Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 31, 1890)
Ht i.i-TiTUTt -m$TEUR. Bat One Per Coat, of Its Fatlenta Haw ttncruwlmd to Hydrophobia. Many years of labor provod to Pasteur that by inoculation he could glv the diea, or our it, in a doff; but it was not until July, that the experiment wan tried on a human bolnjr. The firs t patient a omall lad. having btHn severe ly bitten in some doaen pluera on the hands, arms and lvg his mother, aim pie peasant, brought him from Alsace and asked M. Pasteur to do the same to her son she heard he "did to dogrs to pre vent their petting hydrophobia." tenr hettated; but havinjr procured medical advice, all of which concurred sua to the impossibility of the child's re covery, he (not beinjr himself a doctor) let his uurpeonsinoculate the boy, which operation was repeated fourteen times on two occasion twice in twenty-four hours to accomplish the task as quickly a possible. The child ha not only never showed symptom of hydrophobia, though it is now over four years sinM ho was treated, but i fast growing to manhood. During the four years that have elapsed since M. Pasteur inocu lated his first patient no fewer than 1.WQ persons have been treated In the Paris institution alone, of whom "8 have died that is to say about 1 per cent while before he com menced his inoculation treatment from 15 to 20 per cent invariably succumbed. Pasteur has now made the interesting discovery that the nearer the part bittn is to the brain the bhorter is the period of incubation and the more virolf-nt the attack of the dis ease produced. While the ordinary mor tality in such eases is eijrhty per cent., M. Pasteur by his treatment has re duced it to four per cent Surely those facts speak for themselves. I will now pive a short description of the modus operandi of the inoculation itself as 1 saw it The larjre outer hall of the in stitution by eleven o'clock contained eighty-nine persons, composed of all classes, all nationalities and all a?es. who had come to he inoculated (free of chanrel, having previously had the mis-, fortune to hive been bitten by some rabid animal. On the rieht hand of the hall is a rt-ruiar office, in which every case, with ail particulars, is most carefully registered. After the patient has furnished every possible particular he crosses the passage to a small room on the left where the inoculation is performed. There sits the operator, who is assisted by a doctor, a nurse and a clerk, furnished with full particulars and the number of each ease. The prow ess is a remarkably simple one. A small bypodermic.syrinffe filled with the preparation is injected under the skin, the point of the instrument being no bigger than a wool needle: the opera tion is as triCing as it is painless, and occupies about five seconds. It is re peated on fourteen successive days. th tise being made slightly stronger eaub time. Murray's Magazine. FEEDING OYSTERS. How Vtmn Hialv Are Fattened by Deal er in Eaatern Cltim. The big oyster on the top of the har el opened its jaws wearily and clotted them with a snap, as if in reapeuse to a i-vireely audible gurgle from the bottom r the kej. "He's dry and hungry, too. I guess." said the dealer, in explanation. "It's about time to give him and the other fellows some dinner." and he poured over the o;-.-..ers a bucketful of salt and water. . "Do you call that dinner?" asked the reporter. "More after the style of a lunch," was the reply. "You see, sir, it isr.'f. possi ble, for some unknown reason, to feed oysters in Wash ington as they do in the North. I'p thee a man will buy a bar el of lean oysters, without any flesh at all on their bones, as you might say, and feed them three square meals a day of corn meal and salt water, poured over them, and at the end of a month they will lie as fat as butte-. l'.ul oys ters won't take hearty grub like that down here, and two weeks is as long as they can be kept alive and in pood con dition on salt and water plain. It's a funny thing that if one hundred bushels of real salt oysters are put on top of one hundred bushels of fresh oysters for four or five days, so that the drainage from the salt oysters will drip down over the fresh ones, at the end of that time the fresh oysters supporting them thin at the beginning will be as plump as possible and properly s;..'U v hiie the salt oysters remain pretty much as be fore. Of course, salt wate.- must have been thrown over the whole s:ack daily, liut, on the other band, if the fresh oysters are put on top of the salt ones, every thing else being as in the other case, both the salt oysters and the fresb oysters will lose and become thin. When you see oysters on top of a pile opening their mouths, it is because they are thirsty, the water having drained of! them. Oysters, by the way, will keep longer and better in a dry cellar than in a wet or damp one; they want an equable temperature neither too high nor too low; an oyster that freezes is a dead oyster. Listen to those oys ters in the barrel now you can hear their jaws go as they eat" Washington Star. The Vatican in said to be preparing a new catechism for universal use The Christian college at Luck now, India, has 11,507 pupils enrolled, of whom are Christians. .Spirit of Missions. -A popular edition of the Bible in Portuguese is t lx issued in numbers, on the same plan that has been so sue- iifil in ltl A Trapiwr'a Triea. There were thirty of us lit wimp on a spur of the Riaoa Uills mining for gold, wueo ouo afternoon wo looked down Uon the U-vul plain and tow fonr mounted radxfcin chasing a white man on a mule. He wax milking (or m, but they wure rapidly overhauling him, and it wiu plain enough that we could render no aiMifttoiKWi The foremiwl Ind'uii UriM a nhot, and man and mute fell in a bean. The Indiana preawd forward, yelling mid exult ing, but the faint report of a revulvsr reht our ears, and e a mlskins and ponies tumbling over at every report Some of our men slid dowu tint steep mountain tide to tnke a hand iu, but it was nut usodtxi When they reached the nuin he sat on the ground laughing as if be wuuid split "To tbhik I" he shouted, as won as he could control bis voice, "that these "ere Sionx, who are rated sharp as razors, could be fooled by that old trick ha! ha! ba!" And he laughed autd be had wiped away the tears. Ou the ground near by were three dead Indians, and another about to die, while two of the puniwt were dead and the other two badly wounded. It had all beeu done with an old fashioned Colt's revolver, loadi-d with powder and ball, and carrying a percusxion cap, but the work Bad lieeu rapid and sure. The Indians had ckwd in on him, suppuMing him to lie dead or badly wouuded. while neither mnn nor mule had been touched. After a hit the man, who was an old trapper, went over to the wouuded warrior, and raid to him in the Eioua dialect, and chuckling betweuu Lis words: "Soy, did any of you fellers ever me a white mnn before f "Matty of them." gasped the warrior. "I'ldu't you ever hear of that old trick be fore r "Luil the white man wounded!" "Not bv a doxn Saucy Janes! That bul kt didn't come within a rod of ra& I gave my old mule the siaal to sqimt, and down hetuiuhled.todniw you on. The other three are dead, Bnd you uie about to ro. Say, 1 dmi't want to hurt a dyuig Injun' fwlmss. but iia! ha! hu.'. but it was null to kill a tt-ii;tw to n how you four opened your ha! aa'Ua. eyes when I began to "p! Fuo u,t)it thin? I bave seen in a yeur! Ihiru It, 1 wont need any qui'neen for a month. I'm just sweating the chilis off with laughingT The Indian gazd at him in a troubled way for a mmneut, swrned to realize that be had been duped, and be cloned bis eyes and died wfchou.' ever ratting the lids again. Mew York tun. Tha Engllith Bed Coat, tVhen, in 1S.11, the Duke of Wellington asked Lord ritanhoi, tiien war minister, os to when the EnglLdi army first wore red, he was told timt the etintom dated from the time uf Charles IL Tlie duke thought it was earlier, and Lord MuearZay said tiiat be was right, and tliat the c,:iniou wealth army wore red. This was, however, cot exactly the case, and tin statement was wronz in more thnn one rrpt. Muj. Hon. Harold Dillon, in an article in Colburn" I'nited Ser vice Magaauue, shows when this color wa first adi'ipted. As early as the campaign iu Spain, in 13G7. iu support of Per the Cruel, aud b1m in the following reigo of Richard 11, th English toldier aear to bave been in white wi;h a red cross of St George on hu breast and back. At Agiucivurt, in HIS, the Eugliou archers are mentioned a mostly weoritig no armir and some only doublet, and with their bie loose, evidently to give them greater freedom of action. Caps of boiled leather and of wicker work eroded with bands of iron constituted their best head piw.-es. It wan ouiy after a long camj.ign, or series of cam paigns, that tLe ordinary atildier cmld pro vide hsnuelf with portioiof dufea-tive armor. During the Want of the Kmea tlie badgs of tlie reejiective leader woulil be tlie chiet distinctions in tlie armies, nil speaking out timgue and Using of one ra'e. However, in HOI, there is erideiu.tr f rml luring adopted, fur a small number of men at least, when a eontirgeut f'r tlie army of the king maker, the Larl -of Warwick, tent from live ! dresw-d in red cunt. la HID a attachment of E'ut-u men eiit from Canterbury for tiie Calai g:rrim. nnd others for London, were !iripiurd with rJ "jakettia" of clotb at three sliiiimgs a yard, having on them "rors of white kary" an badgtra, Henry Vll, in USS, Instituted the Vimen of the Guard He a kind of body guard, and they may betaken as the nucleus of the present standing army of England. They consisted of picked men, and wre armed one-half with bows, the rtnerbalf wi:!i hand pins. Their drew, at It still continurs, was rei. Montreal Star. The Xw!oy. A 1'U.tineae man of I;ti-oit, whose office if on Woodward avenue, reiute thht singular esjwrieiice in The free I'rewt: I wontwl a (W bill changed, and as I was alone I surpjied to the - 'Kir uud called a little newsboy wmnn I liad freipisntly employed tc run on erraii'Ls, and told him to carry it to the nearest s.ore and get it changed. I then went iasiJe arid waited. My purtuer cauie io and ridiculed me f ir what I bad done. "'You will never. the boy or the change again,' he raid. "I must fay his prophecy looked poiidble when an hours went by the boy did not re turn; tili I trusted him. J could eauer be lieve tiiat he hail been run ovar or made away with tftun tliut lie had stolen the money. "I did not change my mind when a week bad parted. I did not know where he lived or who hfs awwiutes were, and no newsboy neemed to be missing. The second week wo neariy g'tiie, when a woman came into my office one day. She waa)-ying. " "Are you Mr. T t,ne asked. ' "I am, madam. What can 1 do for youf "Then she told me that ber little boy was dying; that he had been ill nearly two weeks. Slid kept constantly colling my name. I went with ber and found my mi.HHing newnboy. As soon ax be saw me be began to rave. " '1 lost it! I iost Itf was the burden of his cry, but I alone knew what he referred to. He had lost the $10 noto, and it hod preyed on his mind, causing brain fever. He diej in my armx, unconscious that I had trusted hiiu from the very first, aud tiiat I would have done anything to tave his life. I bave not a doubt that be either lost it or had it snatched from bim, and bis wrnsit've nature kept him from tolling the truth, aud be gave bis life up In the struggle. " "A targe part or tne tmu of me con sists in overcoming hostile dispositions. Each time we have conquered some re sent.rr.ent or prejudice ve have made a dirttinct gain in the way to a well-regu. lated behavior. United Presbyterian. From Terminal or luterlor Points the Northern Pacific Railroad la the line to take To All PoiDtsEasl anfl SoaUi. It Is the DINING CAR ROUTE. II run Through VESTIBULEO TRAINS EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR to ST. PAUL AND CHICAGO. (No ChmiKe of Cars.) Ci mowed of III VINO CAliS unitnAed, n i.i.M an !kawinu noon u:Ki'i;tt3 of laie.1t rnutinuuit, TOURIST SLEEPING CARS, emi Iim nNtnieterf jliwI In M-)iteh iltv O it mi dutlieare txilli tree antl f -i rm-liell for o nrr or r irxt or rievimd Clasa Tickels, aud ELEGANT DAY COACHES. A OiVriVt OrS LINK eonnerlimr ith AH. I.lr.s. Brtonli.ir l!KEt"l' and CSiN- KltUl I'Tr.h rLU V J( K. J'llUnmn f-u ep, t rvxei atintM raw be "cured tu mivuitee lorioitfli nv ntrettt of the r-md HlKdl ull Tl Kb. I-in ami tioin nil piims Hi Anierii a. t.owlHiid nd KoniH rmi tve jmr-cli-eii hi ant Ticket i Pici- u! tins I imii. Kuli iiiiorna.ioii miiirnriiiwf rUr", lime of traiiin. rooti and otln-r lieiaiis JuriiUhed on applicauun to ai.y koi.i, or A. D. CHARLETON, Awoitaiit General Pawenirer Aarent, No. 121 First St., Cor Washington, PUKTLAMJ, UUKtiON. OrcioniaD Eailwa? COw:LiniiteaLiiis. C. M. SCOTT. lieceiver. la Take KITerl Jane C3. . 1 0''lMrk. p. m. Betwmtn Portland and Coburg 1 '23 Mi lea S St) ui 1 W.Puctiaiid (!n l et l.o) ar 3 M ) u. U lOn.m SiWert.ni.. . 12 10 a. m 2 W p.m i West acht . X 4ep ni j .S.iier i M p.m j ..Mfwwusville-. t M p m ar . "imnt . in in l.UI V irj a m 7 l .tn 1v I t .w s.tu airrKSCK i-.ii!-i.rii mi 4iKi.ie.isj hii.rs. Kimt el 1 StreeL 7 a.ra 'iip ni 12 Ud m Iv l'liftiaiid I'. A W. V.) .ar S 2Up.nl ..IjiUvette. C'.2m jUierulau... . . . li I-1 p in lialla 1 1U.1C p i" S 11 p.m 1 2 JO p 111 Jlnumoiitn . 1! :.r iu 3:4 p.m ar . Airiir.. 1 r 10 .. m ('uniaiumtinu tiefcrU at twu i-euts x-r un. on Ml al taliotia havinx agents. I'oiineeiliin at ML Aim-! with itaces Inr and fmn Williuit Miueral spniir. Tlckela Inr any mhiu uii llii Hue for sale at Uie Culled arnatr- and itMtritar Iraimlrr Cuaipanv'a otlicie, Sei iiml and 1'iue atreeu, and V. V. V. Ky. CHAS. K. W.'OTT. t.eireiver O. Hy. Co. (Ui.) i.iim. PortUud. Uretimi. RMtT GOIiUAKl), KunUO. liy. Co. lbd. Line llmnlee Jumrtiiin. ten-ral (itflees V. Corner First and Pine Su-eM, Portland, Oreioiu. THE YAQUINA ROUTE. PACIFIC RAILKOAD. 8kjjb Bj7s!.ii5a: CJs';i'S!ei2iii!s Lire. .'J abrtrr. 2' lioum Tlun- Tlmii liy any o!lir U-nmr. First CitMMt ThroiiKi 'Bt!iir ami Krvib'hl 1.1. fniiA Hn'tminl and all prtioie in the rliatnetln Vitlley to Uil UM sail I is H'V OSESOS PACIFIC RAIIXOAD. TU1K w.Tlfcin,K, :K.o-ttf Simdio .) Lv Aiy 1 :o) p.m. i I.I S a-iinna u u .m LV (jtJii I 4-1 p.m. I-V Cnrioilu 10 ;s-i ft. in Ar fiurntnm S ) m. 1 1 Ar All'nny II In a in. 0.4 C. lialoa eoiili-i'l St Alhauy aniKonrnUta. Tn above trt iun cimnm't at YnitiiuM villi the Oria lieveiopmeul touimii iiii-if nlmin alpa bet vt ecu Va4jmiia atitl nail frauiilaeo. 8A1L1S0 DATES : vsamshs. i rsoa . . I nn Tiji!is. Willamette Va!li-y WiUameiUr Valiey WlUamelte Vnllny Julv 11. JutV i, Jul) i. I July IS, July A.. I AilKiifltfj. Ttijx ntnpaiiy ri-nervea the riht to cliauije Mlliu llnl arituoiit notice. fmm uH'irt irinn Curtiaud aud al! Wlliauiette ralM7 pwinU au io eoiiiieetloii with taw raM of the Yaijiiiiia route at Abianyor CvrwKi'.u. aud if (lumimil to sau riaueuwio iwstf arranee to arrive at Vaiiiliia -.(. ev alaf aatura tlx tali: of ailing. wair aad trrlght Kate Aiwayi the howoat. Far laiaraialiea apply to C. H. HAttweU V at rM. Art OaM vlai'at Co asjanMrrr., Ikm yiuotwo, Cai. C. C. HOl'E, Afrt'f (ien. T. A P. Agk O. V. K. It. K. C., . Corrallli, rfoa. MOST SOUMO. Laav OartlUla Manday, Wednesday, Friday, I a Albany M a. m. AnVt)aieni, Mvuday, Wednesday, rrlday, p. .; lea' aaMtira, Tnesday, Thnraiiay, Satur day, f a m. Arrvs Portland, Tuesday, Tbartday, Satur day, 8 M p. m. SODTB SOU Kb. Leav Portland, Holiday, Wednstday, Friday, At rive Salem, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 7;li . m.i leave Sal-iUi, Tuesday, Thursday, sat aruay, a. m. IwvrfUUjaiiy IM p. m. Active CoivaUiaTaosdajr.Taandaj, Satartlay t Mi p.m. HUGH THE NEWEST, Nobbiest and Largest Stock of CL0THII& In the County, is now to be Seen on Ue Counters of -4 f ImQ lia D Of Albany, Oregon. aT 'When you want to "dress up," we would he glmi to show you through and make the right jrico. Merchant Tailoring u hpccialty. Mr. E. A.Schkkm.ek if an -xprrt, and has charge of this department. We guarantee nati faction. 9' I a iCl a a . u' u iTYl' iTfT. " Kimiri . j oaeeeasnr to C. II. lUaaos.) BARBER & HAIRDRESSER u;Btoi. oitr..o. O HAVING. HAIP. TTTIN AM) HHAM pooinr in the lal-t and lt i1e. eH-ial l ati'iitl'in paid to ilmaiue I a.llt-s bair. l 'inr patrnuaice reapeirtfully auliirited. O. P. COSHOW & SONS, 1MJAL j-:sta.tj-: M IXS UJJANCE A (i JCXTS, II It M V 1 1 . K. O It i o . Cullectlona nmde, nitivn ani ii'v' and ft'l No tarial mirk dune on uliurt null'. LEBANON ' ir y ,e V ' 4 Meat Market, Ed Kellenberger, Propr. Fre--h and Salted Beef aud Pork ! MUTTON. PoRWAcr. BO-LOChtA and HAM Bacon aad Lard Always on Hand Mala Street, Lebanon, Or. J. L. t'OWAft. i. m. RAumm. BAtJKOF LEBANON, LEBANON, ORECON. Transacts a General Banting Bnsincsi AK'OI'KTM KKPT Ml BJKT TO i UK.t Ik. EnchaiiKt Hold on New York, i5an Fianolauo furtliuiM aud Albany, OrKoit, ColkicUunsniade on (uvurable tonus. III U !i- Ai, 01.330:1 C.T.COTTON, m;i.kk in Groceries and Provisions. TODACCO 4c CICARS, SMOKERS ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONE4,RY lHfe Ma m a re mi 4 (luarrf l.amn and iMmp l- litnrra. MuIh htM Irf-bauwu. Orra. .1. WVKHM. H. SMr.l.VOX. C0LADN CO.. SCIO, ORECCN. Iluy stid Se 1 1 Land, fill Insure Property. , NOTARY PUBUC. 1 Any Iiif'iriiiaii ui in refarJ io the cheap er Land in the itardeu of Oregon furnished t ffanyaartft-raava he has the W. f.. TMina ! fihwa m it l.oul mine aud rt alainiwid vat ; the b-jiloin, put him uuaii as a Uaua. VV. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. Beat In the world. Ksamln- Ills 3.IHI ;KNI I'K II 4rVI-M.WM fil'OE. 4.IHJ IIAMH-fiKWI U HU T htir. , a.Ml I'OI.KK AMI FA M I MWtiU If e.Mt I X I HA VAI.t r: i At f MIOA., Ut.vn UllllUIM.M IV K kHOK. fc.OOmid KOlM' M UOOt f(HOS All uiaue Iu kuimtfu, liutlou sua Lime. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE lafd?es. HMt Material. Beat Blvle. Beat IWin. It am villi liy y-ur rt- ali-r, orlte W. JU IMitULAH. BKOCKTON, MA8- K j ' "Kxail W. 1.. loa-M Uf fr ceullrnieu aud ludleM." -A I f