOURNAMENT. '
Highest of all in Leavening Power.-
Latest U. S. Gov't Report
PAPER
PUBLISHED
"Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY.
At $2.50 per year, $1.25 for biz months, 75 ota.
Eor three monens. .
Advertising Rotes Made Known on
Application.
The "BAaiiB," of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, is published by the same com
pany every Friday morning. Subscription
price, f l per year, r or advertising rates, aaaress
OE&XliT Xu PATTEESOIT, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek,
ueppuer, uregon.
Oregon, or "Gazette,1
THIS PAPER is kept on file at B. C. Dake's
Advertising Agency, 64 and 65 Merchants
Exchange, Han Francisco, California, where cou
xacta for advertising can be mode for it.
Union Pacfio Railway-Local card.
No. 9, mixed, leaves Heppner 3:30 p. m. dally
xcept Sunday. Arrives at Willows Junction
i6:20 p. ra.
No. 10, mixed, leaves Willows Junction 7:15
t. m. Arrives at Heppner 10 p. m. daily except
Sunday.
East bound, main line arrives at Willows
Junction 1:46 a. m.
West bound, main line, leaves illows Junc
tion 12:15 a. m.
West bound Portland faRt freight with pas
senger coach leaves Willows Junction 6:38 p. m.
-and arrives at The Dalles at 12:01a. m. Here
passengers from the l.ranch layover till 3:15 a.
m. and take the fast mall west bound which ar
rives at Portland 7:25 a. m. The Dalles and
Portland passenger leaves The Dalles daily at
2:16 p. m. and arrives 'it Portland 6:30 p.m.
Leaves Portland 8:00 a. m. daily and airlvesat
The Dalles 12:15 n. m. This connects with the
ast bound wav freight with passenger coach
vhlch leaves The Dalles at 1:30 p. m., arriving
at Willows Junction 6:58 p. m.
United States Ofllclals.
' president Grover Cleveland
Via.Praairlnnt. Ad ai Hfevenaon
Honratjirv nf Htnt Walter O. Gresham
Hecretary of Treasury John H. ('rlinl
Secretary of Interior Hokebinlth
Hnerelarv of War Daniel H. liftniont
KeereMry of Navy Hilary A. Herbert
PoKtinanter-Gnral William L. Wi'son
Attorney-Oreneral Richard 8. Olney
BooretAry of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
ftnvarnnr W. P. Lord
nonrotary of Btata H. II. Kinc-uid
Trwaanrer Phil. MotachHn
Hurt.. Public Inatraction II. M. Irwin
Artirnuv General (7. M M'eman
iH. W. MnHride
rjenaiur j. H. Mitchell
I Binaer Hermann
Congressmen J W. K. Ellis
Printer W. H. Lead
I R. 8. H-n.
SVr,rm JnrlirM . A. Mix IT.
( C. E. WulvmrloB
Seventh Judicial District.
irnnif JnH W. L. RrStshnW
Prowicuting Attorney A. A. Jayn
Morrow County Officials.
Joint Renntor -
ItnimwAntative
(v-nnty.Tndge....
t'omniiaaionnr..
J. M, Raker.
" Clerk
" Hheriff
" Ttxnaarer
Surveyor...
' Hchool Bup't...
" t'oroner
B 1 , pi
E. McNEILL, Receiver.
TO TIKE
GIVES THE CHOICE
Of Two Transcontinental
dose. ?wifWSUa J1
The
25ets..
EOcts. and
T?1.00 Bottle.
One cent
i It is sold on a guarantee by all drug
gists. It cures Incipient Consumption
and is the best Couch, and Croup Cure,
For sale by T. W. Ayers, Jr., Druggist
GREAT.
NORTHERN Ry.
UNION
PACIFIC RY.
VIA
VIA
Spokane ;' Denver
MINNEAPOLIS OMAHA
St. Pnnl TCnnsn; ("irv
" V Th's extra-
ordinary Ke-
juveaalor is
ma most
wonderful
discovery of
i no age. it
has ben en-
forsed by the
lcadingsclen-
tiflo men of
Europe and
America.
Hudyan Is
Ubfe T28e
Hudyan stops
rfemarjrBimss
of the dig.
. i . . . a. cuareo in zu
SAN hHflN S Mw.o
w f i v iiriiv i w i i f nrim
nuui
EAKHOOD
lOnWiHiiK
mm
MM
Kit; iiii
7
Very Latest Fad la for
Bleached Bivalves.
The
Great Meet at Chicago;
gust 5 to 12.
Au-
LOW RATES TO ALL
EASTERN CITIES.
Ocean Steamers Leave Portland
Every 5 Days For
For fall details call on O. B. & N.
Agt Dt at Heppoer, cr address
W. H. HTJRLBURT,
Gen. Pass. Agt.
POBTLAND, OBBOON.
Constipation,
Dirainefs,
Falling gen.
sations, Nerv
ous twitching
of the eyes
and other
pai to.
Strengthens,
Invigorates
and tones the
entlresyttem.
Hudyan cures
Deb illty,
Nervousness,
Emissions,
anddevelopcs
and restores
weak omans.
Piilns in the
back, loFsei
b v d a v or
iiithtstopped
JIN I.
I.-..-: - -m..,:,.- -.viK-'Lh'jiA.T.jr:
qulrklv. Over 2,000 prlvRte endo-sements,
i'rematurenufS means iinnotency in ihe flret
RtiKe. It Is a syrap'om of e-minal weakness
a-n barr-nni'B. It can be Slopped lu 20 days
b7 the use of Hudyan.
Thevew discovery was read" iy the Biwclal
JsUof the old famoiiB Hudson Medical Institute.
It is the strongest vliaiizer made. It is very
powerful, but haimlim Hold for $1.00 a pack
agoorS packages for K5.00(plalnsealed boxes).
Written guarantee given for a cure. 1 f you buy
six boxes and are rot entirely cured, six more
win ix sent to youtreeotaiicriargt-s.
W11 nr i-imuiarxann testimonials. Afnress
iHODHON MbDlCAL 1N8IITUTK,
JJcinctlon Stockton, Market dc l ilts St.
Ban I' ru ic,ii o. Cl .... ,
, A. W. Oowan
1. a. Ho'ithhjr
Jnlina Knithly
J.R. Howard
.T.W. Morrow
.O. W. llarnnirton
.... Frank Gilliam
J. r', Willi.
(leo. lord
Anna Knlaiger
T. W. Ayara. i
bkppnks town orncias.
n.vor Thou. Morgnn
f . O. K. Vnniiwnrth. M
Mchtnthal. wis Pttrtn, T. W.Aysm.Jr.
H. 8. Horner, E. J. Slocnin.
Pr.lw .F-.'-J,,!orl!
Trmumntr -K. t Frw-Und
Manual N. B. Whetstone
Precmrt Oflleri
Jn.tioe of the Paao
4 kinstabU
I'nlted 8tatM Land OHiesr.
THI DALI.M. OS.
J. F. Mnore
A.B. Higgs
LioKAum, oa.
B.F. Wilmm
1. 11. Kobbins
San Francisco
nd all point in I'alifornia, via tha Mt, Hhuta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
Ihs grant highway tlinmgh California tn all
IKilnts I'.wt and South, (trand Hoenin Routa
or rnn r-acinn i 4HIM. Pullman Hnffet
Binopera. Brnjondilam Hloepera
Attai-had to expiwM train, attordma anponor I
wuoimu'KiaiiciQi lor wond-clan paMengeni.
fur nitm, tickMa. almping car rsmirvation.
no. mil nrm or adilrvwi
X HOKIII.KK, Mauaier. K. P. RO'lEBH, Ant
ren. r. a r. Agt.. Portland. Oregou
IF TCU WANT INFORMATION flGu'JT
11111
inr. a leltcr or l""T.I cnr.1 ro
Till: PHKI 1UINS TIP4IT.
I0HN WEDDFRBUHN, Manaqlna Attorne,
P.O. Uoi 4S.
WAHlll.NUl
.U.C.
..E. L. Frwland
..N. 8. WheUtoD
.... H-(ritr
.... Kacanvw
.... Roitr
....Rnnivar
eZSBST SOCZETZStS.
RAWLINS FONT, NO. II.
(. A. R.
l -mm at Lciingtua. Or., ti tut HatarrUy of
rh month. All vatoraa ar Invited In )oin.
i;-C. Hooa. Uao, W.Hhitm.
Aduntant, tf Commantter.
Phy
J. H. FELL, M. D.,
sician& Surgeon.
HEPPNItR. OltF.OOM.
OFFICC AT COMN DMUft aTOHC.
LUM BER!
HTI flAVR FOR NA1.R ALL KIXtM OF TM
f dn i 1 Lu m i't, ISniiaaal Hppnr, at
aw i mown a in
BOOTT HA-WMIIjIj.
FEB 1.000 FICT. Kol'iOf.
" CLK AM,
IF rRUVFRF n
XiM fmt l.itu (rt
KFPFKFR,
a.litlaiuii.
- 110 OS
- 17 M
WILL ADD
L HAMILTON, Prop.
l.Jt llmiilltoittMMiir
Plfilfll!llfl!lfl!111g
rrvSKlNS PltUCClU'D P""
80LOI5RS, WIDOWS,
CHILDREN. PARENTS.
1 tluv f... u..l,tlp nnt a.llnra ritMlilrri In llir llni-ni
1M R"lt B-O B-i Juirln the rranlur Armvor Now uliirrih-war
" JSL. Jsvkw " Y M -T ' 'r.rvlvor. of the I n-lln wr of IKfi to IKt'J, and
Uirtr irLlowt, now rntltM. (nt anil re)-"-t l jHltiw
fc innn wiHthof lov.lv Mu.if fartarh-S wlalir. 1 imuMnds entitled to hluliar mte.
i: w full alia Shl Atu.lr .rf .
bfnt. hrtghtrit, llvell.tl and nntl popular 5
SelKllont. both vocal and Intlrumenul.
m gon.n ur in m mot t legant maaaer. In- i
eluding four Urg tin portrait.
iAnminuu, fa poata Danctr,
ADILWA PAT7I4
ItlHMIt 8LUUMAH CUTTING. r3
tZ THE NEW YORK MUSICALECH0C0.3.
g; Urodwy Thearr HUg..New Y'KkOty.
iiiiiiiuiuiiuuiUiiM'imiu
Llghtrat.
t Caaleat
Working,
Mot
Accurate.
Compact,
Moat Modern ana prcfrettW
For ratslugiM or lufomnthm write to
Tim marlin nun ARMS CO.,
Nr HrlM, C' nil.
Th thnmb I anfalllrir
c-f ch a. ler 1 a. Puu.rv 'I i- In.
dlratr a atn rig lil "! nnri I
ri4 (lrnioe. i lrl, .ui l. Iht j
1-144 malrd 1 1f, tlie tlo n.hof Ih.M
of 4fetl .tiaa id bu.it...
nHtT. lu.th nl Im iI l-et
to lh l- r n.an or ,m..nt i.d
lnMifr halt llamii. tf
.rr .tLli, -a tMr !
! voimri ttt aw til.., cm i
4. it 4 In .rnl 4.f m. 'f.l t
rr.M4 nt tlx fid'a awfc
for a fxor th mar rl In ha f I
.. TM i .waal 1 rt b d ala
reAlietnent. Culture, fti.4 a k.e of
Bin. pv. If, n4 tclii Aperw
tta thta lat if tt.ua.ti ail, th.
puf'.iy n)"r the litrrvr, ttrwll4
or Ihir'O-l .'t.lie ll At
ti.l Tin I a - 4
tutf at 4 tn, uh atlt lm rat
i.air In ! ( "! ott..iv
an A .. l-.tj at Itwlw. ri
Hationai M ci iwm.
WM. rCNLaSP. H.
rrtaltUaL
R HI'
'HOP.
faahlr.
TK MCTS A GENERAL BANKING MSNES?
White Ones Are Probably Doctored Oys
termen Who Ought to Know Say They
Are Mythical Nature's Own Shell'
fish Not to He Improved Upon.
"15leached oysters" is the latest and
a rapidly growing; fad. The fashionable
uptown restaurants are catering; to it.
An oyster that does not peer forth
snowy white from the depth of its -shell
is considered bad form. It does not
appear that the Albirio-hued bivalve
is iirltiroved by the blanching- process.
In fact, it is held by all fair-minded
people who have tried them that the
flavor wnich gives our oysters their
superiority over all the bivalves of the
world is destroyed entirely. 15ut they
are said by self-constituted authori
tites to look better, and it is the
fashion to have them served that way.
The course of treatment to which
the luscious shellfish is subjected to
bring-o about the pule and ghostly hue
is the secret of the restaurant men.
The wholesale oyster dealers know
nothing about it.
A reporter for the New York World
went aboard a floating warehouse, on
the North river, the other day, and
made an inquiry as to the best method
of blanching oysters. It was niparent
that oystermen do not relish the news
paper notoriety which has been thrust
upon the innocent and inoffensive
shellfish.
"If 1 could meet the man who start
ed all tliis talk about typhoid fever and
malaria in oysters," said one old salt,
"I'd chuck him in the bay and hit him
on the head with a boathook when he
came up the first time, and there
wouldn't be no second time.
"As if it ain't bad enough that this
has been one of the worst oyster years
we ever had, but on top of that some
crazy fool up in Connecticut tries to
fatten his oysters in a creek into which
a sewer empties. What's the result? A
lot of college students and professors
get sick and four of them die. What
follows? The newspapers publish it
all over the country, typhoid fever in
oysters, and the business is almost par
alyzed in some places. Forty million
people eating gysters and four of them
get sick and die! How many people
die every day from eating pork and
beef, yet does that scare anybody?
No, sir.
"Now, on top of all this, some fool
restaurant men go to making their
oysters white, which Ood never intend
ed they should be, or lie would have
made 'em so. I don't suppose that the
oysters wire hrtrt any bj it, but Rijine
fellow gets sick, after knocking about
the Tenderloin all night, and remem
bers that he ate a dozen bleached oy
sters, and then he hollers that he has
been poisoned. '
"Some one writes to a newspaper
that sulphate of zinc will blench an
oyster. I don't know whether it will
or not, but a chemist told me that it
would not. I!ut the oyster trade rrets
it in the necK all the same. Thnnk
goodness that these stories did not get
out two months ago, or the oystermen
would all be in the hands of the asso
ciated charities. Our season is over for
cheap oysters, in which the money is
made. Nothing goes out of New ork
now but shell oysters, New York
counts, and culls. The oyate-r business
after the mi-Idle of Novemln-r goes, to
llaltimore. There are no oyster can
neries in New York.
'This fad for while oysters I never
heard of l-fore this year. There are
no pure white oystt-rs. The oyster
takes his color from his Mirroumlings
nnd an old tiysU-rman tun tell lit u
glance which one of the beds ht-n-a-
Uinta an oyste r comes from, rliu llliu
l'oint is often silvery in h;m urunce.
There Is no way that 1 know of to make
an oyster white.
"When the wi-ittht-r Is not too oold
oysters, after la-ing taken tip. tin- sunk
on flouts for from twi lve to twetity
fotir hours in bnn kis'i wat-r. rem-rally
m-tir the mouth of n fn-i.li-wnti-r ert-t-k.
Tliia wutt-r tlit-y will drink fn-c-ly mid
fill up so Unit thi-y 1-HiU fat. This hits
the e,Ti'-l of washing out the s-u water
ami mud tin. I may have lx- n taken in.
I know ever-; oy-t.ir Wd In Nov York
bay. Iting Niulld Miuttd. or the rivers
of New Jer- y, utid I know of no oyster
that la what you might full white.
IVr-oni-lly, I would let atieh alone if
olTi n-d ttte.
"Nat tire cannot In improved ttpoii in
the metti-r of the nyater. rxrept to give
A Milwaukee llider and Osmond to Repre
sent England's Wheelmen Some Amer
ican Crarka International Cycling
Championship Medal.
Special Chicago Letter.!
Walter C. Sanger is to represent
England in the international cycling
championship races, which will occur
in Chicago on the two last days of the
national annual meet of. the League of
American Wheelmen, August 5 to 12.
This much is announced upon the au
thority of a letter received by the
national racing board a few days ago
from llenry Stormey, editor of the
Cyclist, of London, and leader in the
movement to raise funds with which to
r3
Z1MMERM
COLLKCriONS
Mla on Faorat! Ternrn.
EXCHANGE I'Ot'GHT & SOU
B KITS HIV if
aend English amnteurS to compete ii
the Chicago tournament.
Well, Sailer can represent Great
Britain to the queen's taste. He is an
American, and a Milwaukee American
at that, his family being of sturdy
Teutonic stock, though t!ii- name is
English. Whether other representa
tives of the llritish isles will be pres
ent in Chicago during the great meet is
now uncertain. Harris, who was
looked upon as Sanger's sure conqueror
in the race for the English one-mile
championship, but who failed, was to
be sent, but has decided not to come.
Mecredy, Ireland's foremost rider, re
cently suffered a severe fall and will
probably stay at home, and McLaren,
the speedy Scot, will almost certainly
do the jame.
Osmond, who was England's cham
pion of champions in 18111, but who lost
some of his laurels to Zimmerman by
default last year, Is now in Chicago
and is training diligently.
So the international character of
what will undoubted'y Vh"! g-ea'.est
cycle race meeting ever tuiil w' il really
depend upon one man Osmond. The
American public will refuse to take
Sanger, "English champion," serious
ly. It will insist upon regarding him
eh Sanger, plain American and, next to
the heavy mau 'infb,
and extraordinary height would lead
one to suppose wnen ne is seen m
street clothes. He is a human grey
hound and no mistake, weighing one
hundred and sixty-five pounds. The
most noticeable feature of his riding
is developed when he is contrasted
with American riders who train with
him. Not one of them has that dainty
smoothness of pedaling for which
Osmond is famous, and to their credit
be it said that they do not ride with
open mouth, as the big Englishman
does
Should Osmond determine to com
pete with Zimmerman and Sanger it
may be relied upon that he will be a
dangerous man to bet against, for he
is cautious in preparation and will be
masterly in execution.
Can Zimmerman, be beaten? It is a
hard question, lie is a marvel and the
Hying quarter-mile record would have
to be placed at a phenomenally low
figure in order to win from him in the
last long rush of a mile race. That
Sanger cannot cope with him is very
generally believed, although experts
who have observed the Milwaukeean
closely of late have had this opinion
severely shocked by the man's evident
great power. He is a giant, but his
FOR MEN OF SCIENCE.
Deep-sea soundings in the interest
of science and commeroo were begun
in 1868.
Tub mean annual temperature at the
Arctic regions is below thirty degrees
Fahrenheit.
The sun throws vertical rays on the
earth's surface only upon an area equal
to about thirty-five square miles at any
one time.
IlEPPARcniON, 100 years B. C, count
ed 1,012 stars with the naked eye and
Holmaus 1,022. The telescope now
counts 100,000,000.
A well-knows geologist has com
puted the earth's age on the basis of ex
periments made on the effect of heat
and pressure on certain rocks. He con
cludes that the earth's age as a planet
is 24,000,000 years.
Oleo oil is made from the choicest
fat of beef cattle, chilled in ice water,
then melted at a temperature of 140 de
grees Fahrenheit. From this is pressed
a perfect soluble oil, known as oleo oil,
which is the only beef product used in
oleomargarine.
It is asserted that since the earth
quake in South Carolina the soil in
ISerkley county has been more produo-
muscles are as Bupple and his life as j tive than ever Kefore. Prof. Newman,
simple as though he were a Blender
stripling. He can drive a high gear
with a smooth, swift rush before which
Johnson, the grand-stand favorite of
this early season, went down like a
reed at Sandusky and Toledo, a few
days ago.
The big guns of the international
tournament will be Osmond, Zimmer
man, Sanger and Johnson. The latter
may again succumb to J. I'. 151 iss, known
as the American cycling , "Pocket Her
cules," and undoubtedly the speediest
and pluckiest rider in Chicago. He is
a reddieaded, bantam like chap who
weighs 145 pounds, though he does not
look it. He shows remarkable fierce-
if
Wry svT
vm
international cvc'linm c-iiAMrioNsnip
MKllAL ONE IIALK EXACT H1ZK.
ness in mushing Intra races anl lias
now repeatedly vanquished Johnson.
A host of other fine riders is on the
Amerienn path this season, and in the
lot may he discovered several men who
will t-ITi-cttiiilly battle with the popular
leaders for supremacy. Gary ih a llos
ton product of this season who has run
away from Windle, lylcraml laylor,
who were among the iiivineililcs last
year. Altogether, I lie international
races niny he anticipated with lively
interest by all who feel a pride in the
i-velopment of physical America. It
will k! ami unparalleled among the
great athletic events of the year.
EDUCATIONAL NOTES.
HANOr.ll.
Zimmerman, the best rider in 1hia
country. There is home uncertainty
in Osmond's mind lis to whether he
will compete. Helms a reputation to
lose, and its Hint reputation is of Inn
ness value to him he u ill not jeopardize
it foolishly.
Osmond's tirogresH In training has
been watched closely and lilts been
mystifying, lie hits reeled off no won
derful quarters, halves or miles by
which the Iioh-h of a pill. lie which
wants to see It i in win or lose on Ida
merits run be relilied. He begun
work on ( hli itgo's line Itoiilevnnl sys
tem about two months ngo, taking
comparatively leisurely rnles In com-
puny with friends Ami hastening the
pace a hit tow aril the close to liiilueo
perspiration. When the tiew track waa
completed he begun training there.
lie hua no tniiner, believing that lie
know Ids phvsii-iil ability and require
ments belter than rui.V other man, and
TllK first professorship of history
"-as established at Oxford In 1721.
Si-aik, In 1HH5, had :il,ns0 aehools,
Uil.OOO teachers and l.bVI.OOu attendance.
TllK United Statea haft 115 inedii-ul
schools, regular, ec-lectle and homeo
pathic.
TllK total Income from all source of
the American college In 1HV1 was 810,-
stii,m.
TllK first town achool In thla country
wasofM-ned for business in Hurtford,
Conn., In 1042.
Tiik most celebrated rabbinical
m hoola were those of Jumnia, taught
by Gumeliul, of Tihe-rias, Alexandria,
llabylou and Jerusalem.
l oll the feeding of London a little
........ . ,
more limn ;ij:i.'i"'.i ton oi mem, ihhii-
trv and tfcncrul provision were de
livered during ttie year from llin pun
lie markets alone. I ho lotal was
sonic I..VHI ton morn than In any previ
ous year.
of Clemson college, accounts for this
on the theory that the earthquake pro
vided better drainage than previously
existed.
TREES AND FRUIT.
Daniel ITarhold, of Berks county,
Pa., has a peach tree on his premises
which has borne good fruit for Beventy
years.
An apple tree In Clinton county, Mo.,
was bearing fruit and blossoms at the
same time a week ago, and up in Cat-
skill, New York, a horse chestnut tree
was in full bloom for the second time
this summer.
The bread fruit tree seen In the
Dutch East Indies grows forty to fifty
feet high. The fruit is round or slight
ly oval in fdiape, first green, then
brown, then turning yellow when fully: -ripe.
-
V rp-AB tree In Fulton Btet in
Hempstead, L. I., has ripe pears and
blossoms on it, and an apple tree on
the same grounds is also now in blos
som. A horse chestnut tree in Myrtle
avenue, Brooklyn, in front of Wash
iiigton park, now has its second crop of
blossoms this season.
An apple tree known tf) be one hun
dred und forty-three your old, on the)
property of Mrs. Delia Hotchkiss, in
Cheshire, Conn., was destroyed by a
recent storm. It bore fruit every full,
but only on one side each year. The
side that bore one year would be bar
ren the next. The tree yielded about
one hundred and forty bushed an
nually.
IN ANCIENT TIMES.
The Human charaeter were first
used in types at Home In 1407.
The Greek garment were frequent
ly woven in gorgeon patterns and
embroidered with gold and silver.
At nl sit was not the public bene
factor lie I represented. He wh the
most exacting tax collector the Roman
world had up to hi time aver seen.
Tiik ancient Etjiiopiun Milted the
bodies of their dead and hung them up
In a smokehouse to be dried and cured.
They were thu kept for a year, when,
perfectly pn served, they were turned
over to the relative for burial.
BRIGHT BEAMS.
Malick make friends of fools, then
rushes them to ruin.
Timk In the hand of an Idle man I a
dangerous weapon.
Tun mini who "want the earth" fet
but ix feet of it at last.
Snow l pure ami flower arm awert,
but in all t lie world them I nothing an)
I awei-ily pure a a
I purely aw eel and
buby' smile.
hanee to wu,h out and fatten up ' he employ a young Liiilishuiim mere-
some hlilf-sult
'pie understand
OKIT.ON
ri ftr II.. v fir.. lit.f try I
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rftjitv f ,lt fsr.if ft
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f ft' 4 ,' i If.ftl
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It mi m eM4 araa.
TWf IttMirata rif taHy la
Pt itft si I aaaaraA.
..
T ft M l
RlpansTahu!cs
4 f4 -nmrr" '
tt rtA cms
RicoaTtViiMt frt.,
Of irntl', f ''I.
tf it ttimn i iit'frii
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9 tot A It n f 9-Tf
fl. fn'9t t4 f of t 4r
w COPYRIGHTS.
rt f nTti rTriT r-
I tit tt r n w?'i n
Umlhafll K"Ht-, A'M4 N'M)M(ftWtiilt
4W4.5ftt t"k ! ff,
9w , irthrillfe' A r mm. 4
le'H -t "! ? i tm ll t ii h
r -4 .i tft (r T- ii.'fi.'l 4
m '. t mrH i fw t
t w m
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- j . -mwA V S : .!,- -V !-. . . i. i nin.tir.
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'I l I.I lk '-. T-. t,H4lu,i lwt.iil lw,iiir.
? ; -. s sf f.si- M it i
I
water. When the
people umii-rstanii unit me iiii-acm-u
nyst.-ra are unnatural and artificial
tin-y will la-e.iitK! auipiclou of them
and be aatlsllel with the plain, uu-hlrai-lird
variety."
R A I CrO A bRU MBLE S.
Canada baa atut M.ooo milrtnf rail
rnal. I'ltil.APr.l.rni haa nior mile of aur
f trsrt railway than any othrrrity
In llin world.
Tmk rallroal rnAr rrowing In Maa-iwlolM-tt
art. fast Im-Iii aUilished.
r'oT fifty-two roti-eutive mile oil llin
ltiton A Albany road there I U't one.
Thi baa le.-n brv.tight about by thn
pombiited rompuUion and asaUtanro of
tli tat.
Tmtr-itiftiiT railway wi-r aold
unler for lour during 1'. havlnif
tnileair aggregating-1, 'til mile and an
apparent eapiU'iAtim of I J'.K,liO.
During lat year tlnrty-aii eomanie
haliif 10..) tnib-a of road and repra
arntluif rapitaiiU'n of Of-arljr MAs
(wo.Oou, hav defaulted and txwD pia d
la the taodaof r:lvra.
ly a a "riiniM-r. or mussus'i' os-rutor.
Hi custom hit been to clothe hi long
form in warm woolens and grind tiff
from ten to fifteen mile at a guit
slightly under thrve minute lo the
mile. When rhtd in gruy Jersey and
an oM, Corneal terra eotta f, he cut
1 11 , i
f fs.,..i f"4
V . ... ia. las. . .!. If I
' -t4 t,9 m -w -4 av'"1
t m ' ft .. m . f . 4
, , i ' f t flM 1 t
i in I r 4 m m f I f - 4 m
J , ' - $ 'j J H$ ft
Rhcumslicn, Heuralgia, Sciatica, Backacho.u::;
rather a pom!al fguri- astri-li hi
Wheel, tt.f blllP .( hi alrlider but
Cotirtivr!y abort ba-k e-iftiiletilig
I tn Impiah a-.p et wl.ii Ii Bil,.'l.t l avn
; tern lMcnr-1 ti Oiftt of an ovcr?rown
browu.i. A f '15 Ht hi aVippcJ
tniifr?lnff ii'J M-t a lifter ta e iir
b ti'f rit j of
it). ly f ill in I
Only GOc. Read This All Through.!
7IWlt T"'HI. I-srtls Htfll v-r"rt r.iinai
f"T l,.l. Mt anil l lni'lnn S.itotli ln.i.lr 0..i.
K.-I.I..H Si.i.4 ll.nllli an. I IU-ut y lei. t W..tk
l. autidilly I lietrat.. riia-,.p.ll.ai Suirl.-. I liHilrn
. I'ra'-tl. .1 I'atf" 1'r-e l-'. u-fl art I f'4.n.nit.-l
iim. )if all kin-1. -r iiiiiM.nil Hi" r. .lii. mi J.MirtMil
f..r tin million. A ttniakl, tl kMki tar
if lue. fr.
THE QUEEN OF FASHION
ILLUIJUATIN
Til Ce'tbn'ti McCall Emr Pittins
IlUbllakt Iat( f I. Vr.
Tki raaf'tilr. T--i rnm mil l imiWfiwt, T-
r'iiiM n 4 t.i l ttii.. ..ii it 1 m ti - r i..
Villi y In! if frtt tr..m fl'lfi. fti leirt'lrl tun.
fit it.i I.. i hi.'.. ll-.w l.i ma tr ilnna,
, -lillilronfl'ittn(. ate ,ui." 1 k ar U Uiu nl ..if.
k nri ilr('lf TV Tvh month 1" h.l-ift r.,in !) f. fmm
Ill II 111 ff..tlJl . A I ,, .M. ... a. . A.. .. , ... . I . 3.... h... I., ri.. It
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'I GREATEST OFFER
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