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About Cottage Grove echo=leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 18??-1895 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1895)
TRAINING THE BODY. Y ALE U N IVE R S ITY PAR TIC U LAR LY EX CELS IN PHYSICAL D E V E LO P M E N T . W h i le th e I n t e lle c t 1» N o t N e g le c t e d at N e w H a v e n t h e M u s c le » R e c e i v e C a r e fu l A tte n tio n — A M odel G y m n a s iu m D e s c r i b e d — M e t h o d s o f T ra in in g ;. There are plenty of persons, including those in charge of the institution of course, who consider Yale college the finest educational establishment in the United States, if not the world. So far as mental framing goes, however, there are many who, while having great re spect for Yale, do not fully concur in this view, and perhaps this is a lucky thing. Otherwise the rush of students to New Haven town might lie so great as to overwhelm the settlement and kill the college by simply smothering it to A bsolutely P ure MARBLING BOOKS. T h « S lo w O ld F r o c e s h b y W h i c h t h e F a n c y E d g es A r e M ade. Almost ever since the first books were made the fashion of maTbleizing the edges of many of them has been in vogue. It used to be, however, that only the most expensive volumes — those hound in full calf and elaborately let tered— had their edges thus garnish id, but now m cb finishing is left, for the most part, for ledgers, daybooks and f her blank books intonded for bnsiness ase. Though long before gilt edges were thought of the ornamenting of the plaiu white edges of books to imitate marble was popular, there has been little or no change in the process since its first in troduction. It is generally supposed that all such details have come under the stamp of the bookmaker’s art until there is noth ing left in them to remind one of their first and earliest days, but not with marbling. As time has gone on the pop ularity of this method of embellishing paper has grown less. Consequently there has been no need to devise means by which it could be more speedily done. There have been some improvements in the original methods, but most book binders still stick to the old way as good enough. Instead of books whizzing through machinery one after another and taking on their marbled edges in some mysteri ous manner, as might be supposed, each book is taken by band separately and the leaves dipped, tightly held together, into the liqnid that marks their edges with the many colored little veins, be fore the covers are pnt on. A trough about two inches deep is filled with gnm water, on the surface of which various colored pigments have beeu thrown and disposed in various forms with a comb and coarse wire teeth. The cans of liquid paint are ranged along the sides of the trtmgh, and trom them the paint is taken by dipping into them long, soft hairbrushes that are held over the water am. allowed to drip. Oue color is pnt down right over the other, and the wide, coarse comb drag ged throngh them. Tho books are ex tremely dexterously dipped into the wa ter, and the colors adhering to their edges are set by dashing cold water over them. But one of the three edges at a time can be marbleized and set np on end to dry before the book cun be ban died again for another dipping. Thus the variegated edges of books and mar bled papers for the sides and covers of them are produced. The process may seem a little slow, bnt it answers all the needs that the bookbinder finds for it.— St. Louis Re public. S PEED O F WILD DUC KS AND GEESE. T h . D o c k , i t f a k . O v e r S ix t y -s ix >1I I . . an H o a r a n d O u t fly t h e G e e »e . Of all the migratory birds the Ameri can wild pigeon and black dnek are well up toward the front as regard long and rapid flight. The speed of the pigeons can ouly be estimated, while that of the ducks can be established by observation, home years ago the writer aud a scien tific friend measure.! off on the shore of u large 'vestern riv« r a line exactly three miles mug, and each took a station at opposite cuds of the line. The object was to note, by means of preconcerted signals, the time a flock of wild docks took in passing np or down the river, near the stations. During three hours on the morning of a bright October day, observations were noted of t ie times of passing the stations of niuo different flocks. Upon comparing watches it was found that the average time- was 2 minutes and 42 seconds, thns showing the speed per hour to be 66 % miles, or one mile in 54 seconds. As showing how nniform was tbeir flight, a difference was found of only five seconds between the greatest a n d the least intervals of time. As nnmerons flocks of wild geese were daily flying in the same neighbor hood observations were also taken to test their hourly speed. Two points twenty- nine and one-third miles apart were se lected, both of which were connected by telegraph. VYe succeeded in identifying four ont of seven flocks which passed over both places during the four days wo were on the watch. The mean hour ly speed was found to be a fraction over 6< miles. Tho wild goose k-,s been long supposed to bo the swiftest of all water fowl, bnt this experiment shows that he in far behind the wild dnek.— New York World. What r t ’ cMiuj 1» Kducation! These are s..me answers to examina tion tnestions given in an eighth grade school not a thousaud miles from Chi cago: "Liberia was established in 1822 as a colony for aspirated negroes.” “ Nine-tenths of all the plants not found in any other part of tho world are fonnd in Australia ” "Salem Witchcraft was ueithera sol dier nor a sailor, hot he discovered some cities.’/ — (ireat j : vide. BREEDING BUFFALOES. S o m e o f th e H y b r id . T h a t A r e A r e F in e A n im a l» . P rod u ced A famous Montana character is Char lie Allard of Ravalli. Mr. Allard is fa mous mainly because he is one of the owners of the largest herd of buffalo in the country, and no man living has given to these now rare animals more patient study and attention than he. "T h e coldest storms of winter do not trouble them,” he says, “ for their thick, shaggy coats are windproof. Daring the heavy snows and blizzards they climb the hills, and turning their breasts to tho wiuu defy the storm. They feed where the snow is thinnest. Cattle are driven before a storm and w ill often go with a wind 60 or 100 miles from the accustomed range unless they reach a sheltered spot Horses turn their backs to a storm, bnt the buffaloes face it every time. They seem to keep in about the same condition of flesh the year round and are as good eating in the spring as they are in the fall, and a buffalo steak is abont as fine a morsel as ever a man made a meal of. Abont two years ago I purchased the .Tones herd of bnffalo, which was at Omaha. There were 31 of them in the herd, and we paid(for I have apartner n ow )< l 8 ,- 000 for the lot Marcbiel Pablo, a well known cattleman, has joined me in the business aud for the past year has had entire charge of them, so that I do not know just exactly how many we have— about 140, I should judge, now, and by next fall theTe w ill be fully 200 of them. "W e have experimented in crossing bnffalo with all breeds of cattle, and the resnlts are most satisfactory. The Polled Angns stock when crossed with the bnffalo produces a magnificent ani mal. The fnr is finer and closer than that of the buffalo, and the meat is sweet and wholesome. We are produc ing as many of these animals as possi ble, but w ill not pnt any on the market for several years yet. We are not selling any bnffalo either, for the reason that we need them all at present We re ceive letters every day from museums, parks and shows wanting them in all qnantities, aud though we might dis pose of one or two singly we hare no pairs to sell. “ A g '» d buffalo hide is worth $100 now in the market, and heads bring f om <200 to <500 when mounted, and the valno of these is steadily increasing, so that bnffalo breeding is as good an investment c? real w»iRic. O—r her I is about the only one I know of i.ny size. There is a small one in tho Tetas panhandle, and these, with the lew that roam in the national park, are the sole remnants of the thousands which roamed the prairies hut a few years ago.” — Anaconda (Mon.) Standard. KXERCISISO THE ABDOMINAL MUSCLES, or cured, rupture has been discovered and cured, or the suffering students greatly benefited, and so on. Dr. H. S. Anderson is assisted in his practical work by Dr. W. G. Anderson, his brother, and over Dr. Seaver and both tho Andersons is Professor Eugene Lamb Richards, the director of the gym nasium. Though he does none of the actual gymnasium work, its present per fection is largely due to his efforts, for it was Professor Richards who cansed the raising of <250,000 for the erection of the gymnasium bnilding, and he is perhaps the foremost authority on gym nastics aud athletics in the country. He is extremely popular with the stndeuts, who always speak of him as the “ squar- ■st” man in the faculty, and it is to him tiiat. they turn whenever a decision not to be appealed from is wanted on tome disputed point in athletics. Of the 'vnmasinm as an institution it may be suid that it is the only one attached to any college in America where the work is organized on so thorough and scien tific a basis as that which has been im perfectly outlined in this article. Of the gymnasium's home it may be said that it is a veritable palaoe, erected for the abode of physical culture. The visitor who enters this admirably devised building for the first time can not bnt be impressed by the simple splendor of the pure white marble floors and staircases that must be trod before the gymnasium proper is reached. A ft erward this first impression is almost driven ont of mind by the completeness of all the appliances. The baths, the rowing tanks aud the offices are all un exampled in their way, bnt the main floor with its apparatus of every con ceivable sort for physical improvement has not its match anywhere. It is al most worth a special trip to New Haven to see the main floor of Yale's gymna- death, while Harvard and Cornell, Ann Arbor aud Princeton, De Panw and California and all the other universities, big and little, wonld be killed by inat tention. Bpt. in respect of physical training all who have examined Yale’s plan and plant and talked w ith the accomplished men in charge agree that Yale is at the top. It does not follow if this be true that Yale students w ill win every trophy offered at every intercollegiate contest in athletics, that they w ill row the fast est at every boat race, that they w ill make most runs at baseball or pile np the biggest scores at football. Indeed they might fall behind in all these things and the proposition still be true, for it is not asserted that the system of physical training at Yale makes sure game winners, nor was the scheme laid ont with that for its ouly or chief ob ject. The physical work of the stndeuts in Yale's gymnasium is performed for the sole purpose of giving to the young men who undertake it the best possible bodily foundation for the postgraduate course that all tnnSt take in the hard school of this world— of fitting them to endure, of building up nerve and ninscle, so that they w ill be uot only clever and cultivated, bnt strong, self reliant and healthy as well. In order to produce this result gym uastic work has been placed upon the same basis at Yale as any other study. Do not cavil at this use of the word study. The proper development of the body is a most profound aud important .irmly—oue the more thorough master ing of which wonld do away with the necessity for more than half the doctor - iug that is now needed and reduce the uumlicr of hospitals at least one-third. No student is required, however, to take any part in the gymnasium work. Ev ery one who does is first carefully exam ined and measured by J. W. Seaver, M. D. To every one who needs it Dr. Seav er gives a prescription card upon which is written a diagnosis of the student’s physical condition and needs. If his heart is weak, his liver torpid or his in digestion ont of order, if his muscular 1 development is in any degree defective for a person of his size, if there is in cipient curvature of the spine, if his eyesight or hearing is below the stand- ! ard, the facts aro stated npon the card, together with the treatment that should Ixi undergone for the rectification of the defect, the varions entries on the card T W O IN V E N T IO N S IN ONE. covering, in fact, the entire range of T h e K l n e t o g r a p h t h e L a te s t M a r v e l T u r n the perfect physical man. When, after mastering the card, the e d O n t b y E d is o n . “ We are progressing, progressing,” student understands his weaknesses, he said Thomas A. Edison to a Boston is next given a manual of instruction Herald representative when informed prepared by Dr H. S. Anderson, to that his retreat had been invaded for whom the actual training is intrusted, tuu purpose of gettiug ’ »formation con and then the student is put through such cerning the latest and greatest of Lis a course of exercise as experience shows inventions, the one which is being is especially adapted to his case. For eagerly awaited and which very few instance, the student suffering from in have had a chance to see— that is, the digestion and dyspepsia is cansed to combination of the phonograph with take measures to strengthen the muscles the kinetoscope, the contrivance t o of the stomach, sides and abdomen. which Mr. Edison applied the term Among other things he is told to lie on his back stripped and raise his feet so kinetograph on this occasion. "T h e object of this machine,” he that his legs shrill be perpendicular said, “ is to afford tho spectator two in without moving his head, body or arms Theu he is told to lie on ventions in one—that is, two senses are in any way simultaneously appealed to. Suppose, his back as before and raise his head we w ill say, an opera is to be reproduc and body without lifting his feet from ed. The phonograph already repeats the | the floor or using his arms. Many per sound. The kinetoscope afterward af sons a»e greatly surprised on trying ei fords a view of the movements. Now, ther of these for the first time to find it a however, we wish to combine the two well nigh impossible achievement. Of and combine them far more effectively than ever their distinct elements have heretofore been rendered by separate in struments. "Thus, if one wished to hear and see the concert or the opera, it would only be necessary to sit down at home, look upon a scene and see the performance reproduced exactly in every movement aud at the same time the voices of the players and singers, the music of the orchestra, the varions sounds that ac company a performance of this sort, w ill be reproduced exactly. The end BROADENING THE CHEST, attained is a perfect illusion. One rcr ily course when this is thecase it is plainly hears and secs the play, because the evident that the abdominal muscles are conditions necessary to the snitable im abnormally weak. Sacb »w-aknessof it pressions upon the eye and ear are ob self is sufficient cause tor dyspepsia or tained. ” indigestion, and vigorous practice at A n U n lu c k y D r a w . Don Simplicio, to dispel the clouds of melancholy that cast a gloom over his spirits, has taken to theater going. "E rnani” was produced, and everybedy spoke highly of the performance, < nr hero among the rest. "B n t there is one fault about it, ’ ’ be said on coming out of the house cne evening. "W hat is it?” “ I 'll tell yon. In t le third act, whore the conspiracy takes place, they draw lots to ascertain which erf them is to kill Charles V. Now, what was drawn the first night? Ernani. A r 1 the secoui? Exvtni. And the third? Ernani agai i. Always Ernani. Six nights miming! Now. that’ s unlikely on the face of it For the same name to be drawn once or twice may pass, but six times rnnnii g —that is too much.” Ilis remarks were received with a regular ovation. Giornale dclie Donn-t You can carry the little vial of Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pel lets right in the vest- pocket of your dress suit, and it will not make even a little lump. The "Pellets” arc so small that 42 to 44 of them go in a vial scarcely more than an inch long, and as big S co tt* » F a v o r it e s . round as a lead pencil. Scott believed that “ Waverley” was They cure constipa his best novel and the ‘ ‘ Lady of the tion. I r One "Pellet” is a Lake” his best poem. He and the Bal- laxative ; two a mild lautyncs had more than one lively dis cathartic. One taken after dinner will stim cussion on the subject, bnt he would ulate digestive action never admit a change of opinion. He and palliate the effects knew the “ Lady of the Lake” by heart of over eating. They and once repeated the whole to prove act with gentle effi ciency on stomach, the fact liver and b o w e ls . A C r im e . They don’t do the “ Is it true that Mand Makeface was work th e m s e lv e s . They simply stimulate arrested for intimidating voters?” the natural action of 1 “ Yea. She threatened to kiss every th r o r g a n s th e m -I man who would vote for Johnson.” ■elves. *■ I - H O IT T ’ 8 A HALF CENTURY OLD G OLDEN JU B IL E E OF THE UNIVE R S I T Y O F N O T R E DAME. B r ie f R esu m e of th e H is t o r y o f a N o t a b le R o m a n C a t h o li c th e H ig h e r M ost I n s t it u t i o n L e a r n in g — I t s F ie r y Nowhere are boys belter cared for mpd more thoroughly taught than at Hoitt * School. Burlingame. San Mateo Conner, Cal. The school is in charge of Ira G. Hoitt. Ph. D., and will reopen August 6 tb. —S. F. Chronicle. It was ouly 50 years ago that the Ro man Catholic University o f Notre Dame fa Lao— Onr Lady of tho Lake— was iblished by the Rev. Edwin S. Sorin , a 600 acre tract of woodland border- Dg the St. Joseph river, in the northern part of Indiana. It was at first bnt a ¡mull and straggling school, bnt now, at the half century mark, it is oue of tho most notable institutions of learning in the United States. The first move in the direction of establishing Notre Dame, as by common consent it is now termed, was made in 1830 by the missionary father, Very Rev. S. T. Badiu, the first Catholic priest ordained within the boundaries of the republic. With s keener insight than that possessed by many others, he pur chased the bcantifnl tract mentioned front the government at <1.25 an acre with the notion that there a great school should ultimately lx located. Later Fa ther Badiu conveyed this tract, which had come to be known as St. Mary’s of the Lake, to the bishop of Vincennes. In 1842 the first steps in the realiza tion of the educational scheme were taken, when tho prelate conveyed the property to Father Sorin, on condition that a college should be established there within a certain time. This im- T r a i n i n g a n A z t e c G ir l . M AIS BUILDING AT NOTRE DAME. S a r c a s m off t h e S le d g e H a m m e r S o r t. The Liverpool vestry, or some of it, hits not an exalted opinion of Crimean heroes. It seems that a veteran soldier h... taken refuge in the workhouse, and a Mr. Peet objects on the gronnd that the veteran has a pension. A mild man nered partisan feebly protested that the pension was insufficient to ktxp the hero. Bnt Mr. Peet would not away with this. He considered that it was “ not right to encourage these people. ” Crimean he roes, that is, we suppose. And he added his further opinion that “ it was mand lin sentimentality.” We quite agree with Mr. Peet. Take away his pension too. Let him starve. Why in the name of fortune do we let “ these people” go on living? It is ridicnlons; in a word, it is “ maudlin sentimentality.” We are glad to have a Mr. Peet to thrust these truths home We have long looked for h im ; the world has been pining for him since the decease of the late lamented Gradgrind. Let. us have facts, not Crimean heroes. We should advise Mr. Peet to have the Crimean hero thrown ont— into the gutter, his proper place. Crimean herexs are cheap enough; we want more Poets. Aliy oue can rash on a bullet or a bayonet; it takes a Peet to lx sensible. We hope Mr. Peet w ill get into parliament aud press these views, and he might in the meantime give the aged pauper commis sion u good drubbing. This is the right stuff for Englishmen.— Pall Mall Ga either of the exercises named w ill cer zette. tainly andqnickly improve the student’s R e s t o r a t i o n o f H o ll o ’ » O gle. condition. If the reader is a sufferer in this direction and has any doubts of the A remarkable and indeed unique proe- efficacy of the prescription, let him try ess of restoration has been carried ont it aud be convinced, for it is quite as in the interior of a tree. The tree is the beneficial to the nonstudent as to the famous “ R ollc’s oak,” which is to be young man in attendance at Yale. seen within an easy distance of Rouen. These exercises are not the ouly ones It is declared to be the identical oak npon a branch of which the first Duke prescribed for stomach troubles, bnt of Normandy nsed to hang his gold they are all as simple, thongli some of chain to see if ¡my of his subjects wonld them are best performed with the aid of like to hang there instead. If it isn’t, apparatus of one kind or another, and it is, at any rate, so old that it has com besides there are exerc;=esfor increasing pletely last its inside and was liable to the size of any muscle, . ir the relief of collapse at any moment. It has now headache and nervousness due to con beeu relieved of this liability. An ar- tinued mental application, for increas- borieuitnral genius has fitted it with a iug or decreasing the weight, for devel- solid new inside of masonry. The ma- ma oping toe chest, etc., aud all have been sonry is made to follow and fit every laid out and systematized, and all are turn and twist and gnurl of the patient practiced under thoroughly scientific and there is the veteran solid as a rock conditions, since Dr. Seaver, already again. Theu the fissures and cracks on mentioned, who attends to the theory, bis exterior have been neatly fi'led np and ) Dr. aft cement, and the cement has been — rw H. u S. c Anderson, a „a ---------- i“ who *-- looks with er its practical application, are both reg artistically colored, so that you wonld ular physicians who have all the advan never know it from the natural bark. It tages of careful training and long prac is expected and believed that the tree tice in their present positions. Dr. w ill not know the difference either and Seaver is especially expert at physical take to flourishing again as it did a few examination aud measurements, and centuries ago. Still, as no tree has ever more than once has taken 50 measure been thns rejuvenated before, its behav ments in five minutes. The examination ior is being watched with some anx does not stop at mere measurements, iety.— London Letter. however, important though they may be. It includes everything, and students A P resent F o r Y o u r D e x f F r ir cS , who have been found by Dr. Seaver to A curious present for a deaf person be of defective hearing have been per has been introduced in Germany— a fan manently relieved by the removal of deftly concealing a tiny ear trumpet in foreign substances from their ears. Poor its stick. eyesight has been found and improved of Bees, Wasps, Hornets, Centipedes or We are accustomed to think of the Scorpions— bites o f animals, reptiles or ! people of ancient America as largely savage and with none of the thoughts insects, are instantly soothe» 1 and quickly 1 abont conduct aud morals such as were cured with Pain-Killer. It counteracts j held in Europe. Bnt here are a few ex tracts from a letter written by an Aztec the effect o f the poison, allays the irrita or Mexican mother to her daughter be tion, reduces the swelling and stops the fore the conquest of Cortez. The exact pain. W hen you go fishing, on a picnic j date is not given, bnt Prescott quotes it from an early Spanish chronicle: i or on any outing trip, be sure and take a bottle of “ In walking, my daughter, see that yon behave becomingly, neither going with haste not too slowly, since it is evidence of being puffed up to walk too slowly, and walking hastily causes a vicious habit of restlessness and insta ; For all pain— internal or external— it lias no eqi 'll, and bility. Therefore neither walk very fast | for Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea and Dysentery, it is almost nor very slow, yet when it shall be necessary to go with haste, do so; in ! a specific. Sold everywhere at 25c. a bottle. (Quantity ! this use your discretion. And when yon ! has been doubled.) Accept no imitation or substitute. 1 may lx obliged to jump over a pool of ! T h e genuine hears the name — P e r r y D a v i s & S o n . water, do it with decency, that you may neither appear clnmsy nor light. When you are in the street do not carry your head much inclined or vonr body I bent, nor as little go with yonr head very much raised, since it is a mark of M il e « w ith c o ld w ater. R e lia b le an d tafe. ill breeding; walk erect and with yonr JAMES LAIOLA* CO., Putin*, Or, head slightly inclined. Walk throngh the street quietly and with propriety. Another thing that you must attend to, my daughter, is that when you are in the street yon do not go looking hither and thither, nor turning your head to F u lll C a b a lleros Hire, • :!.% per t h o u s a n d . 3 p e r c e n t cash d is c o u n t. look at this and that; walk neither A ll tir»t*cl4si» d ea ler» s h o u ld k e e p them . looking at the skies nor on the ground. SIC S I C H E L a C O ., P O R T L A N D , O R E C O N , S O L E A C E N T 8 Do not look npon those whom yon meet C o rre s p o n d e n ce s o lic ite d . Sam ples Bent o n a p p lica tion . with the eyes of an offended person, nor have the appearance of being uneasy. See, my daughter, that you give your E L L -K N O W N B E E R self no concern shout the words yon ------(I N KKUB OK BOTTLKti)— may hear in going throngh the street, S u o m i u . U nas T . . Ï I T .. D istn r « L e t « from . I O R T L x N U .lt « . nor pay any regard to them. Take care that you neither answer nor speak, bnt act as if you neither heard nor under stood them” — Brooklyn Eagle. Pain-Killer LITTLE’S POWDER DIP— THE BEST MAOEI 4 KING OF ILl-THE “REX” 5-CENTCIGAR WElNHñRDS " ------ OFFICE OF DR ANDERSON, * of N ew B ir th In IK ? ». sinm at half past 4 in the afternoon, when hundreds of students are ¡it work at once under the general direction of the two Andersons. Some of the boys w ill be busy bnilding up the forearm, others broadening the chest, others strengthening the muscles of the back, others swinging in the rings, climbing ladders, etc. xc is still more interesting to see the entire floor full at work at oue exercise. Tb >n the firm, white virile legs and arms move in unison in re sponse to signals from the elder Ander son, and the effect of uniformity is al most as pleasing as that of military evolutions by a particularly well drilled body of soldiers. The style of the building’s exterior may be termed a “ Renaissance applica tion of the Romanesque” — at least that’s wbat I ’m told. It is assuredly a hand some structure, though quiet and mod est in tone and design. The swimming tanks are lined with glazed tiles, the rooms are const racted of Carrara marble and the Turkish baths adjoining the tanks are fitted np as perfectly as the gymnasium proper. The trophy room is to many persons the most attractive apartment in the place. There are flags, pictures, baseballs and all sorts of evi dences of athletic victories. The bowl ing alleys are in the basement, and there is a big yard to the rear of the building and shielded from the street which is used for practice by the shot putters, the hammer throwers, etc. In the superb marble lined entrance hall before noticed a large canvas painted by a National academician hangs. This is the only adornment of these walls, and it was presented to the gymnasium by Channcey M. Depew. It is entitled “ The Old Yale Fence” and is a real work of art, showing the elm shaded Yale campus aud buildings and scores of figures as well as the fence. The figures are full length portraits in miniature, and one of these portraits is Dr. Depew himself M. I . D e x t e r . SCH O OL. port ant work could uot have beeu placed in more competent hands. Father Sorin was a priest of the congregation of the Holy Cross, a missionary and educa tional society founded in France late in the eighteenth century, of which a sta tion was established in the diocese of Vincennes in 1840or thereabout. When Father Sorin and his associates, late in November, 1842, first looked npon the site of the future college, a headquarters for all the missions of what are now northern Indiana and southern Michigan had already been established at St. Mary’s of the Lake. Bnt despite this preliminary work the task before them was not an easy one. To establish an institution of the higher learning is not a lightsome labor even now, and then it was vastly more diffi cult. The story of the slow upbuilding of the present splendid university is most absorbing, but here it can ouly be indi cated, not told. T lx young college had no endowment, aside from the fee sim ple in the beautiful tract upon which it wa;t situated, and as yet this yielded no income, so that tiie ouly money received was the tuition fees of the few students. The devoted priests and teachers that made np its faculty were obliged to pnt up with almost innumerable privations, and it was not until 1844 that it was possible to hold regular commencement exercises. It was in that year that the name was changed front St. Mary’s of the Lake to the present title. It was in that year also the legislature of Indiana conferred npon it a regular charter as a university. Since that year the University of Notre Dame has progressed steadily. In 1879 it suffered what was at the time believed to be a most serious reverse, for, on April 23 of that year, five of the university’s chief buildings were wiped ont by fire, aud with them invaluable libraries and a great collection of scien tific apparatus and relics. But this fire did for Notre Dame what the Chicago fire did for the wonderful city on Lake Michigan. It marked the beginning of a more vigorous growth aud a wider de velopment. It was almost like a new birth. By the follow ing September, so rapidly had the recuperative powers of the institution worked, the magnificent central bnilding which forms the nu cleus of the present Notre Dame had arisen on the April ashes, and the usual entrance of students took place. Every year daring the 26 that have elapsed since theu new buildings have been pnt up, and when it was decided to hold a golden jubilee of the institu tion on June 1 1 and the two days fo l lowing it was seen that the guests of the university would be bidden to a celebration amid a cluster of handsome and magnificent structures, almost like a town in extent and far exceeding the promise given a half century ago by the few small buildings then standing. Of the beauties of Notre Dame, both natural and man made, columns might be written without exhausting the sub ject. The university stands on an emi nonce in the midst of a wide expanse of landscape, brightened by the silver sheen of the St. Joseph river and the lake from which the institution took its first name and rendered additionally charming by sylvan stretches alternating with culti vated fields. The buildings are said tc be the most valuable owned by any col lege west of the Appalachian chaiD. They include, besides the main build ing, a chapel, which is really a magnif icent church of bcantifnl architectural design and rich in treasures of religious art, .an academy of music, science hall, institute of technology, etc. The course of study is very comprehensive, the fac ulty is made np of exceptionally able men, aud the scientific apparatus and li brary of 70,000 volumes are of the best, i The library is now domiciled in the main building, but w ill soon have a home of its own. The university now has 62 instructors and 625 students. S o d a P r o p e l l e d E n g in e s . A fireless locomotive engine was re cently nsed on the Aix-la-Chapelle Jnlich railway. The motor power is de rived from soda. The invention is based on the principle that solutions of caus tic soda, which have high boiling points, liberate heat while absorbing steam. These eng 'nuS eject neither smoke nor Bteam and 'Work noiselessly. Compared coal turning locomotives, soda en- Sines silow a capacity equal to the for- Cl0r’ while they are worked with greater ease and simplicity. H is S e n s ib le P a tie n t . Dr. Aberuetby was habitually rnde to his patients and particularly disliked the loquacity of women in describing their ailments. One lady, knowing his peculiarities and having a wound that needed attention, went to bint palled off her shoe and Blocking without say ing a word and held out her foot iu si lence. At-rnethy looked. “ Scratch?” “ Bite.” “ Cat?” “ D og.” “ Madam,” be said, ’ you are th« moat sensible woman 1 ever m et " A n t if e r m e n t in e H a » J o i n t » I n H i» N o w . A few mouths since a man who bad had his nose bitten off in a street fight Preserves all kinds of Fruit withojt cooking, and retains their applied to the authorities of the great natural flavor. West End hospital, Loudon, reqnesting them to “ graft ” the nose of a corpse . tno. 1893 upon his face. This they refused to do, Ea ta b . 1866. telling him that if he escaped blood IM P O R T E R S , SH IP P IN G a n d COM M ISSION M E R C H A N T S . L iberal a d v a n c e m a d e o n • p p roeed c o u s ip n m e n u o f W h eat, F lo u r , O ats, W o o l a n d H op s. S pecial Im p orts fro m C h in a , Japau and I n poisoning from the effects of such an d ia : T ea , C offee, R ic e , M a ttin g a n d R u s*, S p ice s , S axo, T a p io c a , Chtna Nut OIL e tc . From L iv operation the dead flesh wonld “ slough e r p o o l: L iv e r p o o l F in e, C oarse a n d L u m p R o c k s a lt , C h em ica ls o f all k in d s, T in p la te selected 1 r e lu m e d W h eat B ags, H o p B u rlap, B oll B r im s to n e , Bass A le, G u in n ess' P orter, S rotoh and off” and make the job a failure. Final Mo. Irish W h is k y , B ra n d y e n d W in e*, fe r sale In q u a n titie s t o s u it th e trade. PO R T LA N D , O R ly they did attempt to affix an amputat 'd finger to the place where the persist ent young man’s nose had formerly been, bnt the severed menjber had be- ■ome cold and lifeless before the opera tion could be finished and the “ graft All pilU la pwttbosnl bon*, piss orxppo**. or. S p a s e ro », o o o . l r - r . t l . . 1 Dratpiau of Mod 04 failed to set. ” Sir pomrour. wottnootota orni ■■R-ll-f U t L a S leo.' ». loar. b. rotara Moli. 1 0 . 0 0 0 T r o tim nnio n . 'i o » . C o -— H e ld k > a As a last resort the surgeons suggest CH IC H E STE R C H E M IC AL I X .. t i t I M s d i r . . a,“ l'H I LADEI PH I A. PA. ed that one of the patient’s own fingers should be cut off and fashioned into a nasal appendage. Bnt in order that the "A FAIR FA C E M A Y P R O V E A F O U L BA linger shonld not be lost in the event.of G A I N . ” M A R R Y A P L A IN G I R L IF S H E U S the operation proving unsuccessful, the patient hail his arm incased in plaster, and for four weeks held his mutilated finger to his face with a hope that it would “ take root” and Ihus fnrnish a basis for a new nose. This it finally did, and when it had become firmly affixed the finger was amputated and now hangs alxve the young man's mus tache as a very respectable looking nose. It has Isxn worked over by the bone and flesh carpenters until it no longer resem bles a finger. Among his friends this Is th e o n ly k n o w n re m e d y th at w ill destroy man with the magnificent nasal organ th e M icro b e in th e B lood w ith o u t in ju r y to the C A 8 and . M illio n s c f p e o p le testily to its w ou is referred to as “ the man who has system d e r fu l cu res. joints in his nose. ’ ’— St. Louis Republic. G A SO LIN E C O R B ITT & M ACLEAY CO SA P O LIO TO THE SICK H E R C U L E S &- Radam’s Microbe Killer 1 * W l| H In Hawaii Japanese < 12 . 50 a month. laborers THK THE KEYSTONE OF get A d v ic e free. T ry s b o ttle . lO O H o s e s flll.O O . W rite for circu la rs an d testim on ia ls free. Radanvs Microbe Killer Company A RCH M l) M orrison Street In th e e d ific e o f h eaU h is v ig o r , w h ic h m eans n ot m erely m u scu la r e n e r g y , b u t an a c t iv e d is ch a r g e o f th e v ariou s fu n c t io n s o f th * b o d y , su ch as d ig e s t io n , secretion o ' th e b i’ e, the a c tio n -o f the b o w e ’s, th e c ir c u la t io n o f th e b lo o d . N o th in g m ore a c tiv e ly o r t h o r o u g h ly c o n ’ r fo il tes to t h e u n ite d p e r fo rm a n ce o f these fu n c tion s than the ren o w n e d t o n ic and reg lator, H o s fe tte r ’s Stom ach B itters. T h e resu lt o f its use is a speedy ga in in s tr e n g th , to g e th e r w ith th e a g te e a b ’ e c o n s c io u s n e s s that th e ten u re o f life is b e in g str e n g th e n e d —that o n e Is la y in g n p a store o f v ita lity a g ain st the u n a v o id a b le d ra u g h ts w h ic h o ld age m akes u p o n th e s y s te m T h e fo r t if y in g inti a e n e e o f the B 'tte rs c o n s t !- , tu te t it a r c lia b U safegu ard a g ain st m a la ria . rh eu m a tism au d k id n e y trou ble. A p p et e tite an d d e e p im p ro v e th ro u g th h it* use, ana aud It it j pi roteets ;h e system a gain st the ‘ effects “ o f c o ld s and dam p. M oth er—If you 'v a n ied to g o ftahlng, w hy d id n ’ t y o u ark m e instead o f r u n n in g o f f an a goin g. .loh n n te fro m e x p e r ie n c e )--B e r a n r e I w enfa d to g o fieh iu ’ . : HOW’S E ngines BY R E M O V IN G T H E C A U SE — IT C U K E S A L L H U M AN DISEASES. I d H a w a ii. ★ We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured l>v Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Props., Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business tiar »actions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WttsT A T buax , Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O. W alding , K i . vsan A M arvin , Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure ¡ b taken internally, acting directly upon the blood ard mu cous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimon ials Free. AH* YOU SICK? Send fo r c ir c u la r « o t R ed a m » M icro b e K ille r . 360 M orrison St., P ortla n d , Or. Piso’s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years’ standing.—K. C ady , Huntington. Did., Nov. 12, 1894. M U S I C S T O R K —W iley B. A lle n C o., the o ld e s t, the la rgest, 211 First St., P ortla n d . C h ick e rin g , H ardm an , F isch er P ian os, Estey Organs. Low prices, ea sy term s. l o - C K N T M U S I C —Send fo r c a ta log u e« Tav G krmea for breakfast. Always Tired Describes a dangerous condition, localise it means that the vitality is becom n g e i- li iu-t< d by leasmi o f impoverished blood >iive new life to the vital fin d and the lerves and muscles will grow stronger Hood's Sarsaparilla gives strength, be- uaase it makes pare, tich blood. H o o d ’s S a r s a p a r illa Is th# only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye today. $1, 6 for <5. ASK YOUR DRUaOIST FOR i t ★ T BEST ★ he - N O T E D FOR FOR SIM PLICITY, IN V A L ID S * TH IS! PO RTLAN D , OR. JOHN CARLE * SONS, New Y ork . ECONOMY Writs let P rices... Artificial Eyes woooaro , clarke 4 E lastic Stockings ci. DRUGGISTS Trusses . . . Crutches . . . C atarrh SUPERIO R ■ .P o n t in i. Oregon DR. GUNN’S In E ve ry Detail. IM PROVED U V ER PILLS ' T h ese e n g in e s are a c k n o w le d g e d by e x p e r t an* | g ln e e r s to foe w o rth y o f h ig h e s t c o m m e n d a tio n fo r s im p lic it y , h ig h -g r a d e m a teria l an d s u p e r io r w ork m a n s h ip . T h ey d e v e lo p th e fu ll a ctu al h orae p o w e r , and run w lt h o n t an E le c t r ic Spark B a tt e r y ; th e system o f ig n itio n la s im p le , I n e x p e n s iv e and r elia b le. F or p u m p in g ou tfits fo r irr ig a tin g p u rp os e« n o b etter e n g in e oau be fo u n d o n ih e P a cific Coaat. F o r h o is t in g ou tfits fo r m in es th ey h a ve m e t w ith h ig h e s t a p p rov a l. P ortla n d , W alla W alla, For intermittent p o w e r their e c o n o m y is ud S p ok a n e, v ia O. R A S. questioned. R a ilw a y 'a n d Great N orth ern R a ilw a y to M on tan a p o in t« , St. P a u l, M i n n e a p o l i s , O m a h a, St. L om a. Chi* c a * o and East. A ddress (n ea rest a ? e n L C. C. D on a v a n , G en. Agt. P ortla n d , O r .; R. C Ste v en «, G en. A jrt-S ea ttle W ash .; C .G .D ix o n ,G e n . A g t.,S p ok a n e,W ash. Na d u « t ; rock -b a lla st tr a c k : fine s c e n e r y : p alace s le e p in g and d in in g ca r s : b n ffet-lib ra ry e s n fa m ily tou rist s le e p e r s ; new eq u ip m e n t. A MILD PHYSIC. O X F F IL L F O R A POSE. A movement ot the bowole each d ej is oaceeear, tor health. Tlawo tails sopplj whst th« System lacks to msks ir reaulsr. Thsy c a n Hcsdscbs, brichtao the Lye«, and clear the Complexion better than msioiitli s They neither rnne hoc n r k n t To coorlore you we will mad remple Ire« ur a full box f .r ;«*. Hold «s e n where. BO SANK 0 MED. CO.. Philadelphia. P a NEW WAY EAST -MANUFACTURED B Y - M L K R I F E T TYPE FOUNDHT. G H iC K E N RAISING PAYS iffy -u use the Petaium* lucubatars a Brooders- M ake m on ey w h ile oth er* are w a stin g tim e b y old processes. Catalog t e lls ¿11 abou t it.and d e s c r ib e » every a rticle n eed ed for tbi p ou ltry bu sin ess POR TLAN D, I » - AMERICAN • • PETALUMA TFCUBATO* CO., Petal*m *.C*L ORECON Brad fo r c a ta lo g u e . T h e “ E R IE m ech an ically th e i*est w heel. Preti lest m odel. W e are P acific Coart Agent*. B icy cle cata- I ** - ■ i ■ log u e,m a iled free,gives fn lld e s c r ip tio n .p r ic e * , etc., a o k w t s W a x t t d . W IL L (T E E -A N B - W ORKM ANSHIP H o o d ’S PillS ;L'*riye 4 mara.p11^ Ely’s Cream Balm STRENGTH, * m m s • • ' B m a . n ch H o u s e , * 3 1 S M ain St., Loa A n g e ’. es [jj7 u 7 s o ]^ u T | Apply Balm into etca nontril. E l i B bo » .. M Warren St.,N. Y. A SURE CURE FOR PILES Itching Pile« known by moistara like perspirmti*»n, c*a«» intense itchingwh«n warm. This form and Blind, Bleed- in* or Protruding Pile» y ie ld a t o n c e to D R . B O - S A N - K O ’S P ILE REMEDY, which %ct» directly on ports effected, absorb» tumors, al- lars itching, effecting * permanent cure. Prum 4 c. ~ -------- mad. J J f. B o M tn k o , P k lla d a ..« P o . FRAZER AXLE CREASE BEST IN THE WORLD Its w earin g q u a litie s are u nsurpa ssed , a c t u a l!! ou tla s tin g tw o b o x e s o f an y o t h e r b ra n d . Frfce from A n im a l O ils M K T T H E U E N U IN K . FO R BALK B Y O REG O N AN D W A S H IN G T O N M E R C H A K T H ^ I a n d D e a le r! gen era lly . S. P. N. U. No. 605 -S . F. N. U. No. 682 M R FO S. R W INSLOW'S S<S r Tn u e G • - C H IL D R E N T E E T H I N G Ferule k, »II Dvwawt. 1 ». U ltxM xM lU . P alm er & R ey B r a n c h Electrotypers Stereotypers... Merchants in Gordon and Peet It*» Presses, Cylinder Presses, Paper Cutter*. Motors of all kinds. Folders. Printing Material |Ë AliL EISE ILLS. 1 1 Best Cough Syrup. ' Taau-a Good. Cae 1 j In tima. Bold b Patentees of Self-Sparing Type. Sole Makers of Copper-Alloy Type