OFFICIAL PAPER l:im M lMIIli:illiil !.l'tMMWaniJ M ! i MY SUCCESS ; Is owing to my liberality in ad-: 1 vertising. Robert Bonner. i ! i SlIIMHI I I I I 1 1 I I I f i l l I I I I I I til I I I J'l!l::l!,:lili lilt llllll FREQUENT AND CONSTANT Advertising brought me all I i own. A. T. Stewart. J I iii iwiii HI!inl!:ll!ii!illl!!;:l,llWl;,ml THIRTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1896. WEEKLY pIO. 6721 SEMI-WEEKLY NO,40l in i i n i l i.i i lit 1 1 1 i.ij in i imiti i m i i 111 1 i t 14 iinian 5 - - 3 r SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. fCBLIHHEU Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPACT. Pain often con centrates all its Misery in M vuw mm v mm m mmm Kum 7if tyynyYTllV,VV''y'l,TV,Vll7V TJae at once OTIS PATTERSON, A. W. PATTERSON, . ' Editor Business Manager At 2.5'i per year, f 1.25 tor six months, 711 ots. cor three mumnu. Aduertising Rates Made Known on Application. THI8 PAPKB is kept on file at E. C. Pake's Advertising Agency, B4 and 85 Merchants Kxchangs, Han FranciBco, California, where cou- raou for advertising can be made tor it. 0. R. & N. -LOCAL CARD. Train leaves Heppner 10:30 p. m. daily, except Ktituiay. Arrives b:ia a. m. daily, except aiou-dav. West bound passenger leaves Willows Junc tion 1 :i:l a. in. ; east bound 3:30 a. m. Freight trains leave Willows Junction going east at 7:25 p in. and 8:47 a. in.; going west, 4:30 p. m. aim j.oi a. m. United States Officials. President Q rover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Hecelarv of Stata Hichard 8. Olney Secretary of Treasury John li. Carlisle Secretary or interior note Nmith Secretary of War Daniel S. ijamont Nenretaryof Navy Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster. General William L. Wilson Attorney-deneral J udxon Harmon Beoretaryo! Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor W. P. Lord Peoretary of State H. K. Kincaid Treasurer Phil. Meteolian Hnpt. Pulilio Instruction li. M Irwin Attorney General I'. M. ldleraan u . O. W. MoHride j j H MitchBl r - J Winner Hermann u i w jj Elli Printer W. H. Leeds ( It. H. Bean, Rnnreme Judas F. A. Moore. ( 0. K. Wolverton Sixth Judicial District. Clrcnit Judge Stephen A. Lowell Prosecuting Attorney John 11. Luwrey Morrow County 0Blcil. I u . . TTT t Iteiirssnntauve. J..H. Hoothhjr ikjonty Jndgs Julius tielthly ' Commissioners . It. Howard J. M. Baker. Clerk .T. W. Morrow " Sheriff Q. W. Harrington " Tretisnrur Frank Uillinm ' Assessor J. r'. Willis Hnrvejor... Qeo. Lord " School Sup't Anna lialsiger " Coroner X. W. Aysrs. J r BIPFMEH TOWK OmCKRR. Mayor Thos. Moritan fDinr-tlinmi O. K. Fsrnewnith. M. Uchtentlial. Otis Patterson, T. W. Aysrs, Jr., B. 8. Uornsr. E. J. Slocnra. nourur , . . . -..i- r jmiim E. I Freelnnd Marshal A. A. Hubert Precinrt Olflcer. nf th Pmm K. L. Fre-land t.ntbl N. S. Whetatons I'olied Htate Land OtHeera. TUB DALLES. OS. J. F Moor Iblrist-t A. B. Hunt K-ei LA OrHStll, OS. B.F. Wilson rWM-r J. II. Kobhins Ilec.lv.-r HAWUN4 l-OKT. N ).ll. U. A. K. 1ut ltintm, Orlh but Hato.nl of art month. All veterans ar Invited t J"in. '-C. hofrii. (iso. W. Smith. AdtntMil. tf I 'ommaniUr. MONEY LOANED, rir Morts-.r. ii i,niri.t i.n froiely Sraniiai .!. r rcmred to iiesntlsto Drst mnrtfsirr nioi mruvr. irrns In Ornn, tth ruirrn ixrili-s st s rsleol Inlerfst not to mw.1 ir crnl mt snnuin ortirsi(e I raiiewm llisl unr isseu nr oiner ruin- psnles, AddrrM Mil (Islup. MKKVIS eORT. Hsrr I'lly. itrraon. L U Al li li It ! 111 IUVI MR sAI.lt ALL KlHm Of CM It uffmmM Lumbar Msnllsaol lppor, el hsl IS Sihi-b ths HOOTT M yVVVTVIIIjlL. I J0 ICYCLES Are the Highest of all High Grades. Warranted superior to any Bicycle built In the world, regardless of price. Do not be Induced to pay more money for an Inferior wheel. Insist on having the Vav rley. , Built and guaranteed by the Indiana Btcycle Co., a million dollar concern, whose bond is as good bb gold. 211b. SCORCHER $85. 221b. LADIES' $75. Catalogue free. INDIANA BICYCLE CO., HOMER H. HALLOCK, INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., U. 8. A. Oen. Agent for Eastern Oregon, Pendleton, Or. 1tmu.s. government! PAYING MILLIONS A MONTH ft fa fa fa fa fa fa fa MUCH TALK INDUCES LONG LIFE Some Speculations from the Statistics of French Centenarians. In France a census of centenarians bas just been taken, and the tabulation j shows two hundred and thirteen per sons In that country who are over one hundred years of age. Of this number, says the New York World, only sixty six are men, or less than one-third. An amusing1 comment on this has been go inpr the rounds in Paris to the effect lu.ti, hue reason for this surprising- com parative longevity of women is their proneness to talk and gossip at every conceivable opportunity. Constant chat tering, it is said, leads to the active circulation of the blood, and thus re news the tissues of the body daily and renders the frame particularly strong. In all seriousness, however, have sev eral French physicists taken up this matter, and they have come to the con clusion that the reason so many more women have attained a greater length of life than men is because they have passed through less turmoil and trou ble, and have had a more calm and less impassioned existence. One ease in point is that of an old lady who died re cently in the Haute Garonne, having lived one hundred and fifty years. She is supposed to have been the oldest woman of modern times, and all her life was spent peacefully in a hamlet m this district. The closing decade of her life she was fed on goat's milk and cheese. In the last few years of her existence her body became attenuated to an extraordinary degree and her skin came to resemble parchment. The French centenarians are, as a rule, of the lowest class of society and extremely poor. To persons who served in the wars of the United States or to their Widows, Children, or Parents. Do You receive a pension ? Had You a relative in the War of the Rebellion, Indian or Mexican Wars . on whom you depended for support ? 1 THOUSANDS ARE ENTITLED UNDER THE NEW LAW To receive a pension, who now do not. Thousands under the new law are entitled to an increase of pension. The government owes it to you and is willing and Anxious to pay. Why not present your claim at this present time? Your pension dates from the time you apply. Now is the accepted hour. tiWrite for laws and complete information. No Charge for advice. No Fee unless successful. gs The Press Claims Company f j PHILIP W. AVIRETT, General Manager, ( 618 P Street, WASHINGTON, D. C. fa If. B.Thlt Company il controlled bit nrnrhj one Ihouiani hading !( fi paptrt in the Unllrd Mala, and it guarantied by litem. lie did his best to defend himself, and at' last suggested that a delegation of the most reputable church members go with him to Atlanta, where, he as serted, he would prove his statement to their entire satisfaction. The elders, willing to give him a chance, did select a committee, which with the accused proceeded to Atlanta, and there, of course, they saw that their brother was right and that men, common mortals, did make ice in July. They all returned home and as quick ly as possible a meeting was called to hear the report. When the elders heard the delegation declare, as had the brother before it, that ice was really made in Atlanta in July they arose in their wrath and churched the whole lot of them. Highest of all in Leavening Power.- Latest U. S. Gov't Report Powder PURE ria i.w mr kui-i,h. - " " CUUft. 1 1 on 17 sol ir fiRUvcarn i Hurita, w:u. aud A IV. ) kf l.usi tovt .ltKn4. Tb tbox i'itlns sr strli-Mr fur fash. L HAMILTON. Prop. national fiauK ol wi. rrL4t. to. r iisiiop. trrmUmml. fkir. TB.tNUCT3 1 SENEKltilSSINS ECSINtSS FACTS AUK FACTS ! ! Ol' CAN BI'Y liVon wuith f dry fowls and grfirvtles nd then have enough left nut of ll u to purchase No. 1 Crescent lll'-jfcle. This Is a first rls.s machine. Why then pf ll'n.oo for a bicycle tlist 111 glv. no brtlef service ? MARRY THEIR JUNIORS. A Number of Reasons Why Some Vomen Do So. A late conversation between a num ber of women chanced to fall upon the common occurrence of women marry ing their juniors, says the New York Times. It was remarked that these marriages wero almost invariably hap py ones. One of the group ventured the opinion that the reason for this lay in the wisdom gained with years by the wife, and in the knowledge thus at tained as to how to manage her hus band. Another thought that a man always wanted his wife to "mother" him, and was best satisfied when she did, while she was naturally satisfied by his satisfaction. A third was sure that to take care of othon was a wom an's true vocation, und the secret desire of her heart, and that tliU calling was most entirely entered upon when the selfishness of extreme youth was past, and, when the husband was younger thar bcrstdf.- WWjjjuver'thu causu, the fact remains thut u all these matches. which do seem to bo made In heaven, almost all make a little heaven here lie low. One of the talkers contributed her quota to the stories of remarkable dif fercneess In venrs between man and witc. A one-time tusiiop tt Mat ii. fihe said, married a woman who had been one of his mother's hriilcsmniiU, and who had made his own christening rope. He was ho devotedly attai'lied to her that when she died from extreme old age he mourned her memory, with no thought of filling her place, all the rest of hi life. IN A NIGHT. The Suddenness of a Potato llllcht In Ireland. j The famine that decimated Ireland fifty years ago was caused by the blight ing of the potatoes then the staple food of the peasantry. The blight lit- j erauy walked in. darkness, though the sickness destroyed at noonday. Says Frances Power Cobbe in her '"Life:" I happened to be able to recall pre cisely the day, almost the hour, when the blight fell on the potatoes and caused the great calamity. A party of us were driving to a seven o'clock dinner. As we passed a remarkably fine field of potatoes in blossom the scent came through the open windows of the car riage and we remarked to each other how splendid was the crop. Three or four hours later, as we re turned in the dark, a dreadful odor came from the same field and we ex claimed: "Something has happened to those potatoes! They do not smell at all as they did when we passed them on the way out!" Next morning there was a wail from one end of Ireland to the other. Every field was black and every root rendered unfit for human food. And there were nearly eight million people depending principally upon those potatoes for ex istence. almost any of her predecessors. Iter views in regard to the mission question in China are most sensible. Her majes ty thinks that if the missionaries would interpret the teachings of Confucius in accordance with Christian principles they would have great success among the people, but to tell the Chinese that everything they have heretofore believed is all wrong results in Confu cian worse confounded. USED A LADDER TO GET IN BED. American Y CRICSCENT Hrorcher," ellit 20 rwunds, omr I . Ladles' shd itnls' roadsters all the way from 1 0 to ITV R.irs' Junior," onlr I with pneumstlc tlrs-4 food snai'blua. Our fperlsl." Mn Ivtt; Ladles', I'ft MORROW AND GRANT Counties. WESTERN WHEEL WORKS, CHICACO AND NCW YORK. THE NTTEfcOX III W, tleppner, (ifS'n, COLLECTIONS VU! ob r.TraUa TsfTO. EXCHANGE IWICHT i SOLD THE INTER OCEAN -tt THK- Ojlirtros te line terms BOB)S-CHHYDH STflGEUKE Most Popular Republican Newspaper of the West Anl Has the largest Circulation. DAILY (without Sun Jay) 16.00 per year DAILY (wllti iHNday) Il.oo per year The Weekly Inter Ocean l $1.00 , rut YEAR a rwrrr inn tint kea a news N ' fts (m la sMsrWI A Li. trial s M. a SO fHfc Hit! Ulisil t UtlstAtlVk. BV MAIL OSTMUO-M'tiXS t' i a p. . aalar tjt al tfeta" la ( tr-ttw. Sinqlo Fnre 87 CO. Round Trip Si 0.00 The Weekly Inter Ocean AS A FAMILY PAPER IS NOT EXCELLED BY ANY. l f is l H a ll fsnt l ? is ism nt niuiimii uiiikiiKi kM al tfca asatil I s4 a Ms at. fimxS'CASToy m-m " " . .. . It.-. ... H ' - .. ... i r - miiTKii.T rr i tthsiia. i iw -1 . wt mm H Sir l-r. M M lrs iSmss) t rib M tf 1 na mui. IT IS A TWELVti-PAOE PAPER fwir mti OcrJ i ftt icri) 11 tvtcinn, rt connrtcut (l1ISl ll )li tMI t . Him M . tl s rM III aissnri To fP .rrttl tH tt.Vtl Of lAt SCCt ! Af rit m i w t si, N Is M sm4 m t Hf l I a aa i faittita s4 1 Ma. sto nMb ia tk n tm am mwr 0r oLj LAtMi.. e- the INTER OCEAN. Chlciao, INCREDULOUS ELDERS. bf th UarkD That Mar Hit IMspellad Atlaala r i position. According to a story which cornea up from I apt, llal Talili Walker, a iinmil cent planter of (ieorgia and a resident of Atlanta, tlu-re la much need of q lighteninent In th aouth'Tii irlluii nf Hirsute. It acem Unit a innn living in that M-ftloti i adit mi aomo inia- alnn up to Atlanta during tin month of July Uot. While there lie uv and was much Intentited in the making of art! nclal lee. Returning hmr h t.ld of this ti hln friends, ami fur all the fact thai he la a good rhiirt-h meiiibcr ami tip to that liin had Imi-ii a highly rep tei rill fn I the coiiiiiiiiuit v, lie was at mii-e liaikml upon with siinplflun. The fi-il log ran i high against him for telling and persisting In ('iliiigthut men, coin trxm nmrtaU, wrrc luuking Irn In Lh hot niun'li of July. aitn'lliliig they do Clartvl Hie Iird rotil.l ii.il do, that h was thrrati'mxl with rxpuUlon from tha chun h. TREE-CLIii.u.w nABBITS. REGULATED BY A HAIR. It Sheep That Love Snails and Insectivorous 1 llirds That Feed on drain. It seems almost a stretch of the Im agination to think of rabbits climbing trees, let in Australia many rabbits have somehow acquired the tree-elimb-ing hubit, having been forced, on ac count of the persecutions of dogs and other animals, to drop burrowing and imitate squirrels. An Australian sent on to England re cently the two front feet of a rabbit that had been killed on an acacia, three yards from the ground, ami he wrote In f.is letter thT.t this was not'iit'all a re markable thing, and he had often found them, or at least the traces of their claws, on the bark of trees four, five ami six yards high. lor a parrot to eat sheep Is another remnrkahle thing, and yet the keu of New Zealand Iiiih hcenine a sheep eater, having changed to this article of food from a purely vegetable diet. The tradition of the island In thut at onetime t'ie.n parrots were u uul ) to 'ibtnin their usual supply of vegetable food and that in ih-MM-rat Ion they In vaded the "drying rooms" and ate whatever eiiine to hand, finding sheep meat airrwaiili. In Iceland alnusst all the hor"s are fish eaters, for the reason thut grain la avarer thern and llh la plentiful. In I'.ngliind sheen are known who de light in sniiils. The observation nf this fact la not now ; It dntea tMiek one hun dred and lift y year. It la well known that a large numtx-r of Insectivorous birds teeoiiie grain eaters whenever they find that they rannot proctira their ordinary diet of Insects. Remarkable Experience of an Tourist In Ireland. An American who lately visited Ire land writes: "In the hotel at Dublin was a bed so large and so high that it seemed a tableland of mattress over shadowed by a cliff of headboards. "It seemed preposterous that anyone should monopolize a bed of such size and attempt to warm it. By proper division it would have supplied a fam ily. "When it came time to retire the question was not how to get 'into' bed, but how to get 'on' the bed. The top mattress was almost chin high, and it seemed that to reach it there would have to be a hard climb or a desperate leap. "While the problem of retiring was under cousideration a dark object was seen in one dim corner of the vasty bedroom, which was imperfectly light ed by a solitary candle. "This object proved to be a movable stairway, mounted on rollers. When it was pushed against the behemoth bed the problem of how to retire was iin mediately solved. "One had only to ascend the stairs and then fall oil into the embracing depth of tuis most remarkable bed. BUMBLEBEE OPIUM FIENDS. I)e- THE FAMOUS ALERT. Ila A Hkilarl hla That lis Jos I kl4 forth Melal la llrr. Ileaehed llMn the ISeauport khistla, near Qui-Imt, lies lhr old steamship Alert, which In l;v?4 was llioorrd nrarer to the north poln than any other ii'wl has rr linen, aaya the New York Nun. Hi was the flagship of the Narra A ret 10. r'litl m and lay all winter at I lotirrg liea-'h, J degrevs II minute north latitude In I"! hew prr s'tit il ly the Hi it iih government t. our government takn part In the lre'ly ri'lii f riix-dition, and after that aui-rsfut rnlrrpriw aim was returned with thank to the UriliOi. In l""' sbn was l'tind to the ( ana diari g .v. rimi "lit to Investigate the fiavigiiMoi'y of lluds in strait, and to bring l.iw k the irt)r of r apl'itrrs h ft upon lis banks In sl by the pluiir. On this trip the A! rt waseiamuaii'lFd by (apt i.oi.loii. an-l f..r thfe we. Us was juiiitiird In a DeM of Ire, It was lief lat northern ). The iiiirrUl autli .lit . s (.rem tiled Imr lo the C anadian " rMueht, and (he Ultrr. Dndiiig her al lsl to tie vie araWKirthy, after rm.',.., li,g her f-aT Mtuie time In the l.tn.r and l,ghthrtiw kefvlee, sold le r at aui.ti-.ti m t. rsl data j ago j Mi was Ik.u.-U f r l 'iQ .f a l.!- buiMrrof ft John for the sake of l,.r oM M,eai ai.-l ntlif li.'' rial. A bLAVC. NOW AN tMPHt&Su il u; i n; i.i i,i i.i i;; i;i j;4 neeii mhi f i Its ! " hlv There Is ho t4 i the Erratic Pennsylvania Insects That light In Hitting ths ripe. The argument that dumb brutes shun the beverages and drugs that man uses as a stimulant docs not hold water as far as Itucks county bumblebees are concerned. Home of them have been led aadly astray and are addited to 'hitting the pipe," to speak Itucks county 'a opium joint is located on Flnnhook farm, about a mile west of Doylestown. the trial grounds of well-known rhilnilclphiu seedhouse. aays the I'liiladelphia Ledger. In one portion of the farm are several large beds of poppy plants. It is here the hce get drunk. The poppies are not the poisonous Chinese variety from willed opium In obtained, but they con tain enough of the seductive juice to make a man di..y after .ciiilitig mimic hours in the patch. Quantities of Ih-ch ran be wen lying about in the rtip- shaped flowers. A recent visit to the farm was vrry Interesting. Hits were to It aen In every stage frsiai partial intoxication to death Itself, the beau tiful cups holding the dead bodies of many. naming the Slr. The numbering of the heavenly ImmI lea, w hether planet, satellite or star of the smallest site, has Imi-ii commem-cd at 'he I'nris olwrvritorv hr Mli IMliinilMe, iIim Uir Ol seii-u. es ami Its slst:ilit a .teoiiomer, ill view of the pull lii'litl'iil of un intern itiotiul eHtiilogile of the slurs. 1 he Idea was formed al the atrouotui,-:il omgn-s In hh7, and already lM photographs have Ui-n taken. Suiie only contain a do n stars, this Im Ing a celestial dewrt; but others are crowded, even lothenuiu ler of I.Vio. The average number b Sl.i stars T pliotogrspli. Altogether the r;ital-i-.'up reeted lo rontaln almiit a.ono.fniii alarm. A census of the heavenly tlies has long lieen Dei fied Now a woman i-omi-i forward and will e-iiinl ail of the stars. Mie will lie some time at It, but w hen the work la done It Will he fill, shed. Controls the Warmth and Tentdlattoo of the Senate and Home. One solitary human hair seems a very small thing, but it is the most impor tant part of an important machine in the cupitol at Washington. This machine warms and ventilatea the house, the senate and the various committee rooms and runs several elec tric dynamos. Its most curious feature is the appliance for telling the proper temperature of the air in the building. A dial arranged like a clock marks difTcrcnt degrees from 0 to 100. 0 means perfectly dry air, 100 saturated air, 1. e., air carrying all the moisture It will hold. Human hair absorbs moisture like a rope, becoming shorter when it Is wet, in the same way. The hair here is six inches long. The difference in length between it when wet and when dry stands for the 100 degrees of moisture on the dial, and as the moisture of the air varies the pointer on the dial moves. According to the necessity, more steam is thrown in or steam is allowed to escape, the atmosphere being in thia way regulated and kept at a healthy point. ATE SWANS AND HERONS. Why Mot Now Have Boast Teaeook with All His Feathers On. In the sixth year of the troublous reign of King hdward IV. the arch bishop of York gave a huge feast, the menu of which has been preserved. says the London Queen. Among the dishes there were put on the tables two hundred and sixty-four crane, two hundred and four bltterna and four hundred heronshaws. How many cranes and bitterns could be col lected now from the whole of these islands? llut why should we not extend our present limited range of edible crea tures and Include at least some of those which our ancestors loved? Crane, bit tern, heron, swan and peacock: all these are birds which used to be pre sented at dinners. Why should we not at least try the three wjhlch remain to use? (Swans are as ens.- to keep as ducks; peacocks might, 1 suppose, be multiplied; there are still plenty of heron. 1 believe that at St. John's college, Cambridge, they do still serve up roast cygnet, for the college possesses swans. Why should we not have cfgnet In season just like roast duck? And think of the lordly peacock pre sented with ail his feathers and hla tail outspread; thev killed him. skinned nun, rousted him, and then tied him again in his skin with his feathers ar ranged. And then they set that dainty dish before the king. After that they carved him but I believe you did not curve a peacock you displayed him. hpeelscle In th f'ollertloa. A novel method of correcting a clergyman's mistakes in reading la re- ported In the Church Kevlew. During the collection after a sermon one Sun- day, a gentleman In the congregation quietly took off his Sieetaele and put I hem on the pinto. The church war den courteously handed them lack, MipHising tin-in to have been put thera in utivine of tiilud, but the donor again deposited them on the plate, and, not w ishing to make a acene, the oflldal finished his duties, and the aieclaclea were duly presented with the other alma. However, after the service ha look them down to the donor a stranger and said he feared they wera given Ly mistake. Judge of hla sur prise on bring assured that It was Do mistake- that the clergyman who read the pmyera had made so many blun der In reading that he presumed ha eon Id Hot see. and so he presented hint w ills a pair of stc.U Ics. RUPTURE Instantly Relieve and Permanently CURED WITUnilT Knifo or Oporatiot. Treatment Absolutely Palnlca- CURE EFFECTED From Thrco to Six Wco''S. WRITE FOR TERMS THE 0. E. MILLER CO. i'ii l i ;i0 K'ias ' '- I-ORTLAM). OREGON. IUiiim are tnanuf isturcd. A'islft Is sueiesfiilly imitated. Tltr. snail'a month I In It f-mt. ( n noil grow on trees In Jan Tiia first ali'ht-l Lad but aiawn letter. Nrw I'.mssa ha a amall hirr robitiy. Tiir title, rabbi Rajah master or U. her. I Hum In India are played In th mri air. Tiir smallest known microti) la that of liitluf na I oil. l.isiiD Lave been unearthed It! hehtuelir I'elrilinl Order. A bed of M-lrilied oyster ha been found on the top of l!ig mountain, just Imm k of I'oi list. ill, Wyoming rounty, I'a. Some of the Ss t imens are of mammoth t,,ir, one In Mr. Iteynolds' p.e.s-ssloi liieasiiring '. went J two Inches lotig liy iiine iiii In s wide and Weighing f-rty Hiuuds. The s-i Inn ns rai.ge In ail sies, from t h U dow n t the ordinary ulible oyst. rs of the pres. nt lime. Some of the tiiii-iis show the y of ll,ei.t. r -tfietiv, an-l In all of them the meat Is easily removed front Iha shell. 'I he Ih- seems to Is eHlQne to a mis'l in-.iiiel. resting on a small plat eau, at lite r llrcm top of the tboun tain, lo r tl.e !u'.;ian -inlv I'a. V I. OAIa tllCTMlO ILT ANO A'LIANCt i INtUHl TO THI tlCN TNttl tiaiAT POINT) OF ADVANTAOt Ovt Ask IMITATORS la kaa4 I I . s lie. .Ir...t.e ...rfr tn IJt 4r-T-r5' .. . Il w..fM ..ffi.l on II. .n l,l of H.e . V ...I..I-.-.41. ' ' . ' v i Ww 'L r...rfiitlasJa r "- "Xr- .. S for lif tH t.l it.t,i gl,.e Wi,., " -i "' , ,T .f -, "' v l.-t tV All. tiLilZiTt.i'T"' :j i" " : .i.e! . . ..... .tt..t,.,tf'jim7y "i a '-tm r i! fci rw !'. ....r ..., -a -r d . .1 i..r f. a : .-. . TV,? ijvrssi TT -Ty 3-.ri - ei Ei TMllroMtiiciitOCi).i ll'Sloi T l If Hn-IOi,, 3 P' f)t wsatio. :q WiililliUuuuiaiua,,'i3 1 WANTED-AN IDLA ii.iu to I ia J'ns.i .. W U,IM. O.iu to 'i-'lf;ii w. h.-st ! -' J O! w;.;.ns. s I aim. W I r'i."si. wh- ws so ,i,i.. h. r l-ii r! w.i H-si t n'-l ' ' d it;.trr I'- 1 i e i. w.,.1. t the i p.... I ' . .. I I ,('..lj tt,, II. e f f ,,!. r ,., I,; . . I I.. . . ' - t j,,t. , .. . ii., t ' t I" I.' ' ' I ' f . . t nil 1 I Hi j b ! I I 'I 'rt airl sianiciNta AMI NlCtttANT. e-4 thn i!!! I , H.a M f I MeTaisw 4 sw tMt 1 r, ait-ea r"l. sr U .''o. tnr. tf" MMfwir tiih wm a rtn 4 i'i T to I I I es i.M4 w 4 ae. I i . . e --l 4 ' M ! III)IA lal- r.slis ,.i.l,i. i.'m h. n l M'H'IM !.. i M a ,4 ij- na -I l-! (twfc THE OWES ELECTRIC BELT AKD APfMKCE CO, I ) til sMaM lrl, alav. f t,r i .f ' r-fl II n