Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Oregon register. (Lafayette, Yamhill County, Or.) 18??-1889 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1888)
^Where QnllL TMthptelui Are Mart« VARIOUS PER- WHEN fuddled . UP bT • Chlcagw p«ln»*on*or the l,K „ Wd M “*• -..«rt o« pictur-qu» deKMMU Ot Ml ui. „.rood U>. aim di* Ul-ou u>e re**“» ol th* «nil. wecnnol “7211.«. ‘>t U» 'udividiuU. ‘«ul. «1 ul>o.yncnwi«i. TL. caa. ixvurred tue other pnuuineat boud. ill U. I*«» *“d “• 1"*Jori,F °« L jj regulated gu«U bad r» Helmut door, .«rethrown ’ .ud through the .(»rture iru.tl**11—n who Out . few d drt-u-u.1 lb *U lb. glory ot „.[¡¿e uwu. Now hi> hat nia hrr1 bl» clothing w«» “¿.re .«. • druok.ol.er (w A» b. "tuggered to il «M noticed tluU. be wu ,„d biro on. <>f lbo“ dreeeed clothier, of.tbe prewut day , tro.il of their «tore. Ap- cl«rt «itb *n uturteady g*U, I indiridu*! called out; -■» 01e boy. cant Xer “*•- hlc- ; B«» .hoc drunk to «bland, rotobed." bligingly took e*r* the lch the Inebriate fondly Im- e (riend, »ud promlHe.) to eee bed. «f>«r Which tbe young, wgned hinuelf to tbe care of; erler, who conducted him to kL OLD FXLLOWS. the picturesque drunkards i* bachelor who, when be is in . rry. ijmsts that all hto friend I j him »n tb® wonihiP th 1 □*. Hi» importunities becoui< b« is not in the least non { hen friend« fail to respond t< J ta the companionship of th»f r« about the bar. generous individuals wm seei I ng on Clark street. Tbe horn; the jolly old gentleman was ridewalk with a demijohn un- d a well filled glass in his right raa jolly and generous, and hole world to enjoy hto liquid >• he cried, “let*» all take a y*i at free ae water, and Bing« r tastes too much of drowneo wants water! Let’s all take r- /brought to a realizing sense of when two guardians of the lav> of him and escortedto jpropriaiing the demijohn foi rening the police discovered « I and well dressed middle age« I Imly sleeping in a mortar bed, in front of a half completed ie somnbtent gentleman ha<: hat, but without taking tbt ther disrobe had quietly settle«! a snooza Considerable effort to arouse him, and when h« I his consciousness he looked nJ him and murmured: , bed, but the feathers stick to tea* LXQ THX KLEPHANT. young gentleman in the city while under the influence of it peculiar. He is an ardent da and his pets comprise al )animal kingdom. He seldom in drinking but when he doe? it to his tabulations.. When in ■ his younger days invariably , and he imagines himself the the circus. The elephant his chief source of delight, and ikM, and scorpions, and crawl- s dreams are peopled with the ihant, and be babbles on aa tild with its flrat bag of peannta ) canvas of th« peripatetic to the picturesquely rapid young ng and active while sober, bu n while under the influence o| sep things moving. A case ol irred a few evenings ago when rapidly inclined .inebriates eii- ad depot to wait for a train and to his suburban home. Be id of the monotony of the sit- wandered dowu the track, and ifflng engine without its usual f engineer and fireman, he reck- 1 aboard and pulled the throttle In an instant the engine began id the rapid young man, in bright, leaped from the cab, bus lus injuries. The wild engine its way, and had it not been for i and foresight of a switchman ister night have occurred. As pid young man was ar res tel and now in a dungeon cell as- John Barleycorn and be are ess may b® picturesque,” said /’but as for me, I’ll take mine in ape. When it come6 to ringing -r bell atid asking your wife to •ind pick you out of a crowd who their own names, then its time I don’t want any more pictur- ‘ it may safely be argued that easantes’t and easiest way of en- | to discreetly avoid the pictur- lique or the decidedly unusual fcgo Herald. tn Boston. •I would like a pair of trousers. jer-Trousersl Yea, sir. About “Dh, three or four dollars. °bn, sbow this gentleman oodnter.—Philadelphia Call. Everybody knows that a bunch of quill picks can be bought at a drug store for a nickel, and there tho popular knowledge ends. A reporter started out to find the fountain head of quill toothpicks. The re tail druggist said that he I xj light them of the wholesale dealer in drugs and notious The reporter made a tour of the wholesale drug houses, mid at every one he was In formed that they purchased them elthei in New York or imported them from France and Germany, and that was ul they knew about it. The feather dealers h:ui little o»* no light to throw upon the subject. The manufacturers ot feather dusters were ignorant regarding the quill pick industry. Finally a gentleman, who to the buyer for a large drug house, was' found, who had seen a factory where the quiil picks were made. When -.asked the question, said: “I do not know of any factory in this country where quill toothpicks are mode. We buy oura from a broker in Paris, -who obtains them from a large manufactory year that city. M. Bardin^, u> Joinville le Pont, near Paris, had the lariMHt manufactory in the world engaged in the quill industry. He has 2,000,000 geese, aud produces annually 20,000,000 quills. Formerly this factory made quill pens, but when these went out of general use the quills were used to make brushes for artists and toothpiqks. The picks are made by machinery, and are put up in bundles of ten each, and these are In packages containing 1,000. The price it so low that there is very little murgin of profit in the business. The wooden toothpick has taken the place of the quill, aud these latter ate made jnostly in the east, but there are factories in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and Wisconsin, where Wooden toothpicks are made very cheaply. Fond du Lac, Wit., has a factory that turns out millions of wooden picks every week. They come 1,000 in a box, and cost but five cents jicr box to the cousumer. The quill pick costs five cents ¡»er bunch of ten, but they are far better than the wooden ones. Of course there are a great many feathers grown in this country, but other uses hate been found for the quills. A big factory in Michigan, located at Coldwater, makes a featherbone for whips, corsets, etc. Brush factories use the quills for camels’ hair pencils, but I do not believe there is a factory in America where quill picks are made.—Chicago inter Ocean. WHAT ZURICH UNIVER8ITV IS DOING FOR THE FAIR 8&*- A DlaMcting Boom Fall of Lady Student«. Th« Scalpel la Tnpor F1n<ere— Kntha- •lanin Ip Soioattfle Work—An In to reel ing Sight—A Diaounaioa., The workshop of a medical college! But, in place of spectacled young men with long gown« and sharp acalpei*. there are • »core of girto rotted iu protecting overall» ai>d deftly dissecting the subjects before them. That’s what I saw in the preparatory school to the medical branch of the Zurich univer sity This year a bettar idea of the femhto medical student may be gathered than ever before, beqause the numtier is so much J [raster, and. an the number increamb. each ndividual is freer in her actioun. for she feels she excites less attention. The clientele to growing yearly For this season the total of youug ladies studying this branch in Zurich is forty-four, against thirty three last sea son. Don’t think this dissecting room to an ab solute place of horror The bodies are di vided intn their Several parts before the •tuiiente approach them, and each Sroung lady has her chosen portion to operate upon. This reduces the uncanny appearance to a considerable extent, for no bodies entire are to be seen lying on the many slabs or tables. At one table where I stopped a delicate and spirituelle you nd lady holding in her gloved hands a I’azor like knife and pair of tine pinchers, was cutting at a «dismembered head, studying the organs of sight, probing into the cavities of the brain and plucking useful thoughts from what to me was a ghastly trophy And yet her delicacy of treatment, her unmistakable enthusiasm, her evident comprehension of every stroke she made, re moved that feeling from aie in a few mo ments, and i Lingered, watching her quick movements as intensely aa i would any ordinary scientific experiment. “Yea,” she said, in reply to my question suggested in virtue of a slight acquaintance 1 had witb her, “i make the eye my spe cialty, for 1 believe, in addition to being one of the most interesting points to study, to likewise a more potent factor than to gen erally beMMqd in the health of an individ ual. 1 have l^iown persons to suffer-from severe headaches and pains in the back' who Milk Hcwpitals of New York?» w Not all the world knows that there are have attributed the trouble entirely to spi- wal disorders, when, as a fact, it arose frotn such things as milk hospitals in the sub urbs of this city. The idea is a German their eyes being out of focus. They actually one. These hospitals are for the cure of could not see out of one eye, and yet they every physical ill, on the principal of mak did not know it. It seems incredible, and ing the blood entirely over and keeping it yet any intelligent oculist will substantiate pure by taking milk, milk, nothing but what 1 say. There to no doubt that persona milk as foocPfor weeks, months, years^ have beep the yictims of nervous prostration Iu fact, the doctors of milk hospital« fix brought on by a difficulty with the eyes of upon three years as the limit of time which they were ignorant; but which a very necessary to make a patient completely easy operation would have removed." A little farther on a dihciple of thia glori over. Then, if he wants to stay made tover, Ire is advised to keep on with the ous art stood over a partially cut leg, from milk diet and leave solid food alone for the which she was stripping the skin and flesh remainder of his (|^ys. When a patient and explaining the muscles, aa they pre enters tho hospital he is at once treated to sented themselves, to the several new sJYol- six quarts of milk a day, which is. in ars who stood about her, intent upon her mo creased ‘gradually to eleven and twelve. tions. There was no hesitancy in her incis This seems an incredible amount for any ions, she cut with a clean stroke, and every one, particularly an invalid, to consume, time the blade fell just where it was in but the facts are as stated. The milk is tended. She was graceful and emphatic in administered in cupfuls every ten or fif her treatment of the subject, - and under teen minutes, and must be drank slowly, ready tongue the relations of the various nerves, tendons and muscles she exposed sipped as a Parisian take? his absinthe. Sometimes the patient grows deathly were made clear and carried their full mean sick at the very sight of milk, early in ing to the expectant audience about her In a distant corner a young woman and action. Perseverance is the only medi cine he takes to overcome this nausea. several male students were discussing an ab normal growth discovered by one of them in Whether lie gets sick or well he is sure to get fat; and the fatter he gets the mure the trunk of a one time sturdy Frenchman, does his doctor rejoice. He is weighed in resting upon their particular slab. There the balance daily and never found want appeared to be considerable difference in ing. Should he not climb tip intolthe opinion prevailing, and 1 remarked with a hundred weights fast enough, a quart or i certain elation peculiar, perhaps, to my sex, so more is added to his daily allowance of ! that the young woman held her ground and milk. Meantiiné, while he drinks the ! hbr idea stubbornly, and the young men paid milk, lie is expected to lie abed all the | due and proper attention to what She fre time, his only recreation being a daily quently said. 1 next noticed a fashionably attired damsel, With in hot water. After he is satisfac torily made over and pronounced well, he wearing a promenade dress and having every drops down to a gallon of milk per day indicatiou of being in the mode, who, pro- and gets ou famously Ladies take to the i tected only by a small white aprou plentifully tniik éure more readily than men do. ' decorated with varicolored ribbons, was cut- Some of them have found it beneficial for ! ting and scraping at an arm, baring the the restoration of broken down nerves, 1 muscles with an ease and dexterity that were but they deplore the excessive flesh it | certainly natural, and could never have been brings with it.—New York Press, “Every wholly acquired. At firstsight 1 judged this Day Talk. ” > * ■ apparently wordly apd giddy creature was I prompted by some morbid {»assiou to amuse A Most Primitive People. ' herself in this manner, but wbe« 1 asked the The natives of New Britain are the most ■ professor who accompanied me, he said she primitive people I have ever seen. Their i was the most skillful manipulator of the Jiuts ate small and filthy, and little won i scalpel among al) those then attendant, and der is it that there is much sickness among J could strip a muscle as cleanly and as beau- them. At night they build a fire in the1 * tihilly as an established surgeon. On the nter et the hut nnd huddle around it for i \l‘street one would take her for the average armth, with no covering over them and shopping butterfly, with refined featuresand nothing uflder them save a coarse mat. a rosy, semi transparent skin. The women are, with a few exceptions, The professor further assured me that the the ugliest specimens of the human race women were particularly dexterous in hand imaginable, and a sight of them will go ling muscles- Their small, taper finger? gave far to convert one to the Darwinian theory- them an advantage over the males, and their These creatures seldom wash themselves, eyes were quicker to detect details and rmnu- ind, as they are employed from one year’s tiaa. Alter once becoming accustomed to end to the other in hard labor, their ap the use of the scalpel, the women are more pearance is anything but enticing. Th«i I patient than the men. and they prosecute men pass tlieir days in fishing or idling their researches more persistently away tlieir time smoking or chewing betel it was to me very interesting to watch the girls mingiiug. With their male colleagues nut. > Both men and women are keen traders, and studying witb them the terrible mystery and-ever eager-ito acquire divara, or native of human construction. There was no money, consisWg of small shells joeoseuess, no loud talking or unseemly strung upon a thread, and which is mirth. All was quiet, orderly, strictly in counted by the fathom. Every offense of the line of business. The young lady .to every nature caa be atoned for by the whom 1 have referred was the only one who payment of this currency, which is gave any suggestion of the outer world, and hoarded up in houses especially built for she was eccentric, she was a genius and as the purpose. These houses are under the sumed the privilege of geuius. “Taboo,” aud are so sacred that they are Her com pan tons were robed tn all conceal even secure from robliers, the penalty for ing white Mother Hubbards, tight at the violation of the “Taboo” being instant neck and tight at the waist, otherwise falling death.—San Francisco Chronicle- * unbound from shoulders to feet, beneath this, clothing os littie cumbrous as can be worn. The modern bustle is, of course, for- A Wadding in Japan. In Japan the marriage ceremony to per bidden, and corsets are discouraged. The formed in a tent pitched on the summit of a freest action is sought and anything that in convenient hill. The bride’s party proceeds terferes is cast aside The robes are made to the appointed place by one route, and the rather more cliuging than loose, so that each groom’s party by another. In the tent they student fills the smallest place she well can. are confronted by the god of marriage, a Superfluous clothing, in other words, to figure with a dog’s head. With the aid of a barely tolerated, and upon the bead is worn priest and lighted flambeaus the knot to tied a white turban. The male students do oct hesitate to openly amid the loud crise of all present Mean while, at the foot oTthe hill others have kin declare their opposition to the presence of women in the medical profession, and yet dled a bonfire. After the ceremony in the tent the bride descends the hiU and commits when brought in contact with them in toe ur the flames all the toys of her childhood, operating room they treat tbe females witb nod receives in her hand a distaff and roll of the utmost deference and respect»—Zurich sotton.—Thomas Stevens in New York Sun. Cor. New York Star. £ » MEDICAL STUDENTS. i. Sooie Ancient Fhllosophy« A book called “Speculum Mundi, or ■ .la» Representing the Face of the orld," published in 1670, give» a curi- •xu picture ot what piuwed for science be lore the great modern diacoveriee were mode. It consists ot a chapter on each of the six days of creation. It says thut the world was at flrat an unfashioiied lump. Having disposed of the question of a firmament as l»est it could, it says ot the air that the highest region is said to be “exceeding hoi,” because of the stars. Meteors and comets, it informs us, are “composed of vapours or fumes—a kinde of Smoak.” Somb of these vapors “tran scend” very high, “even to the Starry Heaven Itself; which is witnessed by our l>est modern astronomers, who have ob served many comets above the moon ” Great events are connected with comets, i>ecause those bodies consist of “many hot and dry exhalations” and “distemper the air,” which “the,bellows of the body suck In und receive; insomuch that there can not but be sickness, plague, and much mortality.” Moreover, these “poysonous breathings” are ‘.‘very apt so to disorder •iml dry up the- blood in humane bodies i hat thereby great store of red and a dust ( holer may be purchased, and this stirrpth *ap to anger with the thought of many furious and violent actions, and so by consequence to war.” Thunder is caused “by reason of hot aud dry exhalations shut within the •loud, which, seeking to get out, with great violence do knock and rend the cloud.” Tbe hot and dry exhalation in escaping is set on Are by the violence, and liecomes lightning, when it often con tin ues burning until it fulls to the ground. “And oftentimes a great stone is blown out of the cloud with it; whose cause is also natural.” For, when the exhalation is drawn up from the earth, it sometimes cakes earthy matter “1‘ke unto the finest sand” with it, and this, “through the moisture which It g:tt«th ill the air,** “clottereth togetlier,” and. “by the ex cessive heat whid^it flndeth in the general matter of t^e exhalation, ” becomes hard like a brick. Sometimes the exhalations carry up also frogs, fishes and grain, or the vehement heat of the snu draws milk, and we are treated to curious showers of corresponding nature. We aib informed that the long, streaming threads seen floating in the air, and vulgarly supposed to be spiders’ webs, aretnothing of the kind, but meteors, which “may rightly be supposed to proceed .out of a through boy led or digested vapo£, Jbeing mixed with eartlif and slimy exhalations.”— Popular Science yonthly. TDE TEST OF TASTE. DECKING OF THE HEAD AND DRAF^ •NG Qf THE FACE. The Male Savage's Love of Personal Or- Mmootntiuii— Dawning Art title Taste. MoMtuliue Attire In the Middle Agee» Hoou. Uleree and High HaL The bead ban always been the test of tasta. lo «V Hi soil cMMUitries. where tailordom ob tains and indlinery means more than a lengw of fringe and a string of beads, deevea nave run toe tea«to hard, and skirts have mad« a uilt U Shoe«. too. uave not ueen out of it. and ornamentation has been an a congerie» of minor little imps frisking about the oigger competitor* for the wreath ot onugied tee there, flowers, lace and jewels, made and ottered by the genius of bad tasto<\ From the earliest tunes when man first til m V chat be ua» hands and can use them ne puu imrt of hto newly acquired powers lato the decking of his bead aud the draping of ois face Now be twists hto hair into mon strous shafiea. standing out from bis scalp like a hunchbacked aureole, now he contents Qimsaif with a more symmetrical nimbus, whereof each snaky stiffened ray extends be- rood toe breadth of hto shoulder*. Anon he stick» a tew feathers among the clay daubed mass, and anon ho tots it hang down in greasy elf locks to hto ueck. taking care, oowever. tq travesty the natural shape of hto need Pv Hl lets, which bind on to it every kind ■»I rngbttui and ungainly excresceuce. or be liaiulo nis face in patterns of red and yellow and blue, or makes that painting permanent with tattooing needles and indigo, or be nangs heavy weights in hto ears, or destroys the shape of hi» under lip. or does something insane witb hie teeth, or in some way distorts tnd disfigures himself under the name of or oamcnuition and with the idea of making n mise If a very smart fellow indeed. In savage life It is the brave who thus smartens himself up with most intention. I’he squaw follows humbly ata distance, walking ou the same road, but in a narrower groove, and with more modest mien. Tbs brave to the one who is “en evidence:” the squaw has simply to work for hto comfort and bear children to keep the tribe allv< But be must strike terror into the hearts of uis enemies, a* well as make himself an object of admiration to the docile females, wt)O ac cept him at his own valuation, aud are wooed exactly as birds and beasts are wooed—one part by the display of masculine charms, another part taken by force Hence he prank» himself out in paint and feathers—in Chine«« and Politic«. the teeth and claws and skins of the wiki The fact that the Manchoo nation rules beasts he has overcome—ir. the scalps of ths the Chinese does not weaken China. The enemies be has slain—in this rude attempt to people, and especially the literati of China, express a dawning .artistic sense, and that are loyal to tjie imperial family just as if botch at ornamentation which to disfigure it wfcre Chines« •’The emperor to to me ment and not enitwlluiunentr-in this way and the donor of literary rank, and his ances that be makes himself a love worthy object tors gave my ancestors literary honors to the girls of his tribe; a model to be here tor seven or eight generations. I owe him after mutated to the boys, a terror to hto fealty as the fountain of my honors.” foes who count bis deeds of prowess by hto Such is a specimen of the way In which questionable trophies, and something im they reason, tfnd it is an understood thing measurably hideous and disgusting to all that any who; on occasion of a popular civilised (oik with whom be copies in contact. rising at any place, mrty be acting as chief This lavish personal embellishment of the magistrates, must die rather than quit male savage continued far into the days of tin ir ¡Mists. — civilization When the middle ages were To talk politics is in common life not tbf wedge betweeu classic times and modern allowed. Tire well conducted citizen da vs we had mail clad nights with plumes of pays liis taxes, attends to his own affairs, (ortentout- size and sweep, or close fitting and avoids criticising the government. If. lie goes to take a Cup of tea in a large tea skin (tresses left nothing to be desired in the and something in the way shop he sees written up in large characters. way ot tuuplir “Do nert talk politics. The nupter of tlie ot mbdestv wflae the modicum of human force, which can never be got rid of, ex house wishes his customers to avoid such conversation, on his own account as well pressed Itself in parti colored legs, and shoes as on theirs.’} People wffl converse of that were surely the design of come maniac course on political subjects, notwithstand at large Hau and cloaks and purfled ing this injunction, and run the risk of breeches—points ami tags and lace frills at being observed by some one who may re the wrists and knees— boots which would port what they have been heard to say, have earned a small child in the upper gap— with additions. The daily newspaper, curie«* wigs that were intrinsically as ugly waistcoats tooj is forcing its way as an exciting as a Zblu’s ciav daubed novelty, and its compact dose of news, that came nearly to the knees— breeches too tight for prur r ’ cab!e sitting — every kind of local and foreign, is giowing into a neces sity. But the old system is built up on absurdity wnicn bad taste could invent. and the absence of a political thought as a folly «torment to wear, have we poor silly foundation, and it is considered that this »(imán? undergone in our zeal for fashionable (iiartvrdoni and only quite of late years has abstinence from criticism of the govern ment is a duty.—Contemporary Review. the masculine commqu sense declared itself once for all in favor of simplicity and demo *cratic unity, and a costume that to useful On« Danger of Ice Water. “If people must drink ice water,” said and possible to all alike But even now our exquisites torture thtem- a chemist to a reporter, *‘I would advise them to bottle the water and lay the bot seives in tight boots and tighter gloves, as tles on the ice, rather than to place ice in well as in guillotine collars; while that per the water, for there is no doubt that al ennial high hat. which will not fade down to most all the river and lake ice usedfrtfi its roots whatever the cold blast of criticism New York contains a large proportion of may blow on it, to ther true survival of the -I bacteria. Of course, most of the species savage’s wondrons headgear. Which brings encountered are harmless, but in Hudson us round to the point of our paper—the tost river water and ice there are the bacteria of the bead—that last stronghold of bad of typhoid fever and the bacteria of sup taste and folly —that stumbling block of the puration or pyaemia. Tills cannot be oth aesthetically weak. Here we have it still iu erwise when you consider the number of force. W itb the comfortable, useful, uufine, hospitals in and near New York, the democratic and national body clothing of drainage from which en^ in the river. If men. we have still this remnant of barbarism you must mix the ice and water then get —this reminder of the time when the men of lake ice, for it is the purer of the two. Ice the world made their hair into bunch back cut from rivers in the vicinity of large aureoles, wore feathers such as we see m Albeit Durar, or full bottomed wigs as in cities always contains numerous bacteria, and to my mind the authorities should ex the time of Queen Anne and the first three Georges of England, and wrecked themselves ercise a supervision" over the gathering of on this fatal rock which is to good taste what such products. “Ice really should be made by an arti Hinbad's Nland of loadstone was to all the ficial process, and then only distilled water ships that sailed thereby.—New York Homs stfbttld be used. Freezing and Ipw tem Journal perature do not kill all species of bacteria. * Not«» of Qa««r Expression«. Supptfration and typhoid bacilla can be A teacher of Mississippi colored folks has killed only by boiling the water. There fore, by taking the water that comes from been taking notes of queer expressions that distillation and freezing it you can get ice ibe has heard from- her pupils and in meet that might well be taken as a standard for ing. and ^fhe Americann Mtoriouary pub lishes them. Here area few; “Go to'the purity.”—New York Mail and Express. p-eat physicianer.” “1 use consecrated lye.” Profit In “Parallel Bibles.** “She is a crippier.” “O Lord, give us good I have seen a statement floating around thinking tactical*. * “The meeting will be in that a revision or new version of the Old Ibe basin of the church.” “O lx>rd. throw Testament has been a financial failure, »verboard all the load we’se totin, and the and the English speaking people every tins which ufiset u&” “Jog them in remem where have practically declared that the brance of their vow«." “I want her to resist King James translation is good enough be with the ironing.” “1 want all you peo for them. The revision of the New Test ple to adhere to the belL" “There will be no ament caught on as a noyelty, being well respectable people tn heaven «God is no re* advertised and pushed by enterprising ipector of paraansi." “I was much disencoor- publishers, but the new version of the tged.” “It was said at the startment of the Bible fell flat. The publishers of Eng nesting." “1 take care of three head of land and America have, however, made a ihildren." “We have passed through many good thing of the revision in the publica lark scenes and unseens”—New York Hua. tion of what is known as ♦-parallel Bibles,” the old and new version being printed in parallel columns. They come a little higher, but as no one wants the new version alone, it is easy to sell the double edition to a person wanting a Bible at all—Bookseller in Globe-Demo crat