PAPER OFFICIAL A LARGE NUMBER .... A HOT NUMBER- J Hie Heppner Gazetta. Without it the Heppner hills would appear dry and barren. People read it; business men advertise in it. Of Morrow County's citizens read the Heppner Gazette. Not much of an authority on agriculture or poli tics, but true to the interests of its neighbors. HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1896. WEEKLY WO. 6P7( SEMI-WEEKLY KO 463 S FOURTEENTH YEAR . why electric; uoms mas SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANi. CLOSING OUT SALE! OTIS PATTERSON, A. W. PATTERSON. . . . Editor Business Manager At $2.50 per year, $1.25 for six moaths, 75 ots. cor three nuuwi. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. ttmjtu PAPHR ia Vmit nn file At E. C!. i)ke 1 Advortisinu Airency. 64 and 65 Merchants Exohangs, Una Franoisoo, California, where eou- tacts lor aaveramnK oaa uo uiaraa un ,u. 0. R. & N. -LOCAL CARD. We invite your attention to our Immense Line of Summer Dress Goods of the Very a Latest Styles. Our Salesman, Price, who recog- nizes no cost or value, will offer these goods Train leaves Heppner 10:45 p. m. dally, except Sunday. Arrives o:w a. m. uauy, cmci West bound passenger leaves Heppner Juno Mmi 111 n. m p.rtst bound i:&la. m. nv.ihi tiuiim leave IlcDuner Junction itolne east at 7:15 p. ra. and 9:10 a. m.; going west, 4:30 p. m. and 6. lo a. ui. CiFFIOIAL DIREOTOBT. United States OBlelals. President G rover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Uonnafiirv nf Hi uta -.. Kiclmrri S. Olney Secretary of TreaBnry John O. Carlisle Secretary or interior nonmuiui Honrniurv nf War Daniel 8. burnout Bwretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster-General William L. WiIbod Attorney-fleneral Jmlson Harmon Beorotaryot Agriculture J. Starling Morton State of Oregon. Governor W. P. Lord Away k Regular Peorntary of State Treasarer Pnpt. fahlin Inst.rnction. Attorney General Senators H. K. Kincnid ..Phil. Motunhau !. M. Irwin . .0. M. Idleman j d. W. McBride 7 J. H. Mitchell ( Hinirer Hermaun Conres8uien 1 W. It. Ellis Printer ii- J- H- Leed' ( R. 8. Bean, Ritnmina .1 n H i' AM . . i F. A. Moore, (0. K. Wolverton Flxth Judicial District. Stenhen A. Lowell Proswiiiug Attorney Johu H. Lowroy Ho now County Officials. a. .in H,.Ktr ... A. W. Gowan Representative. . . . J. .8. B,9;l'b nnty Jnde , . J uhns Keithly ' ('ommisoinners J. 11. Howard J. M. Ilukxr. Olerlt J. W. Morrow Kh.riT a. W. Harnnirton " Tnwnrer , Frank Gilliam Assessor J. If. Willi; Unrmvnr .. Geo. Lord Hoh.ml Bup't Anna Halsiger Coroner T. W. Ayers, J r I hcppkiu town nrncivRR. v.nm Tlios. Morgan Lichtenthal, Otis Psttarsnn, T. W. Aysrs, Jr., 8. 8. Horner, E. J. Blooara. Recorder ,;,' S,Mij r . K. Ij. Frwelsnd Marshal..'. A. A. Wubuiu I'reeiBCtOfneerp. l.iMnf IK llaainA E. Lt. Freeland Constable N. B. Whetton United State band Officers, rue ttAf.I.KS. OS. J.F.Moore ltes-War A. 8. Biggs lisoeiver t.A nllMDK. OK. n.F, Wilson """'r'' J.H. Kobbins ileoeivsr BECBET SOCIETIES. We Tale a LooK at Tljese Goods, You can find a Bargain iQ ttyen). have a Larcie Line of Glassware, Crockery and Tinware that we are closing out. Don't buy these goods till you see our prices. Due to the'Heated Carbon Points Evap orating, Prof. Sylvanus Thompson has been answering a question wnicn nas onen puzzled the public. The arc light pro ceeds from the points of two little car bon rods as large as one's little finger. Prof. Thompson explains what is the state of the carbon when the lamp Is throwing out its light. lie says, reports the Pittsburgh Dispatch, that the car bon is sometimes actually melting, a thing that was until recently thought impossible. Moreover, he says that when a light is hissing the liquid carbon is really boiling. Highest of all in Leavening Power.- mm st r r -Latest U. S. Gov't Report nr. a 88 AB50LUTEE.Y PUBE that no one doubted they were his lineal descendants. The rooster, when put In ordinary combustion the' on the stand, began at once to crow Yours for Cash. & SlyOCUM. Home Comfort. ROLL OF HONOR. THREE GOLD And ONE SILVER Medal, World's Industrial and Cotton Centen nial Exposition, New Orleans, 1884 '85, HIGHEST AWARDS Nebraska State Board of Agriculture, '87. KAWLINS POST, NO. IL Q. A. B. Meaia at Lexington, Or., the last Rat unlay of aer. month. All veterans are invited to Join. ! u,.n Urn. W. Huts. ' Adiotant. tf CoBiinaoaW. Cbattshoohd DIPLOMA Alabama Agr'l Sooiety at Montgomery, LUMBER! AWARD Valley Eipo. Qa 1888. Colombo;!, ilTl HAVK FOR HA1.K ALL KINDS OF CN V drMsml Lumber. M miles of Heppner, at what U known as the 8COTT BAWMIXilj. HIGHEST AWARDS St. Louis Agr'l and Meobaoioal Asso,'G9 BIX HIOHEST AWARDS World's Columbian Ei , Chioaao, 1893. PER 1.0UO FEKT, KOUOH, - - - CLEAR, I too n ao HIGHEST AWARDS Western Fair Association, London, Can da. 1803. TF DELIVERED IN HKI'PNKR, WILL ADD 1 Ib.uu par I.0u0 Iwt aidltlunal. Th sbovs quotations ars strtctljr for Cash. L HAMILTON, Frop. Sal Ban oi mwi W. PENLAND, CD. &. BIHHOP, PrMldrat. Cash I r. TRANSaCTS i GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Mid SIX GOLD MEDALS rimer Pair. S io Franoisoo, Gal., 1894 SILVER MEDAL Toronto Eipo'n, Toronto. Canada, 18115. l mm t1-- , " " J " ' J " V..f .t;-Ji..l W Family and Hotel Ranges. Are oncqnallcd beoansa thry ars madf of mallcabls iron and wroogbt steel Will not break by overheating or rough usage Wateibaokt brar 200 pounds pressure; no danger of explosions br frecin, Flora lined ilb asbestos. Bake qnickly, EeoDominal in fool. Abundance bit water. Born hard or soft eoal, or wood Convenient and ornamental. Will I net life-time with ordinary oar. Fully gasranteed. Over 917,720 Sold to Nov. 1. 185. Above stvls of Rsnss No. at. Is sold nnlr at nn. uullorro urtce Uiroushoul the lulled Btatos and Caixla. E. L. FREELAND, makes COLLECTIONS, whites INSURANCE, ? MAjtta ABSTRACTS. U. S.VUND COMMISSIONER. Und Filings and Final Proofs "Taken, " ' STENOGRAPHER. NOTARY PUBLIC, srarjriiT35ii. oaraoir. D. J. McFaul, M. D. Above bonore were reoeived by WROUGHT IRON RANGE COMPANY, ; Washington Avenue, 19th and Wtb streets, 8T. LOt lH, MO.. V. B. A. And TO to 7 Pearl Hired, Tuaus i , ) aniu AT J. M. H ager's Residence. state of the arc crater is such that the solid caxbon below is covered with a layer or film of liquid carbon just boil- Irtrt. pvnnnrntinff nff. Whpn hifisinc -6 - " 1 o o ( takes place the new state oi tnings is set up. He says: "If you watch a short, hiss ing arc you will see a column of light concentrating itself on a narrow spot and the spot keeps moving about and is very unstable in position, as well as in the amount of light it gives out. The crater surface after the arc has been hissing is found to be literally honey combed. "When the arc is hissing you can see little bits erupted out, and the hissing seems to be compared to the hissing which takes pluce in coiling water. There is, in fact, exactly the same kind of difference between the silent arc and the hissing ore as between quiet evap oration and a noisy boiling." AFRICAN CLIMATE. On the Central Plateau it Is Cdbl and Mot Unhealthy. As for the climate, it in no worse than that found elsewhere in tropic lands. The heat ia not so great as in India or as it is sometimes in New York in summer. Fortunately, writes Henry M. Stanley in Century, the coast belt on both sides of Africa, where the heat ia greatest, and where the climate is most unhealthy, is narrow. In four hours a railway train at ordinary speed would enable us to cross it, and so avoid the debilitating temperature. Ascend ing the sides of the coast range by the, same means of conveyance, we should in two hours reach a rolling plain which gradually rises in height from 2,500 to 3,500 feet aboe the sea. Here the climate is sensibly cooler, and the vhite man can Bafely work six hours of the day in the ojhmi without fear of sunstroke, though he must not count on immunity from fever. In from ten to twelve hours the traveler by train would meet another steep rise, and would find himself from 5,000 to 8,000 feet aliove the sen, on the broad cen tral plateau of the continent, which varies from fiOO to 1,000 miles acrotm. It is in this section that t he great lakes, snowy mountains Hiid tallest hills are found. Here we have cold nights and a hot sun when the skies urc not cloud ed, though the air in the shade is fre quently cool enough for nn overcoat; nud It is on this Immense upland that the white man, when compWled by cir cumstances, may find a homo lustily, as if desiring to proclaim the innocence of the accused, and furnished much amusement to the court. After hearing all the evidence in the case and inspecting the rooster the judge discharged the prisoners and told the prosecutor that, while it was perhaps true he had lost his chickens, yet he was convinced they had become the prey of owls or 'possums. THE IVORY INDUSTRY. THE GOOD SAMARITAN IN CHINA He Would Have Been Likely to Get Him self Into Trouble. : One dark evening I was returning home from a call on one of our Eng lish neighbors in Taiyuenf u, writes Prof. C. M. Cady in Century. When not far from our ' compound the road crossed nn open space of several acres in extent. As I was finding my way along by the dim light of a Chinese lantern, I nearly stumbled over the body of a man who had fallen by the way. My first impulse was to take hold of the person and ascertain if help was needed; but for some reason I did not, but hurried home to get aid. Mr. X was still with us, and on hearing my statement said: "Yes, I know; the man is dead, and it Is fortunate that you did not attempt to toucn the body. Should we now try to remove it, or even go to it, we should no doubt be Been, and at once suspicion would attach itself to us, and none could tell the consequences. We might cause a riot before morning." It should be said that this suspicion would not have been becnuse we were foreigners, for a native under sini' liar circumstances would likewise have run the risk of being charged with the murder. . The Uood Samaritan would have fared hardly In- China or most likely would have been sus pected of doing the kind deed for some ultimate gain while the priest and the Levite would have been accounted not hard-hearted, but prudent. GAVE THE FISH A JAG. Entertaining FoundH In inn. Paid up Capital ll.0Wi.on0. Ho charge) for Inside plumbing when pressure bollsrs are used. COLLiKOTIONS Hade on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HErFNER. tf OREGON Ontario-Horns Stave line A, N I BDBHS-SflHYOH STHGEUHE H. A. WILLIAMS, P'op. J ,11 HAKES Plenty of them at the Gazette Office.1 . . S. O. Smitli & HBSxOe, '.sticrirniiu tno psslsss is; FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING. m Ail WcHk la This Una. fontraMInf and Job Work. Plrture Framing;, all SUi-1. at prim In suit, a us triors nrdrring as w guarantee aall.lw)- Unn. I'rlcve reasonable. Terms ( ash. BtoroOpp. 1. O. Thomiwon Co. Main Htm Ileppnor. OSTA HI O-BUllS'S TllF. LANCASHIRE INSURANCE Co. (svee Borne Duly at 9 n. ra. tod ar rises at Obterio la 42 boars. Single Foro $7.DO. Round Trip $10.00 areynm'(h fMM r,et.ls pf pme4. nunsHCAsroy M,H Shims dallf ,,M f r.nnrU Si !? I f ' Hl- M.miiH M rmtte In inlerlor '" fnrtwed- . U enk ihe tmf!, Prteitle e1 L.' ! - ai Burna, i w OI MANCIIICH'I'KHi ICNOIANII PITTF.r5flX. AGENT. ,?..,, w,",r Do You Want a Rig ? Gw4 Af6a:iiii:3i tut Piiri Vp M Don't You Want a Place to ,Y$fV- ;J Put up Your Team ? Are You in Need of a Saddle Horse ? rtMlak!!r All tfiM cud a rrrcariKl at Thompson k Mods, Uwr Maio 8Ue! iifpptier, urejfrin. This Is One Way or Hetnt la California. "Did you ever iee drunken finh?" In quired a Sonoma county wine grower. No one would ennfe that he had wen intoxicated flab, and the silence In dicated a predisMNitinn to Incredulity, says a writer In the Sun I'rutioiiwo 1'oet. "I supK)xe you are poing to tell us alout a drunken catfish staggering down through the orchard and catch ux a bird?" siifrgeated oue. "l)o you think I am a liar? demsnd- rtl the furiner, Indignantly, but he wns left In Ignorance ua to the belief of his hearers. "My winery is right on the tank of a little creek. Tliia time of the year the water stands in pools and every fx ml ia full of trout, suckers and pike. All of the waste from the winery 1 thrown Into the creek, and that Is (nougb to discolor the water, but the other day a big vat of sour claret burst end nearly all of It ran down iuU the hole of wab-r just ixlow the winery In half an hour the kkiI was crowded with fish floating belly up. I thought they were dead, and pulM a big pike out, but he w iggled and Sopped around just like an old drunk trying to get up without anything to bold on to. One l;y one Uiey dlaapiieared as thry ao- la-red up, and when the water eleaml two days afterward there waan't adex! fish In the y. Thry ha1 Just been Jagfed" Oaa ef Maine's WI4os. There Is now living In ffartland. Me at the ripe old age of 71 years, one o Maine's notable widows. This Is Mr. Kllrn Phillips, rrlirt of (ieorge, a brother of Wrn.tr II Pblllij. ller bus. Iwnd was graduate from Harvard rrd l re, a memlier of the famoiks rlaes of "in, amonf bis e laaswat and InUmate friends liug H. O, VV. llolniee and James Freeman f Isrk. Mrs. Phillia has In ber totiss aewral aaiique rrln-s of great Intereet and hltorl al value, among t hern bng marble lop table jd drawer wbirh Wlonred u John Drown, of Ilarier"a r erry fame, and a topr ewer and sidlaH, onrej the property of John I'hjliip, the flrst mayor of the rlly of floeton. fbe trlls many an IntereatJwg rrmiassrinre of Wendell phHIiji, with whom she was leUmetrly aequalnted. Kesr U the tine the W l. W ills tbtUHie,b -H eir,et If In a1eatee,oae eae, t-1 M 3 w"" i .,!'... s !) ,'ied s.iliaSiS s.pirri S.S ) msits a-4 n ' a 4li ! ie. I'.e e ' in r-e stale, ',i sre sitll five s fiUmt l Iki it g a Mk H.e tim. snmiisi ss ,! II J-snni.ms o fPl-ll ll MSI J i t,t-r. ; a. a. ' " - - - " f. I'latitf . aa er'ills'sl 1 ivx-rx T d jcarr. Isrf rr.. nt'l'. srd Mt,f t.,nl, S e life t'Sl' m 1 What a FULL DAY'S WORK. New Knalaad Farmer Afcem- Ensland Farmer pllined. Iest some one should thluk an Aroostook farmer s h too free and . . A !.. cuav. tne I'arKiiursi corr luimvu, ... .1,.. K.,rt Ka rlield IK'tU'Oll ifives una nccount of an average day a work dur ing the rH.tato-diggiiig season: "I went to lied at 11 p. til. with the conviction that I must iret up at 4 a, m. Chscw time). Awoke whi n the clock struck 2 and diired not go to sleep again ior fear of sleeping over. Juiulied out of led at 4 o'clock, ran to the barii,ilreaa.-l mvaelf as I went, and fed and hiirneejH-il four horaee; ran to the bounr and woke the. old woman (for good reasons farm- i rs w ivea OIWD Sleep wnu uie mir girl tbrough Htato digging); ran to the spring and buck twUe; gnnwd the double wagon; mended a check rein; iiiiloadrd four barrels and a banket of i Kit ii lor and duailied la hsrn-la; 5, oke up the trew; 5:30, brrskfuat; 4:31, ran to the barn again, got the horses on the wagon and started for the faetory; 0, arrlvrd at factory, horara slruiniliff. two acres of teams n brail of me; everyUly swearing; 8.30, lit my pip; 7, gave some of) the Ikivs a lesson In careless language; a lit my p! again; , went Into the boarding housr ami tried to bus the rook; 10, told a tiig yarn; II, stole a U.tlle of whisky; 12:30, got uiilo(wlrl. full as a siarrli fm-tory, and ran the boraee all the way home, arriving at 1; had a row with a frenchman and forgot to eat dinner; t, rhsrd four Arab iieddlrra out of the Arid, then hauled Hitatoesi o the rrllar till T; a, bal sniiiirr, unharnraard and eared for Uia horara, went lo the spring twice more, ahoveled iMitatora In cellar till 0:30, got a t ha ore to k I mi U,e hired girl twice; JO, went to les happy. ELECTRICITY KILLS THE TREES, Wires Attached to the Branches Destroy the rpllaae, In France ereat care is taken In lo cating the wires that carry hlgh-tew-slon electric currents, whether used for light or for power, but in America the. tlilnir U done more simply. Io one bothers himself about what Is to be found at the side of the wire, and It pulses among the branches: of the tree ' and across thickets, unconscious of the damage that it may do. Now in many , towns, says the Cosmos, It has been observed that the trees Jn the cur rent dwindle and die. It baa also been olwerved that Uie death of the tree Invariably follows the rainy season; the leaves beiug then soaked with moisture, become goxl conductors.and lead the current down Into the tree from the wire. The wire, to lie sure. have leen Insulated, but the protect-' Ive layer Jins leen quickly destroyed by the friction of the brunches and the line become bare, pnxlucing thus results that It would have been well to avoid. And the electricity la the only thing that ran be accused of thl. It suflhvs, to convince oiirsclf, to com pare the condition of the treea t rat- It Means Death to Seventy-Five Thousand Elephants Annually. One-fifth of the world's commerce in ivory comes to Great Britain, and it will astonish most people, says Answers, to learn that 15,000 elephants have to bo killed every year to keep our markets supplied with the precious substance. Altogether, to keep the whole world in ivory apart from fossil tusks 75,000 elephants are slaughtered annually. Africa is the great ivory country; and in the Congo basin, the best hunting ground, there are supposed to be about 200,000 elephants, worth altogether about 500,000. The average weight of ivory obtained from a single ele phant is about 50 pounds. Tusks weighing about 100 pounds each have been procured, but this is very rare. The most expensive tusks are those used in the manufacture of billiard balls; they cost, as a rule, 110 a 100-weight. Ivory dust and shavings are used by confectioners to stiffen the more ex pensive kinds of jellies. The scraping are often burnt and made into a paint known us "ivory black, worth about 20 a ton. The hardest of all ivory is that ob tained from the hippopotamus. It will emit sparks like a piece of flint when struck with steel, and is principally used in making artificial teeth. MRS. MONROE'S DOCTRINE. She Made a New Rule for Women of the Executive Mansion. About the time that James Monroe os president of the United States pro claimed the great doctrine which bears bis name in international affairs, says the Chicago Tribune, bis wife, Eliza Kortright Monroe, took a stand In so ciul atTairs which bas stood the test of time quite as well aa that of her great husband. She absolutely refused to return any social calls. Great was the row it stirred up ind the.chargesof affecting royal manners and customs and of being rude and oil the rest rained about Mrs, Monroe's head. Put it was of no avail. She stuck it out, ond each "first lotiy of the land" has followed her example since. So great, however, was the Uieturbance over Mm. Monroe's refusal to return culls that John Quincy Adams consid ered It necessary to draw up and formally promulgate a formula of eti quette which has since regulated the life of the executive muiiHion. After the revolution James Monroe, then only 23 years old, went to New York as a delegate in congress from Virginia, lie was a IluhImhih' young fellow, with iHiliticn) and military suc cess upon-liiin in a marked degree and. a diHtinguislMHl ancestry. There he met the beautiful daughter of Law rence Kortright. who was an impor tant figure In the social life of New York of tliut day, nud, falling in love, they were married. CATARRH is a LOCAL DISEASE and Is th result at raids and svdosa cNsislia chsnsss. It ran be eiired by a irirsnant remedy wbKB M applied ill. eracd by wire with that of neighbor, rseiiy law ih smiriis. h . i. i i .! i In lot' sir sijeurlwil 11 fifes lug tree. It baa often hrn noticed relief at ones, that III a storm ail the trees through' which wires tmss die In a few hours, A ROOSTER 'Mffel IN EVIDENCE. Fts aepsfras as) lb Haass Had?. The human brain roniairia a eonaid ershla proportion of phosphorus, vary. Irif frrm I SO In I-Jo of the rallr maaa. If the average weight of the t'anraeiaa brain be taken at i'"t nun U will then cor la In an im'mnt of phpbors .mounting to from I t 13 to I.'itrea. A rurlo'ss fsi t ret-aMling Una t.boa phorus Iti the I, um n lfslB ia that Itlsal must eatifly wa6tii.f ia tie brslu matter tit :. tela (ewrt Bad flared ls tS liases Siaad. In a stealing raexi whhh was trtesl In the roiu,ty court at "ylsauia, a., a very riri;ilitiary wlinea was In trodml ! first (if bis kind Ui at has err appeared In our eourthotisr, says the runainifth News. Tbla wea a iloiuiriK k rooster. Two nrgro boye were pneuvtiUril t"T strli,g rlilrkrtia from another negro. The priasrrutor proved that bla i hirkrsia Were Nilsaing, and ! rhiiine.1 to he IdrnUflrst the in ts the )sid of Ihe aetiar,!. It then developed on lb latter ll prose their (n lie f One of our t.f'yh'rst young lawyers was mndiieting U.e defenar, and 1st very Irir'nloiwly nio.Ueed in rvli'.erne lh fcl.t tneiilloiied doOii r.lrk fnlr. wlilih belnnrM to lh ilrfrndatils. In oi'ler to show the aim- liar in i,jarhf'ee lielwerri I I tt tt.i.iji add the Hii l rl,l.Uei. Th e fe-'I't l'l, l.f w Irftrl )fed tl I he l i e I rr. II , I.,, ir.. I ai,d tl.e I u'i.I i i,: re ai very while the surrounding ones are not touched. This Is very arrioua source nf complaint, and causes some law auiu. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS. IsspeovesaaaU Wfelrfe Make Tsslr is Hardly Hatlreobla. PainsUklug akill and constant lin- proveiurnt are neeeaaary factors In the ef frction or suecra of aJUMsvt any in dustry, but now here, sns the .New York Mail and (r'.sprres, re thry more fully attended than In the making of artificial I mil. There waa a time w hen the lam and the crippled had to show their defect and misfortunes to th world. Now It Is just the othrr wsy. People with artificial leg ran ni walk so ierfertly a to avoid detertion, and a person with a alngl amputation ran almost defy detection. Improvement make It poeailile to move the knee and ankle Joint a, and thla Innovation also atrengUteiia lb whole limb and makea it more durable. One of the latest Improvement la In the koesi joint of Use leg for thigh am putation, which la ao r ran red that whra In a sitting p a it ton the ron! arid spring are enUrely relse1, tlm re lieving all atrain ami preaksur. There sre In the t'nited Hutee lou.nuo persona w ho bsve to be supplied w 1th new limit on an avers" of once In every fit to eight years. Th manofarturinff of thes artielest In Ness loth ha lafeofii quit an enterprise. " Ely's Cream Balm Is scknnwlntued to be the md Ihonmirh cars fnr NsesK'slarrb, 1I In Head sud list reter of all fmiedm. It iM'" suit cIwmists tlis a-sslpssssges, allsrs usla anil liiAamnialUin, besis Ihssnres, pro. lerts lh nenil'Tsiie f ruai culu., IU'M Uis sener ot Uaia sn4 .hi.II. I'rir. Mr. l Prnvitou m by m.il. KLX illllI UKltn, 4 W arraa suetl, w let. Your Face I)hi:aln or the w. The lnins Iwlilne and ernsriin M Unl to ertema, teller, aaltf beuia, and othef diseased of the skia U instantly allsrt.1 y applrlng IhsmberUia's lye sad r'nn Oialiaee. Msay Very ba4 case kav been pertrsnsnOv etii4 bf It. It U equally eftVient tb hiad pt aivd a fsvoril renv edf sr.ie al-.Uj rhsi )d kamls, chib Isitia, ff-4 bus, anI rhroni eye. lur l 1 Jpi,i(Ut st I'i Hi rr l . Irf Dr. r4)s Cr.4l'Ua PoWilrra, ) v are ' i al.sl s l.or ne.u eln in lad vnle t. I'ik', l.i l pmiiwaod vvfuiifua-. rf le b; t anf lrvr, drngiieU Will as vreastaed wilh a most ef.aa'"g smile, after feu Insast In a IteMDiIacliiis scuiet-ni shim ua ais PINCH TENSIOM, TENSION INDICATOfl AUTOMATIC TENSION RELEASES, Tb ! cvmplrl se t useful l'k rrt s4.l4 t ny elg eisanf. Tb wiiiti: l Cirtbi isi lUat'tomcl Bal!. Of rist rtalib tail Pirftcl A.-JsttiassL twt ALL Itaawld Ar'.Ute. Aad wil fin 4 p' b I ka.il ti j.i.r st;tv;m-. A' iiva I (inn V.ttr- ,-. ' el l.f y 1 1 - .M ' "" ' v.tiTE mzi k".c::.r:E C3 cur.vtu.1.0. o. OeM b md sufasrtbe. m i U Hi l.:m In r1rr an I str-r ";