tlNMIlllIlM I MftlWIIM44MlM IMIH1IIHI WHW g PAPER . . I OFFICIAL nlil4tTlriti.,ri;rM t MY SUCCESS Is owing to my liberality in ad-1 vertis'ng Robert Bonner. FREQUENT AND CONSTANT Advertising brought me all I own. A. T. Stewart. I i i i i 1 1 i i i in i ii utiii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 in L . tug THIRTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1896. J WEEKLY NO. 674) I SEMI-WEEKLY NO.40oi SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUUMBHSU Tuesdays and Fridays BY M PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. OTIS PATTERSON, . 1 . . Editor A. W. PATTERSON. . Business Manager At f J.50 per year, $1.25 (or biz months, 75 ots. tor itiree monies. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. BEWARE IN TIME. The first acute twinge of 18 THE WARNING ,TO CT I C OR Oil DELAV.-ANO THOSE TWINGES MAY USC 1 U lWUJ W1L. TWIST VOOR LEO OUT OF SHAPE. THIS PAPER is kept on file at E. 0. Duke's Advertising Agenoy, At and 05 Merchants I axoftangs, Han rranoisoo, tJaufornia, where oou raota (or advertising oan be made tor it. 0. R. & N.-LOCAL CARD. Train leaves Heppner 10:30 p. m. dally, except Sunday. Arrives 6:15 a. m. daily, except Mon- oay. West bound passenger leaves Willows Junc tion 1:13 a. m.: east bound 8:30 a. m. Freight trains leave Willows Junction going I east at 7:25 p. m. aud 8:47 a. m.; going west, 4:30 I p, m. ana o.oo a.m. n r iICYCLES Are the Highest of all High Grades. Warranted superior to any Bicycle built in the world, regardless o( price. Do not be induced to pay more money for an inferior wheel. Insist on having the Wavtrley. Built and guaranteed by the Indiana Bicycle Co., a million dollar concern, whose bond is as good as gold. '; 211b. SCORCHER $85. 221b. LADIES' $75. Catalogue free. INDIANA BICYCLE CO., HOMER H. HALLOCK, Indianapolis, Ind., U. 8. A. Gen. Agent for Eastern Oregon, Pendleton, Or. OFFICIAL milECTOIVZ". Dotted States Officials. President . .....Grover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Secretary of Htate Richard S. Olney Beoretary of Treasury John Q. Carlisle Secretary of Interior Hoke Smith Beoretary of War Daniel tt. Lamont Hmreterv of Navv Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster-General William L. Wi son Attorney-General Judaon Harmon Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor W. P. Lord Secretary of State H. ft. Kincaid Treasurer ....Phil. Metanhao Bnpt. Pulilio Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney General C. M. Idlemao u . i Q. W. MoBride ""-" (J. II. Hitohall n M J hunger Hermann U,.I. , W JfMl. Printer W. U. Leeds ( H. S. Bean, 4nnrama Judoae F. A. Moore. ( 0. K. Wolvertoo Sixth Judicial District. Circuit Judge Stephen A. Lowell Proaeoatiog Attorney John H. Lawrey Morrow County Officials. . i . a . . m O - inuit nwiauir... ... ....... n, tt, wi.wnn ttspresentjitlve..'. J S. Boothhy 'mnty Judge Jnlins Knlthly ' Commission. ,' J. K. Howard J. M. Baker. " Clerk J. W. Morrow " Hhariff G. W. Harm niton " Trtwsorar Frank Gilliam ' Assessor J. . Willis Hnrvavor.- Geo. Lord " School Sup't Anna Balsiger " Coroner T. W. Ayera, Jr BiFPNia town orncsns. Vlajtor Thoe. Morgan Cwineiltnen O. K. Fanisworth. M. Mohtenthal. Otis Patteraon, T. W. Avar, Jr., N. H Hnmar. K J. Hlnanm. KannrHar ?. J. lUllock rVaaanrar. E. L. Frelnl Marshal A. A. Roberta I Preainet Officer. ; . - Jnatioa of the Paeee ..E. t. Fra-lana (instable. N. 8. WheUtoue United Htate laad Ornrere. TBI DALLES. OK. J. F. Moore K-eHster A. S. Biggs Receiver LA OBANDB, OB. B.F. Wilaon Register J. H. Bobbins Receiver X3HXI SaOCXJoTIXaS. KAWUNS porrr, NO. it. G. A. B. H u at Leiingloo, Or., the laet Beturday of I act. month. AU veterans are Invited In Join. t-C. Boon. Geo. W. Km iti Adlolaat, tf CommamUr MONEY LOANED. Nfl Mortgages on Inipti'1 rami I'rnperty Negotiat el. Hears reiereit to negotiate Oral mortgagee upiiii tmiirnveil farms in Oregon, with eeaiern parties at a rata of internal not to finwl per cent per annum Mortgage. renewed Uial nave been uiin uy outer com panies, Addrea with stamp. MKHVIN ABORTS. lUser City. Oregnn. L U M B E It ! XXTt RAVE FOK MALE ALL EI Sim OF I'N IT 4nml Lutabf IS ml tea ul ItpppiMtr. a hal la soown a me BOOTT m A. WIVIZLsL. Itmu.s. government! PAYING MILLIONS A MONTH 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 t relative in the War of the Rebellion, Indian or Mexican Wars on whom you depended for support ? 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 vV 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. tWrite for laws and complete information. No Charge for advice. . uV No Fee unless successful. The Press Claims Company j PHILIP W. AVIRETT, General Manager, f) Si8 P Street, WASHINGTON, D. C. JT. B. Thi$ Company U tontrotted by nearly one thousand leading nevt papert i the TJnlttd fUtitet, and iM guaranteed by Iheni. (i FACTS ! ! isassasssyasyss FACTS I rEB L0 FEET Itot'l.H. mm m CLEAH. - - It I F nnuvmri) in heppker, will adu l SA W par t.eu isa avatuoiiel The above quotations are etrtetlr for Cash. ' ' .L HAMILTON, frop hb Ban. nn. WI. rKKLANO, KO. st. BlxllOF. rreaiieai, Ceekleg. TRAXSiCH 1 GENEAll BMIM BUSINESS Yoli CAS BUY I.A.00 woith of dry goiwls and giweil-s and then have enough left out of f luO 00 to purchase a No. 1 Crescent Bicycle. This is first-class machine. Why then pay I luo.00 for a bicycle that will five no better service f CnECSr 'Scorcher," weight JO pounds, only IX. Lai las' and Hants' medste-s all the way from l'4 to 17V Boys Junior," only Is) with pneumatic tlr-a g'Kxl machine. "Our Kptclal," Men's 170; Ladles', IV. Annum Wi STERN WHEEL WORKS. CHICAGO AND NEW YORK, THE PITTERSOX 1TB. i, - y55 Happner, Oron. -J MORROW MHO GRAM Counties. srf -L; A TRICKY MEMORY. I A Keen-Minded Han Whose Recollection Was at Fault. It would afford material for an entire paper to study defects of memory and to describe some of the curiosities of thinking which result from such de fects. A writer in Popular Science Monthly says that he saw lately a busi-, ness man of keen mind and good gen eral memory, who was not paralyzed in any way and was perfectly able to understand and talk, but who had sud denly lost part of his power of reading and of mathematical calculation. The letters d, g, q, x and y, though seen perfectly, were no longer recog nized and conveyed no more Idea to him than Chinese characters would to us. He had great difficulty in reading had to spell out all words and could not read words containing three letters. He could write the letters which he could read, but could not write the five letters mentioned. He could read and write some numbers, but B, 7 and 8 had been lost to him, and when asked to write them his only result, after many attempts, was to begin to write the words six, seven or eight, not being able to finish these, as the first and last contained letters x and g which he did not know. He could not add 7 and 5 together or any twos numbers of which 6, 7 or 8 formed a part, for he could not call them to his mind. Other numbers he knew well. He could no longer tell time by the watch. For a week after the onset of the dis ease he did not recognize his surround-1 ings. On going out for the first time the streets of the city no longer seemed ; familiar; on coming back he did not know his own house. After a few weeks, however, all his memories had returned excepting those of the let- j ters and figures named. But as the loss of these put a stop to his reading j and to all his business life the small de ' feet of memory was to him a serious I thing. . Experience has shown that such a I defect is due to a small area of disease in one part of the brain. Such cases are not uncommon and illustrate the separateness of our various memories and their dependence upon a sound brain. ANCIENT WARRIORS. They Were Phyaloally Inferior to Soldiers of the Present. The popular tendency to enlarge everything that is far oft and belittle that which is so cIoro by is responsible for the opinion that the men of tho present time are degenerate reductions of the s men of medieval times, who were giants clad in iron and with muscles of steel. The l'arls Figaro thus shows the absurdity of this opinion: t:iat 1 v.-;ia i.o bor,vca r.io t j tell him something of our government. "You have a president of the couutry, the whole states, is it not?" he inquired earnestly. v I nodded assent. "Va bene! If a man kills murders, you understand who tries him, the federal or state courts?" "The state courts," I replied, "unless it is a case of treason." "If he is convicted, who can pardon .! AT 1 , - . -Hie president, or course?" he him- COLLECTIONS Msvle oa favorable Term. EXCHANGE BOUGHT 4 SOLI) ii Errs En. if oreoom Oalario-Bnins Slaic Line A, M l BURHS-GHHYOH STR9ELIHE M, . WI.IUM1. r-e. HE INTER OCEAN -it ma- BV MAIL osTAiuo-nunss leaves) Htm rf at P. ! ar rives UuverKi Boera. Sinalo Fore 37.B0. Round Trip 3 10.00 fV TV- wttl r ef snusl BCRS't-CASrOK fir 4si'f at- itf f"aee K I Purse, larva, r"et.M a4 Usaiiew Most Popular Republican Newspaper of the West Anl Has the Largest Circulation. DAILY (without Set-day) 16. oo p,r year DAILY (with Sunday) IS.oo pr year The Weekly Inter Ocean l ct. 00 rxR TIAR Iy AS A rwfaf TMB IHTf.l OCBAK keaS aree. at lis. si laj aS The Weekly Inter Ocean AS A FAMILY PAPER IS NOT EXCELLED BY ANY. . . tl If asamrf f ! la eewfc eaeestwe m (he tea) II LJ NISI . s-alif ail St la lb. mf Kee as MeawaV I, IjJ II IIIU1UIHttUl.teri...Mlit II M mct lv rr it trtnut k a. 4 tu "rs rh. wm mt ih '' "it.es ee m Hve swMSaaw Mt. (4 aaae glvae laai TrVat hi ft if lltat tawhUs. IT IS A TWELV.PA0E PAPER. jm ivrrt cri h fxturi rx mno, ttif vrtsri asm cAnircia(. I'Tts "r ail tt mr iill'sto) atIM j? aie, ar i anna atisriin in tut m t us w 1Mb i toiix or nui MAt K'i ni an? frail am Ml at last. K Is Ml mm 4 mm tmt iiwjai ef fSas Vag bask rVMw. 4 H.Xa Iwm .aWi tkt ike ave mt Ik. SI .SIf laM Oma le T"t V oS (Mrte Utnti- the INTER OCEAN. ChUifO. i i ii ii i ii i n . i m asked, with calm assurance, and a slight emphasis on the "of course." "No, indeed; the murderer is tried in the state courts; he can be pardoned only by the state board of pardons, if there is one, or by the state's chief officer the governor. The president has nothing to do with it." "Well!" flashed my companion, sar castically, "in Italy the governor i f a little petty province has not the par doning power." "Sir!" I thundered, now thoroughly angry, "Italy will go twice into the petty province of Texas." It was very naughty to get angry, and especially with such a politely sar castic little Italian. I know it. Hut who could sit still and hear the sher, unapproachable nay, glorious im mensity of our country assailed without getting angry? No one except the audacious fop, who every now and then annoys us with a brazen assertion that bigness is, after all. not such a virtue. QUICKEST HANQINQON RECORD Legal Execution Performed Inside of Pour Minutes to Accommodate Reporters. Capt. J. B. Patten, warden of the In diana state prison at Jeffersonville, has the record for superintending the quickest legal hanging ever accom plished in this or any other country, says the St. Louis Republic. The laws of Indiana prescribe that the death sentence must be executed between midnight and the dawn of the day set by the court. A man named Stone had butchered a whole family in Davis county, of that state, and had been condemned to death. The case was a celebrated one, and newspaper men from Indianapolis and Louisville went down to Jeffcrsonville in a perfect phalanx to wttness and report the famous criminal's exit from this vale f tears. They arrived in the early evening, expecting to return to their homes on a train leaving Jeff ersonville about one o'chick, by which time they expected the execution to be over. To their intense disappointment and chagrin they discovered that the last train they could take departed from the prison town at twelve o'clock at night. , Having determined this they set about arranging matters so they eould see the hanging and yet catch the train. .They telegraphed tha clrcum Highest of all in Leaveaing Power Latest U. S. Gov't Report im TOOT!? aAeSOWTECV PURE THE BABY ALARM. A New Electrical Household Appliance . and Ita Uses. The newest electrical household ap pliance, and in future no nursery will be complete without it, is the "baby alarm." It often happens that, in a large house, where the infant is sleep ing in a room on the upper story, the nurse cannot retire to the servants' room, which may be on a different floor and too far distant for any to hear the child's signal that it. is awake. The in tention of the baby alarm is to give warning to any required distance when the child cries. A sensitive microphone, placed near the cot, is connected to a battery and an . induction coil, and thence by wires to a small electro-magnet at the end where tho sound is to be received. When the child cries the mi crophone will set up an iindulatory cir cuit, the electro-magnet will be actu ated, its oscillation will close a bell cir cuit, and a bell will continue to ring as long as the sound of the baby's voice is sustained. As the device is at present constructed the adjustment of the bal ance lever which is set in motion by the electro magnet is so delicate that the apparatus has to be handled with extreme care, and any bungling by an inexperienced person is likely to de range it. Suggestions have been made for lessening the complexity of the in strument, and muking it a practical and durable means of enabling infants to unconsciously signal to a distance, and thus save much anxious watching on tbe part ot those In charge. - Our learned physiolofrlsru. after haV-' stance ahead to the conductor, asking lng measured hundreds of skeletons. testify that the men of our times are from one to two centimeters taller thuai tho men of the middle ages. We possess their war garments, ami it turns out that we aprx-ar not only to have grown taller since the time whn these were manufactured, but one shoulders eould never fit into the trj corslets of our so-called athletic fosre- fathers. I The superintendent of the museums under the Heron d empire, winhing to put on the armor of Francis I., tlve largest of all in the Muacumof Artillery, wan unable to do so. It was too aovaJl for him, though he was in no acne a giant. ; And here la another exampwt. In Switzerland,' recently, 00 the ix-ooaVon of a gymnast lo tournament, the young tnrn, winning to vhmm the fHUviiU'B by a proeeaaliin with liU tor leal roatumea. borrowed the arms and armor of the araenal. Hut it la evident that their anevatora, pple of little foresight, never though of their trrandchllilreli, and theses grandchildren were unable to put oa the armor. It was too small for tbeia. Ho much for the aUluru of our an-vito-e. A tolhelrsuppoaxnl alrvnttlse. we have tin proof beyond tho weight of tin eii';'ieiit of the mi n-of artna. Hut thu liarneM of the knlghta wssa very much lighter than haa comisouly been supposed. According to cm os tha ra'.Aloguea of the Museum of Ar tillery the weight of the osmplfta armor did not, aa a rule. err4 flf pounds, and Inasmuch aa tlioae who wore It were horaemrB, It was tbe horse that had to bear the greater pavK of the fatlgwe. CRUSHED THE SNttRER. Was Very FUTURE OF THE HORSE. , Will Always Aa Aaaer nisi Teafcee Wbe) ratrWrlla. An Italian gentleman whom I met while traveling die .mt a rmat de praved inapprvliiin of the wonderful vatne of the failed Mates, says a writer In rwilmer'e, lie apoke iltigllah very well, for he had been many yeara In (rndon, and. as we were enjoying Die a-e-r.st itr brlwwn lla and Via lU-ggio, he Baked ra.liiely whrthrrfwae a.t an Am-rt-ean from "the aiel-." H Irarnlng RUPTURE Instantly Relieved and Permanently CURED JIPS WITHOUT vVjfr Knift or Operation. Treatment Absolutely Painless CURC EFFECTED From Thre to Si Wtelti, WRITE FOR TERMS THE 0. E. MILLER CO. Gefxtt: fcflMS MSrsf. Bteefsa l.tinC rOKTLASD. OREGON. WANTED-ANIDEA.: IMa l SUWl Cl"! I f f V"r g ! a '.u i w..i.s. C. tU ", atWM WekMata, Cr hat taaaW Vk4 aviee etas him to hold the train until after the execution, lie consented to hold it five minutes only. They were filled wun aespairi Who ever beard oi a hanging, Including prayers, speech making, etc., in five brief minutes? Hut, nevertheless, they commenced to work on Warden Patten. The result was that everything waaat once got ten ready for sending the murderer to eternity. IVomptly at the stroke of midnight the parson finished his prayer; in five more seconds the noose was around the condemned man's neck, the black cap drawn, the trap sprung and In two minutes and twenty-two aeeonda the attending physician pro nounced the murderer a corpse. Car rlagea waiting outside the Incloaure bore the reporters to the train In an other minute, and with nearly seventy aeeonda to spare tho train pulled out. Wu.eii.is AND WATERLOO. What Om ef Ike fair Bee tUsMaafceee ef the Wal)-r Swiss ItaUla. "In my early days I knew a lady who Snppened to be In Ilruwla that menxw ilile June," said Mrs. Newton C'nae- tnd to the New York Commercial AaV irtiarr man. "hhe was then newly. tarried and only twenty-three years of ;re. Ho little certain of virUary did the .Int'lUh on the spot feel that her hue and Insisted on her dremtng like a t'ormandy pesvsant, thinking such a xntume would lie a protection. "Vividly have I heard her deerrfrie .he rting aha wlloiMMwd at Vhe d'jor f the hotel where she waa slaying and ho di-Hlr of wives who were left be hindwives axon to lie widows. "Very graphically, did she Ae- arrlbe the nest day's events, whea women many of whom, tooagltat4 to rhange their attire, were attll eW- -vaotly drrsMNl -msvle their way aotna iow to the fir Id of battle, rrturnlrig la lie army wagona, siii.j-.rilng the heavda if the wounded on thrir fcniT. iMslhiBg thrtr trow and binding en their arounde, while a stravly rain poered dtfwn otl the faoee begrimed ht powdi whh h Vet allowed thstr rallor to be a. "I ones met at a dinner the widow of sn offi'vr-l fsl the laii wlm fit r hi at WaU-rt.io. and tha lady narrated her eiieriei"e of the 'after ttlle' arwne. t ar raeosi aha had to rnaa the Held of Vtrf li, wi,kh saa atiil siren b with I lie dsvd, arwt t -m ihia prpw aha waa hUniifnlded and placed on horwlavli, the all brllaf, i1 l.v a lrtr. 'he held a handWert hirf ll her IsTaM atpwd, I II, it, t she sail, with vtrfgwe -and a4 antil alt hsvl re'hdsa allvlty fteerly a i!e frn tleeeie f rarnage waa I he lndae remitrd fi'nn hf er Then she ..Urd back The Odd of Watrrbet ai twara-l l.aa a field of ttnatiOea. Tif the U'lWw were all stripped tf clothing and sffsa whit la the sunshine l.ae stie Tbe ewsrs l..rasf gtsu', had daeea their wmk ireetBaiiF." Uses to Which the Animal Be Turned. When railroads were first put in op eration it was predicted that there would be a great fall in the value of horses, a deterioration of horse flesh, and finally that the animals would soon become curiosities on the way .towards extinction. Of course, lays the Iloston Transcript, everybody knows that nothing of the kind hap pened. Horses increased in number, valuo and quality. The business the railroads developed all along - their liivee ooaaakmod a demand frmore and better horses. Just at present the popularity of tne bicycle and the appli cation of electricity to transmutation are causing some people to repeat the predictions of fifty years ago eoueern iuir tho home. It is even said that the horse in tho near future will be raised simply for slaughter for fonl. If the hot-iut could leurn of this prediction his nU'lligcnce aud his sense of his value would prevent him from taking It .eriotihly. He might ask: What good ia the electrld car off the rails? How does a bicycle act on plowed ground, and what can It draw without the as sistance of human energy? If horses become very cheap will not more eo pie buy them, and will not the aggre gate of individual wants occasion a irreal demand that will send up prices? The Intelligent horse axklng thoae questions could well afford to munch his on la calmly while the alarmists urr cogitating as to w hat reply was poas'lile. Tbe real of riflef MarMa. A aad accident lately happened to a flying machine at eydnry, N. 8. W. The inventor did not acximpany the ma chine on It trial trip, and as no one volunteered the machine waa allowed to go alone. The fallowing account vt lie n r forma neo has been aent over: "Hiaoltig and snorting. It slid along the tram for a distance of one hundred fret, when, having rearhed the end of the rails. Instead of lifting Ita wings and floating gracefully ecroe the har bur. It buinlrd B"ln't the rocks and toppled over on to the Wei ll, part of It becoming submerged by the wave. Home of the hot rlndrra from the fur- nee) rem In rontart with the light me terlala of whh h It waa eooairori.-d and act I hero on fire and la a few moments a portion of the framework and the ma' rhinery were all that remained of this ir1'i' tUn of Inventive grnlua. The manager esplained that the trial was a failure Imaaae there waa nol auffl' trnt wind lo Oil the halls, and ao one had been placed Inside to sail It ENORMOUS HEAT. A Figure Which Demonstrates the Powet ... of the 8an. . -; ...There is not more than one person In each ten thousand who has anything like the correct idea what -an. icicle forty-five miles in diameter and ttrc hundred thousand in length would look like. It is also true, says the St. Louis Republic, that there is no necessity foa one being provided with a mind thai would enable him to form a correct conception of such a gigantio cylinder of ice, for there is no probability that anyone will ever live to see an icicle even half so large, yet it is interesting to know that Sir John Uerschel, the great astronomer, used such an illus tration in one of his articles on the la tensity of the sun's heat. . After giving the diameter of the great blazing orW, and a calculation on the amqunt Of heat radiated by each square foot of ita immense surface, he closed by saying that if it were possible for an icicki forty-five miles in diameter and ttvo hundred thousand miles long to plurJge into the sun's great burning sea of gas it would be melted away and utterly consumed even to its vapor, in leas than one second ot time. Such an Iclclat would contain more ice than has formed on the rivers and lakes of the United States during the past one hundred years; its base would cover the averaOe Missouri country and its length would be almost sufllcient to reach to the moon. Mo Chance of Betas Caught. Judge Andrews, of Georgia, used to tell an amusing story of the way hi which he was once "taken down" by one of his audience duriug a politlSal address. He was a candidate for gov crnor of his state and waa explaining o the crowd of people that had ssseTa blcd to hear him how his friends had pressed him to be a candidate and that tho ofllee was seeking him; he was not tccklng the orllce. "In fact, be eex- claimed, "tne omce oi governor been following me for the last years!" , At this point a tall country man at the rear of tho audience rnje. "Hut here's yer consolation. Judge," he shouted. "You're galniu'on it all thai time I .1.11 never- ratch you!" Ihki cheering prophecy proved to be quite correct, in spite of the mirth it pro voked at tho time of its utterance, PEN AND INK DRAWINQ. Modern by a Imitation of the Ancients New Proeeea. It la easy, of conrie, to understand how Mn drawing should have come to be so largely employed and rlalsorated. It Is a matter of reproduction fur Illus tration. An etching-will not print with type, nor with a steel engraving. This, says the London Spectator, led in the early part of the century to the Imita tion of steel eugravings by wood en gravers, who did the bualneaa moat skillfully with Immenae labor. The drawings for them were mostly made in pencil. Hut photographla process rendered the Intervention of the wood rngravr neislleaa, if the artist made a pen drawing that would photograph and process well. A pure technical dilllculty ran be overcome by large number of craftsmen; large numbers, accordingly, have learned to make pen lira wlnga to supplant wood engravings, liut It should Im noted that to do Ihla la lt If b kind of reproductive process. Few rlalxirale pen drawing are made without a studious foundation In some other material. The pen line roust fre quently be traced or drawn over the pencil line, vrry much like the engrav er's tool. The point about the moderns and an rlellta. then, reaolvra Itaelf Into the Imitation by the moderns In a new medium of the technique of an old. It Is cvrtaln that the ancients eould have performed Ihia feat If they had choaen, not a!t.iMlirr certain that they would have ihoM-n. For, to consider thoae otb-r points of reproduction and die semination, the modern master aeeroa lo Im in no greater hurry than the SB riettt to make uae of (he new facilities. VI hen each a master Atp take a the pen, he hand Ira it U much grander ef fect lhan do Us devotees. i. . C.t 4 ILICTfSlO SILTS AND agi,IACI INtWM TO THI MCK IMItl QM AT OOlNTt Of AOVANTAOf OVH ALL IT4T0" it. . t l.rlrle t mm. r i laOsaai). ! -. alil.a.si It eae keet4 f r.M aoifcr.aa.ailee n, a wawn-. It the Hen- wtrmntatrta, la avmthera I'lsh. la a m and (ywef! wilH f'.aiit ee;tia!a t'erfeet ri.as e.f ee'.in'U e fl lt f see f)rtd there Tne itnnW it g i f sett wslf l ea'id lo Le a p.'t rare aaaakkaeaa, j . the twtasat very aiwratde f -4 a fee laUt after h hae Uea tbe ewe. UllVAr tM'r U' re.le l'.a' W '.'.'. seeaee. NO MtDiClMIt Affl NlCf ttaRT. sM ai aawaa taUti Imu sH MSaSVase ef eae BfewM ftefte tat n.a. aelaeeeanM iagaIMa. aes mm eHeav Titt ti.r Kir tmt eat a Ua rmtrw a4 ee'jea Tre Bin Is I WW ea-4.aj ewe t4 Bv-i-e. t rs eK s4 al I a .e lllalr.l-4 t aiel.we la -e t.- .!. m tt-m-mmt aa le " -.'44g ...t laws, eaa) saaasiasais a Sal as ... mm4 eaMeHS'e f tMe a4 ai l"aae. THE OIEH ELECTRIC BELT ASO APFLIAHC8 CO. mt Se HI asaee seeet, Cwle,