Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1893)
MttbKJaMalfsWMai . Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ADSOULTiELY PURE A Storm an PLke Peak. It 'r do fun to he on top of Pike's peak hi a storm. H B ao experience thai few care to have. ! won't forget mine of two yean ago. A party left Alanitou for the peak one annoy da; in July, when a storm was the last thing that would suggest itseit We tnok a carriage at Cascade and started for the summit. The vehicle was strong ermneh to have carried a 10-ton pun. and wan slang on strong leather straps like a stagecoach We all enjoyed the superb scenery, and reached the signal service station on the snmmit in good order. Be fore we had been there an hour a thunder storm broke over the mountain. The women took refuge in the station, and we men threw ourselves flat on the huge granite bowlders. The rain came down in torrents but it was not in it with lightning, f can laugh now. tint I did not then. The lightning strork the summit time and time again until the whole thing seemed to be a mass of bine fire that sprang from bowlder to bowlder and enveloped the place. It blinded me. Every moment I expected to be struck, and I was afraid to yell to my friends for fear that the fluid had killed them. My hair stood on end, faorrihte sen sations chased themselves apaud down my spine at each clap of thunder, and they came at the rate of a million a niinnte. Unless yon bare been through it your self, you cannot imagine my feelings as 1 lay there nearly drowned, awaiting to be electrocuted. When the storm ceased it took me fully ten minutes to realize thai 1 was alive, Xo one was killed, hut six mules had been struck by toe fm- from heaven. Interview in "Chicago Inter Ocean. A Worthy badge's Dilemma. Judge L W. fioniware, of Fulton, is one of the best known criminal lawyers in Missouri, but has forgotten many of the good tilings he learned at Sunday school ilisKranddaughter, four years old, came to pay him a visit the other day. She ar rived In care of the conductor about 11 o'clock in the evening, tired and sleepy from an all day's journey. Her grand father awkwardly but successfully pre pared her for her couch, and with an at tendant sent her to bed. while he settled himself to study. Presently he heard sobs from the child a bedroom, and entering asked in jrrand fatherly tones what was the m fitter, totandpa, I n forgot my prayer. ' Weii, never mind the prayer tonight; go to bed and go to sleep. "But, persisted the little miss, "mamma and papa will not let nie go to bed without saying my pray er, and I've forgot it, and she sobbed again. "Well, daughter, never mind to nie ht; tomorrow night you may say it twice,' replied the kind hearted grand Cither. btili the sobbing lips replied: "No. not J must say it. Yon start it, grandpa, and rii remember it." A great silence fell upon the household; great beads of cold aweat started out upon the perplexed brow of the head of the house. He couldn't think; bis mind was chaos. Finally, with heroic effort, he began: "Mary had a little lamb" o. no, grandpa: that isn't s protested the troubled little appealer Then frantically the judge be can again. ''Kock-e-bre baby in the tree top" "No. n-o-o," came from the child, and the next moment srte was fast asleep on her knees. "Jefferson City (Ma) Tribune, XJghtaing as a Photographer. ' On examining the field glasses used at the observatory on Mount Arie. situated near the summer resorts. West Baden and French, i-iek, it was found that one of the fieid glares had an impression of flowers in both 1 uses, like a negative. It mast have imtti canned by liuutniiig, as the glow wait left on the upper platform of the oDuervatory and the inijiraaaioo is of such flowers as are gruwing on Mount Arte. The quality of the iam U not impaired at all thou,: the roipreattion seems to go clew through the ieiwei, Mr. ttnerk, toe proprietor of Uie observatory, cannot ac count for this freak of iightning otherwise than the electric action on the Rowers and koaea. LouisviHr Courier-Journal. A Meet Astounding- La put. An absent minded doctor, on calling upon ft gentleman who had Iwen for some time aiime, put a fee into the lament's hand and took the medicine himhelf which he had prepared hn the sick m i. He was not made sensible of in error till he fonnd himself getting ill and the patient getting better. London lit liu- Flacky Lihthoua Keeper. In February. lbHl, the Sharp's island lighthouse was carried away by ice in Cneaapeake bay. The keepers tended the lamp to the last and clung to the structure wiien it was swept from its foundation, finally saving not only themselves, but a great part of the valuable apparatus. M ashiogton Star. Tne largest town clock in the world la Is the tower of the Glasgow university at Glasgow. Tne clock weighs about a ton and a hah and has a pendulum weighing IWO pounds. . It is well enough for the politician to be an earty bird, but it is a good thing to be careful and not come across the worm at its proverbial turning point. The city of London proper is only one mile square, but so valuaoie is Its real ea u;e that it produces a rental of f7,0Mu,Auti year. ' - . CaodoHe, the investigator, says that the boakh of dark eyed persons is much supe rior to fihnt of the light or the blue eyed 1 um .i?. Much confiiKttw bus arisen from con found id jr the common iaurvl U-aurus cera- sua, or laurel cherry i with the famous laurel of the m-u-nta (l. nobilis). The former not introduced into Europe until 1576. Its tea ptmtain the potent poison, prosaic acid, whereas the leaves of JL nobilis eoutHin a fragrant aromatic oil used in ctiofrctiouery h is to this, the true laurel, that we appJy the term bay. I and we use n an rmftirai term for an I honorary crown or garland bestowed as a prise for any fciud of victory or excellence: i Beneath km reign almil Eaxden wear the bays, j Weapparently get the word bay throogt: : the Latio bacca, a berry from the French have, or, h Holland's "PUnie" has it, "The bates or herriea (HatT, that It (the Roiall Laurelh beareth." Hence also the term "bachelor" w supposed by some to be derived from the ancient practice of crowning eandtuateit for honors with bay leaves and beTi, wheuce the term hacca lanreus and laureate. Those who were found worthy of the honor obtained the laurel of bachelor or the laurel of doctor (Laurea baccalaureatus. Lanrea doctara tos). In the Scotch universities the act of conferring degrees is, or was, styled "laureation" and a ehaplet was used in some of them. In the ages of chivalry the has chevaliers, or men below the degree of knight, were admitted to serve by being crowned with a ehaplet of laurel berries, and were hence called bnccalaurei Notes and Queries. Ancient fiwhw Families. From the very nature of the case all Swiss nobility is more or less ancient, and is, therefore, still venerable in a republic which has not yet cast off all reference for historic tradition. The Valais. for i stance, contains a very ancient noblesse, some of whom, as the De Sepibus and the De Cocatrix, bear Latin names, whether or not they claim a Romas descent. And a Roman descent assuredly is claimed by the Bernese family of Lenta Ins, who affil iate themselves to that most Ulustrious house of the Gens Cornelia. in a conglomerate nation like the Swiss the fountains of honor have been numer ous. Some of the nobility owe their dis tinctions to the empire or to the dukes of Austria; some to the dukes of Zahringen, the founders of Berne and Frtbourg; some to the dukes of Burgundy; some, who were Huguenots, to the kings of France, and some of the more modern ones even to the kings of Pruaxia.--Ten.pie Bar Stone Cornice Cotter. An Ingenious instrument is used in Italy for the cutting of stone cornices, moldings. balustrades, etc The general features of the machine are very similar to those of the ordinary metal planing machine. The stone to be operated upon is firmly clamped on the bed. to which a reciprocating mo tion w imparted by suitable mechanism. The cutting tools are carried on a saddle plate capable of horizontal movement upon a slide by means of a screw and handle. The slide m. in turn, capable of vertical ad justment on slide piilurs by means of bevel gearing and screws. The machine turns out sixteen feet of cornice, well nmaned. in twenty minute. New York Telegram. Cloekwerfc fa a Llehtbmme. A first order lamp in a lighthouse con sumes two and a half rations of oil in a long winter night. Tbe oil is fed to it by clockwork, and the flash is controlled by similar mechanism. An opaque pane in the cylinder of glass revolving about the light makes a dark interval and a red pane produces a red flash. The lens of s first or der light is six feet in diameter, and tne light has four concentric wicks, the big- j gest being four inches in diameter. Waah- Votablo Famines la History. Famines were formerly much more com mon than during the last half century, and many notable calamities of this nature are mentioned by historians. Not including the seven years' famine in Kgypt men tioned hi the Did Testament, the first great famine noted in history was in Italy, B C. 4& Tnousandsor persons, driven mad by want, threw themselves into the sea and rivers to escape from further suffering. In A. D. 42 there was a great famine in Egypt, and another in Rome and the vicinity in A D. 2nU In 272 famine prevailed in the British islands, and people ate grass, roots and the bark of trees; thousands died in Scotland from privation in A D. 306, and over 40.000 perished in Britain four years later. Providence Journal. An Apt Statesseat. I When the late binhop of Carlisle was once preaching in aid of hospitals in the I abbey, he upset a glass of water placed for ! him on the pulpit lie fore he bad begun to 1 speak. The water trickled down the neck of an unfortune young man sitting below and the bishop, who was quite unconscious j of the mishap, began bis sermon, strange I to say, with the words, "Accidents will happear' Pali Mail tiaaette, For Aboriginal Efforts. As an indication of advancing civfliza i don among tne red men, It is announced ' that the Yuma Indiana of California are about to build a theater of their own. It will be devoted; doubtless, to Yumarous entertainments. Boston Herald. ' A Kcmiador. ' ' A man bad ft donkey for sale and, hear ing that a friend wanted to boy one, ha sent him tin following, written on a post card: - Dear D , If you are looking for on AS donkey, don't forge me, Xours, etc THE PASSING OF THE YEAR. With whir a alary wmwiand kit inn year Tho bud t wring, ilmne bcuultf ul h&rbtiitfvrt i Of fuony fehhti and ckoiHlienw tttuw. eajo Uie iwwinttti, and earui garuuure pread out; And whiMi the silver babil of the elyadu Cooiea dnwu uMtn tlii autumn sun, iuuI with A sober Klodn the ultl ytuu-Ukittw Qp It ws bright inbtiriiance of eu&en frutu, A. pouip and pageant fill th splendid aeeoe. LawKtolkiw. Kipling's Story of an Interview. An Australian paper said very humor ously. "Uudyard Kipling landed on this island at 12 o'clock and at taMS he bad formulated an Australian policy." "Yea, that is very funny," said Kipling, but it is not true. This is bow it was: A young reporter cornered me just after I had landed. I treated htm kindly, but I said firmly that 1 was not to be inter viewed. ! have no thought of interviewing; you.1 replied the reporter with a touch of sadness in his voice, i ask a much great er favor thau that.' " It turned out that the reporter was a man with a theory who had been persist ently sat down upon by his superiors on the press. He had an Australian policy that be knew would be of the greatest benefit to the country. No paper would print it. His modest request was that hapltng would let htm put forth his theory as the scheme of the young novelist. "They will print it," he said, "if I give It as coming; from you." "All right," agreed Kipung, "fire ahead." So the young reporter got in four mortal columns telling the people of Australia how to run their country. "I never read the article. continued Kipling, "but there must have been some amazing theories in it, from the storm it raised. 1 hope that young man realizes my forbearance in standing all the un merited abuse heaped upon me for it."- Detroit Free Press. 1 Now or Kerw. There is hardly anything so bad that a wise person cannot get some good out of it. Indeed, it is one of the principal marks of a philosopher that he reaps an advan tage even from misfortune. A little Boston girl bad for some time wanted a dog. Finally she was taken very ill with pneumonia. One day. when she had begun to get better, she told her mam ma how very much she wanted a dog, and begged her to ask grandpa to buy ber one. jidamma answered that grandpa did not like dogs and probably would not be will ing to buy one. Then seeing the little invalid look sadly disappointed, she said: "Wait till you get well, my dear, then we will see," Oh. no," answered the child, whose few years bad taught her a little wisdom, 'the sicker I am the more likely be wall be to buy it for me." Boston Herald. A Flacky Greyhound. A circumstance which I should say was m uncommon one in the annais of shikar hapnened the other day. A gentleman while out shooting in the Eastern Dun in acanebrake started a leopard and a cub. Among bis dt$w which were beating was a powerful English greyhound. This dog drove off the leopard and killed the cub. This same dog also killed a very powerful lnngoor (gray monkey), one of tlie largest sue, standibg fully 3 feet 9 inches or 4 One of the spaniels Lad cut this lungoar off from the tree for which it was making, and it turned upon the dog and hit it in the neck very severely, its tusks being as large as a small leopard s. It then tried to strangle the dog, when the greyhound came to the rescue. It caught the lungoor by the nape of the neck and with one crunch kiilea iU Asian. A Humorous gaaae. In Marianne North's "Recollections of a Happy Life'' is a description of ft tame snake. Its mistress would sometimes twist the pretty hronse creature in the great piait of hair she wore around her head, and once threatened to go down thus decorated to a dinner party of rather stiff people. But one of the snake's own eccentricities serves to distinguish it among all other reptiles of a similar nature which have pets. It was as fund of glittering things as its mistress herself, and when she took tiff her many rings and placed them on different parts of the table it would go about col lecting thorn and stringing them on Its lithe body. Then it would tie itself in a knot, so that the nogs could not be taken off until it was pleased to untie Itself again. Taming Leopards la India. The chetab is tied in all directions, principally from a thick grummet of rope around his loins, while a hood fitted over his head effectually blinds him. He is fastened on a strong cot bedstead and tne keepers and their wives and families re duce him to submission by starving him and keeping him awake. His head made to face the village street, and for an hour at a time several times a day bis keepers make pretended rushes at him and wave cloths, staves and other articles in his face. He is talked to continually, and women's tongues are believed to be the moat effective antisoporifica. No created being could resist the effects of hunger, want of sleep and feminine scolding, and the poor chetah becomes piteousiy. ab jectly tame. "Beast and Doan in inuia." Only On Clean Thing. When Jones was at Oxford he was a most excellent; fellow, and only bad one enemy soap, fie was called Dirty Jones. One day the wag Brown went into his rooms, and remonstrating with him on the nntidv, slovenly and dirty state of everything, said: "Upon my word. Dirty, it's too bad; the only clean thing in your room u the toweir London Tit-Bita. Doctor I believe yon nave some sort of poison in your system. PatientShouldnt wonder. What was that last stuff yon gave me? Exchacga MMtttrianrles la Mmlirln. Re waa a ilu toi ot the advnnwd school. He laid ht li i iifer ou my pulse, and with his watch in lutwl gave it a fair start and observed it can tully allof the way around. Stroo. H la sam m a moment, thru he committed a card that wa covered with figures and continued, "That equals oV' and be placed that number ou a slate Put out your tongue, boodl That is Is. he said. Inches.?" 1 asked. Hnw i your apatite " he inquired, ig noring my question. "hqtial to the supply. "That makes SIM,' he replied. "Cant you reduce it a lit tie?" I asked. but t ai led to get hi attention. -Cold feet!1' "Yea.' I answered. Three." brand "No, two," I replied, to Porrrcl him. He set the three under the other figures. He then placed a thermometer in my mouth, which he afterward consulted in connection with the card, "A gout) IVft." he said. "IropuKsiblef" 1 suggested mildly He wrote down the m and anted if 1 had headaches. "Sometimes in the morning, after being kept late at the ofltc." 1 answered. r our, be wild. "Isn't that rather low!" 1 asked. "Do you smoke?" be inquired, Ym" Ton." he replied. "No. two for ten." I said. He put down the ten. "Do yon slwp well!" he asked. "That depends upon the baby,' I an swered, "We won't consider that," he said. "Yon had better call it m," I suggested. He added together the figures t hat he had placed on the slate "That makes 4tV' he said. Is that the amount of the hilt!" I asked. "Bill!" he replied. That is the Bomber of the preemption. 1 want you to know that medicine with me is no longer an ex. perimeut, for I have reduced it to a matbe matical certainty. Every symptom has its number, and the sum of these numbers in dicates the medicine that is needed. 1 have worked fur fifteen years in formulating my prescriptions and perfecting the treatment, hut 1 have it now Your hilt is ten do) lors." 1 understood that number, and left the office feeling relieved and deeply impressed by the doctor's lea ruing. Harry C. t uiton in Harper's Bazar. Salt la the Lake of Aatla Paafcai. The famous salt lake of A alia Paakai. oar Honolulu, occupies tbe crater of an immense tufa cone, whose ejects covers several square miles, and are especially re uarkahle for containing numerous aggre gallons of crystalline grains of pure olivine, the lake is just at mean sea level, and 's scarcely a mile distant from the ocean, but there is evidently no free communication with the waters of tbe sea. During the dry mouths crusts of salt are deposited, sometimes six inch- or more in thickness, on the bottom of the lake, and the salt has at times been takn out for use. In tb rainy aeaxon the salt is wholly redissoived The crust of salt is at the present Untr from one to three inches thick, and t!ir water is. of course, a saturated brine. It is interesting to note, however, that it does not correspond in composition with the waters from the ocean. Like the Dead h tbe take contains an excessive quan tity of calcium salt. The iuteriorof the crater basin is crusted in many places with deposits of cart male of calcium, proving that it was at one time occupied by a high ly calcareous water, proliabiy of high tem perature. 1 have given in connection with the results of my analysis, which extends only to tbe constituents present in large amount, an analysis of concentrated sea water from the salt works of Kakaako, and an average of number of analyses that have been made of tbe waters of tbe Dead sea. These latter sometimes contain a larger proportion of solids than tbe average fig ore, hut to uo analysts that 1 have seen has the quantity been as large as that found la the water of Aaiia Paakai. Cor. Nature. Tall Girl. iUmpoaalM.. . "Put two extra Ilftaoo the heel." accom panied an order to a shoemaker. 'Tally another victim of the tall girL" the Rhoemaker remarked. "How in tUtil?" "Why, there are to many tall girla now. adayM that the average beigbtof men mujtt be rained. Up to a few years ago tbe low eat heel waa the rage, but now tbe heel it decidedly higher 1 fifrure it between half and three-quarter, of ao inch. It ia all the growth of recent year. Itian'ttbefaehion, either, for you'll not find the high heel among tall men. lt' only among the lit tle fellow wbo try to add to their height by ever ao little. But even half an inch counta in a maa'a height. A few yuan ago a man of & feet 0 waa aeldom over topped by a lady. Now tbe man of 6 feet 8 is not infrequently looked down on. 1 don't anppaw any city in the world can show ao many tail girls as are to be seen in Broadway, fourteenth and Twenty-third streets these days. Tbey are not thin girls either, but well proportioned and aolidly built, which makes their height all the moreexasperating to an undersized man. yon see, by adding a little to his heels and to his hat, a man Just under the average can lift himself up to it." New York Sun. Beoefils from Ituaalng, Running is the great beautiller of figure and movement, it gjvea muscular develop ment, strung heart action and free lung play. The muscle eomes where ft ought to be, the shoulders go back, the loins hold tbe trunk well balanced, and the feet take their correct pomtiona. It was running which made tbe Greek figure. Tbe more active tribes of American Indians nave been runners from time immemorial, and from the cheat to tbe heels tbey are mnch more beautifully built than tbe average of white men. Knnulng people have usually the firm but elastic texture which 1a the beauty of flesh. London Tlt-Bitt. As to the number of persons speaking tbe western languages, it is estimated that over 100,000,01 people now speak the Bug lish language, over oV.OMO.Ouu tbe German. 41,MJ,0W the French. 41,000,000 the Span- t.k .nri M fain th. ftAli.n linmw. KIDNEY, Bladder rrinsrv and Liver Ptiessw Dropsy Gravel and Unbelt arc cured lj HUNT'S REMEDY THE BEST KIDNEY AND LIVER MEOICIMC. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Brirbt's Divest, Retention or Son-retention of l'ruie,Fsuu la ths Back, Loins ot Side. t HUNT'S REMEDY Cures In if ratf ran re, Nervous DteaM, General Debility, Female Weakness sad xceM. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Btlionnr.ew. Headache, Jaundice. Soar titooasch, Dyspepsia, Constipation snu Hies, HUNT'S REMEDY ! AC AT M F. on the Kleoeya. Mver 1 and Howris, restoring tben u s benitby sc- tion, and 41 tlr.fi when all oihtr medicio i fall. Hundred hare been tsvd wbo have been liven ap to die by friends and physicians. not. fa BY ALL LHt .-lst Bakin&Pon'der When in Portland be cure to take in the preattwt Dovclty at the Expedition. We ahull bake biiwuiU and cake every afternoon and evening on our pretty Jewel ia Store. Everybody cordially invited to bare a biscuit with at and see the wonderful merit of (iolden Went Baking Powder proved by actual work. CLOSSET&DEVERS, PORTLAND, OR. Driving tlie Brain at the expense of the Body. While we drive tlie brain wse tHgl .... ...;m nxra. the body. Ex ercise, pure air foods that make healthy flesh refreshing sleep such are methods. When loss of flesh, strength and nerve become apparent your physician will doubtless tell you that the quickest builder of all three is Scott's Emulsion 5f Cod Liver Oil, which not only creates flesh of and in itself, but simulates the appetite for other foods. r.iMriKl by ftmrtt Bnviw. K T. All e'mtetrts THe Best Waterjroof Coat In the WORLD I The Vim UHA KI St JCKV.R la warranted pittiraiwllll,pjfou(lryiuilMihsnkltorni. I'm mw FUUM EX ft U' KK in period TUHug cost, arid! KormtheKMintMiide. HrrttartKif toiltauun. Ixm-U IbuaiocMt if ine-fwh Brand" luiotun iu lllaxira-f (tei 'jftUKrrue fit. A. J. TOWKH, lMlan, MTJ sod Bsople I Who bare - Isniisor Asta ms,sooBlilaas Plan'sOnn for Ootwompttocu It has astrMl II DM not Irvlnr- 1 Sd It li Dot bad tCrUUtS. I U Is It beei ouoMR aynjjj. son everrwiwre. Widen TTTnTC Jam If ii jr " London TviS f Vl-. LoudOfl XsVAiU. ft ,