Entered «t the PoMoflire tn McMinnville, «s Secoud-cbu* matter. VOL. XXIV M’MINNVILLE, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1891 MORPHINE ANTIDOTE DR. MOOR’S STARTLING PROOF THAT HE HAS CONQUERED THE POISON. I I i HIRTY years’ observation of Castori* with tho patronage of HIR ’ T million« of per«on«. permit na to speak cf it without gno»«ing. It i« unquestionably tho best remedy fnr Infanta *nd Children the world haa rve’ known. It i» bartules«. Children like it. It give« them health. It will wave their live«. Tn it Mother« have .Gatrflitag which I* ab«ol«t»ly -afa und pr*ctio*lly perfect *a a child'« medicino. Cu» tori* destroy Wore». Caatoria allay, Feverrohnc««. Cantori* privent» vomiting Soar Card. Castori* caret Dl*rrhKA H7.VG KO(>M ¡SLEEP­ Hauling of all ERS of latent rquipment. Ì «JURIST SLEEPINC CARS W. J. CLARK, D.D.S Ktxt that can be constructed and in which ac- commudations are FREE and furnished for holders tf first and second-class tickets, and Graduate University of Ma h. Has opened an office in I’nion lll.ick. Room 6. and is prepared to do all work in the dental line. CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK A SPECIALTY. ELECANT DAY COACHES. L atest M ethod or P ainless C straction A continuous line, connecting with all lines, af- lording direct and uninterrupted service. Full- uihii Sleejs-r reservations can be secured In ad- i ance thu ugh any agent of the road. THE THROUGH TICKETS to and from allpointsln America. England und Europe, at any ticket office of this road. COMMERCIAL Full information concerning rules, titre ot trains, routes and other details, furnished on ap* plication to any agent, or LIVERY STABLE. A. D. CHARLTON, CATES & HENRY, Props f- Assistant General Passenger Agent, No. 121 First Street Corner Washington, E Street, north of Third. Everything New and Tirst-class. Conveyance of Commercial Travel­ er« a -pecialty Picard and stabling by the day or month We solicit a fair share of the local pat ronage. I PORTLAND. OR. CITY BATHS CRANK ROECA, — AND— TOXSORIAL PARLOBS, WILL LOGAN, Prop. > Ont Door West vi Cigar Store. M c M innville or i For a Clean Shave or Fashionable Hair Cut Give Him a Call. Fermanganate of Pot *• b Demonstrates Its Mastery Over Morphine of an Equal Amount—Poisons. No .Matter How Ad­ ministered. Beach the Stomach. Dr. William Moor, the discoverer of the new antidote for morphine, is experiment­ ing with strychnine, cocaine and other poisons. Dr. Moor has demonstrated by staking his life upon it that the ]>enuanganate will iustuntly counteract all the poisonous effects of morphine. When Le took three grains of the poison, against the protests of 12 physicians, he demonstrated not only the success of his antidote, which lie took immediately afterward, but proved that it was a new discovery to the medical profes­ sion. Dr. Moor is 28 years old. He is tall, with a black mustache and a restless, en­ ergetic manner. He has all the enthusiasm of an inventor Poisons are his playthiugs and experiment his amusement. Hu is an Austrian by birth, studied two years in Berlin and one in Paris and is a graduate of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in this city. He has been in practice a lit­ tle over three years. Dr. Moor was asked how his attention came to lie called to permanganate of pot­ ash. He said it had always been a favor­ ite with hitn when as a boy he performed chemical experiments. “It is very pretty to look at,” said he. Then be took a pill made of the permanganate and put it in a glass of water. When he touched it with a spoon, it turned the whole glass to a rich purple color, like that of a fine Burgundy. This showed that the drug, which usually comes in dark purple, needlelike crystals, is easily soluble. “I will show you how it affects mor­ phine,” said Dr. Moor. Then he took a little bottle of sulphate of morphine. He poured out a grain of morphine. This he dissolved in a half glass of water. It was colorless. The reporter, who tasted it, found It intensely bitter. “Now watch the effect,” said Dr. Moor. He poured the colorless morphine solution into the glass containing the beautiful purple liquid. The liquid immediately turned a dirty black, like ink, and the color at once be­ gan to precipitate in fine particles toward the bottom of the glass. “Now taste it,” said Dr. Moor. It was tasteless. The bitterness had all disappeared, showing that the morphine had been instantly annihilated by contact with the permanganate of potash. The liquid at the top began to get clearer. The fine black particles in five minutes formed a thick layer, and all the rest looked like pure water. This residuum is black man­ ganese dioxide, a harmless substance. “That is the way it acts in the human stomach,” said Dr. Moor. “The morphine or any of the salts of opium is at once ren­ dered harmless by contact witli the per­ manganate. The antidote at once seeks the poison, passing by the other substances. The soluble salt of morphine is acted upon by the antidote 75,000 times quicker than albumen and several thousand times quick­ er than pepton.” “How did you find this out?” “I experimented upon the white of egg, ' said Dr. Moor. “That is pure albumen. It is converted into pepton by the action of pepsin. Pepton is the chief rival of the permanganate, because pepton is soluble in water and permanganate of potash acl9 most quickly on soluble substunces. You Lave seen the demonstration which I Lave just given “Tbeetfeet of the permanganate on mor­ phine is instantaneous, as you see. But for purposes of calculation I estimate it as occupying a second. Theu I watch the ef­ fect of permanganate of potash on white of egg and calculate the time until the ef­ fect is produced. It is infinitely slower — 75,900 times slower. Thus I knew that the permanganate would seek the morphine and not the pepton in the stomach.” “But thut is only theoretical. Did you have no practical test before you took the three grains of morphine yourself?” he was asked. “Ob, yes," said Dr. Moor. “I tried it on a couple of rabbits i y hypodermic in­ jections, administering the same quantity of morphine to each. J ii the one which 1 gave the antidote tLe temperature remain­ ed normal. In the other it fell to 16. Then I began trying it on myself, taking first an eighth of a grain, theu a quarter, then a half, theu three-quarters. When I took the antidote, there was uo apparent effect. 1 never took as much as three grains at one time uutil 1 gave my demonstration before the west side German clinic. Dr. Gottbeil was very much frightened. I told him I would just as lief take six grains. Almost auy quantity of morphine would be harm­ less if a similar quantity of the antidote vfere taken. “Professor Hitzig in Germany a year or two ago proved that poisons of all kinds, no matter how administered, find their way to the stomach. Thus a snake poison received in the leg or a hypodermic injec­ tion of morphine in the arms begins to get into the stomach within a few seconds. Professor Hitzig found that one-half the poison will get into the stomach witbin an hour The same is true of poisons re­ ceived through the stomach, which pass back to the stomach again. So it follows that permanganate of potash, if adminis­ tered while a person is still alive, begins at once to destroy the poison. It should be administered ill successive doses, say at intervals of 20 minutes. 1 do not claim, however, that atropine should uot also be administered hypodermically. Everything should be doue to maintain the heart's action.” Dr. Moor is hopeful that the power of the permanganate in killing poison ex­ tends to pol»ous other than those derived from opium. Cocaine is one of the sub­ stances with which he is experimeuting in addition to strychnine and atropine. He knows from experiment that the effects of permanganate upon these substances is different from that upon morphine and in the case of strychnine 1» very much slower. He said yesterday that he did not know that it Lad ever been ascertained what was the active principle of a rattlesnake’s poison. “I am going to experiment with the rattlesnake, however,” said he. “If the poison gets into the stomach, there ought to be a way of reaching it, as is done with morphine.”—New York World The attorney fur a long time Lad been hying to account for this seeming telep­ athic communication between tbu two young ladies. Yesterday Le tLought he would make a test of the matter, ami call­ ing his stenographer be said, “I want you to takedown thisarricleof agreement and give it to Miss Blank to transcribe.” He then dictated a lengthy anil technical doc- ' liment, trying to make it as difficult as possible. The stenographer took it down and then went to her machine and began operating it. The attorney watched her closely amt saw that Bhe never Btoppel her work. He ; waited for a half hour, then he turned to ; liis typewriter and said: “Miss So-and-so, I think yon have for­ gotten to give Miss Blank that dictation 1 gave you for her.” “Oh, no,” replied the young lady. ' “Mias Blank has it finished and waiting for you out there.” This nonplused the attorney. He was sure his private stenographer bad nut left thu room and did not see how it could be possible for such * complicated agreement to be transferred by telepathic communi cation. He went out to Miss Blank, who handed him the agreement completed. The attorney could not contain himself any longer as he said: “Miss Blank, I have been noticing something strange for the past month. Will you tell me liow you receive my instructions from Miss So-and- so without Ler leaving my room? Here you have transcribed a very difficult dic­ tation, and I am sure you have had no communication with her.” The young lady began to smile aud said: “Mr.------, you should not be so sure ' that we have had uo communication. We can converse with each other when the door is open just as well as if we were in the same room. No, it’suot thought trans fereuce, but plain telegraphy. You see, Miss So-and-so aud I have learned telegra­ phy recently, aud we practice in this way. “We found the space bars of our type­ writers made perfect telegraph keys, so thut we can send messages just as well as with a regular telegraph instrument. So it’s not so mysteroiua alter all.” Tlie young lady showed her employer the manner of sending a message, and be began to think how easily some mysterious incidents could Le explained if w e only knew the truth.—Pittsburg Dispatch. Sang Hie Father Out of Jail. Little Davie Connelly, the sweet voiced lad who is known all over the Pacific coast, sung his father out of jail iu the Spokaue police court once. David Connel­ ly, Sr., bad been arrested for being tlruuk and had been liued «1 aud costs by Judge Miller. Then Davie appeared. Inspector Gough was au admirer of the lad, aud so was Prosecutor Plattor. At tLeir request the little fellow sang in a voice of affecting sweetness, “Kiss and Let’s Make Up.” Judge Miller listened, aud when he had concluded asked his name. “Davie Connelly,” said the lad. “Why—ahem—who’s yon r father? ” a»k- ed the judge, with a suspicion of tender ness in his voice. “Why, he’s the man you just sent to jail,” said the little fellow. "I think we ha J better let the father go for the boy’s sake,” said Mr. Plattor. “Siug'My Mother’s Picture,’ ” suggest­ ed Inspector Gongb, and the boy sang with tender emotion the appeal of the child nut to sell bis mother’s portrait. It was a sweet, pathetic refrain that brought emotions to the heart. “Does your father get drunk often?”; asked the judge as he looked sympathetic­ ally at the little singer. “No, sir. This is the first time in a\ year,” he replied. “And, judge, if you will let him go, I ll work at the Louvre next week aud bring you the money for bis fine.” “Yon? Why, what do you earn?’ “Seventeen dollars and a half a week,” replied Davie. And in another minute it was arranged, and the parent was allowed to go —Portland Oregonian. An Oddity of Skin Grafting. After a series of observations extending over n period of 12 years and experiment­ ing on 23 individuals of both sexes and of opposite colors Professor Thiersch of Leipsic Las given the following as the result; If a piece of negro’sskin isgrafted on tLe flesh ot a white loan or woman, the transplanted piece, as soou as it begins to properly adhere, gradually changes in col­ or and texture until it becomes indistin­ guishable from tliat of the surrounding cuticle, the process of change usually occu­ pying a period of from 92 to 112 days to make the complete transforniaiton. On tLe other Land, when the skin of a white person is grafted to the flesh of a negro, the change, which it has already been ad­ mitted finally takes place, is not nearly so rapid, usually occupying a period of up­ ward of a year. As to texture, it can be truly said that the white piece, though it changes to nil appearance to real negro skin, is never as fine and soft as its ebony surroundings. The question now arises: Should further experiment prove this to lie true beyond a doubt, will the belles of the future have their faces denuded and patched up with negro skin in order to give them a fash­ ionable texture?—St. Louis Republic. SritSCEIPTlON PRICE «.' iul nolloeintbe •*< ¡entitle American, anil J»“4 »7 btonght widely before Un puhhciiX. ! ! ,n'’'-‘”tor- ’ihla splendid ranter, u. " l.re* k-Tt rtesautly liluetniteit. has by far the lai .'st circulation ot auv u entlh. work In tho winl’i A.f n yea-. ; mp|B copies sent free. enS l dltnf Ed‘tloni-'"‘”’tl';y t <«3 year. Hlnela copies, -J.. » cen j. I.vcry numhor cnntaius beau­ tiful plate- in colors, and miotognph, of new boa-os. wall plans, enabling builders to show iba secure contracts. Address ItUkN X OOe NEW koi.a, 3bl B uoaumat . F F H 5 X 1 2 3 Than ..IHM. Attention i t called by a writer in The National Builder to some peculiar charac­ teristics of luminous paint and the facts to be observed in obtaining from it the best service. Amoug the facts presented is the important c ue that a greater luminosity is produced by a short and near exposure to an ordinary artificial light or by being placed near a window about sunset on » rainy day. Again, after 10 seconds’ expo sure to good diffused daylight, which is really as effective ns an exposure of 10 hours, this substance will give out a prac­ tical light for 10 or 12 hours, Hud the lu­ minosity will not entirely disappear in less than 30 hours, such a difference in the times required for the absorption and the emission of light being so remarkable as to make it seem that the light emitted is many times greater than that absorbed. It is also found that a temperature of 300 Had I but served my God with half or 400 degrees will uot put calcium eal­ phide into a luminous condition, though the zeal I served my king, he would not after exposure to light an increase in tem­ have given me over in uiy gray hair«.— perature of 25 degrees will make it much Cardinal Wolsey. more luminous. This, however, is not a conversion of beat into light, because if kept at a high temperature it becomes non- luminous In a shorter time. “Legal Tender.” Tn October last the Central bank, Ant­ A Detroit doctor is laying fora boy about werp, notified Messrs. T------ & Co., import­ 16 years old, who came into his office one ers of wheat, that henceforth only 1,000 day last week, and after getting the doc­ franca’ worth of 5 franc pieces would be tor’s advice disappeared and has not since received at a singlo payment. This inti­ been seen, at least by him. mation enraged the excitable head of the “Doctor,” said the boy, “I have a sink­ firm to such a degree that ho at once con­ ing feeling all over a great many times a sulted a lawyer, who told him that in the day.” eyes of the law the bank was not entitled “Ever at night?” asked the doctor. to impose any such restriction, whereupon “Hardly ever.” the bead of the firm stated in reply to tLe “Let me see your tongue.” ukase of the bank that in future all their The boy showed his tongue. The doctor payments should be effected in 5 franc felt his pulse, sounded his chest, worked a pieces. And be kept his word. Every stethoscope on him, listened at his heart­ time he bad to pay money into the bank he bought up all t he 5 franc pieces he could beats and then told him what was the collect from the other banks and forward­ matter with him and what to take for it. “Maybe my business has got something ed them to the Bank Centrale. A few­ weeks ago be paid in the sum of e0,000 to do with it, doctor?” suggested the boy francs, which had to be conveyed on a as the physician stepped into the adjoin­ Do You Own a Dog? ing room to get a vial. wagon hired for the purpose and which The supreme court of Iowa has decided took a couple of tellers ever 60 long to “Hardly that, I think,” cheerily sang count. —Etoile Beige. that the owner of a dog is responsible in out the physician from the other room. damages for injuries caused by the bark­ “What is your business?” “I run an elevator,” responded the lad. ing of the animal. A dog barked suddenly Vmed Ashes. And before the doctor could get to him and viciously at a horse ridden on the pub­ A widow in Vienna having asked wheth­ lic highway. The rider of the horse was he had disappeared, as above stated.—De­ er she would be allowed to preserve the troit Free Press. in consequence thrown and injured, and ashes of her husband in an urn in her suing for damages recovered from the own­ apartment has been told by the govern­ er of tho dog. This judgment the supremo ment that this could not be permitted. RILEY AS A SIGN PAINTER. court of Iowa has affirmed.—Exchange. The minister responsible says the custom, Thu Famous Poet Relates an Experience Booth’s Retort. if it became general,’ ‘ might lead to strange of His Youthful Days. A CURIOUS KANAKA CHARACTER. eccentricity and superstitions.”—Vienna In the days of his management at the “Well, now, I want to know aliout that Letter. Winter garden Edwin Booth received a letter from a clergyman saying that he patent medicine peddling,.” I eaid to James Bill Kagsdale, the Hawaiian Parliamen­ tary Interpreter. THE MOTHER OF MERMAIDS. wished to see Booth in his principal parts, Whitcomb Riley. Something in my tone made him reply During the early years of Kalakaua’s but desired, if possible, to be admitted reign and for some years preceding a half To the Sslentifio World She I* Knows into the theater by a side door, as he did quickly: “That has been distorted. It was really white called Bill Ragsdale was the offi­ Merely aa the Dugong. not care to run any risk of being seen by a very simple matter and followed the cial interpreter in tha elective branch of his parishioners entering from the front To the scientific world the mermaid is Edwin Booth made answer in these words, sign painting naturally. After the ‘trade’ the Hawaiian parliament. Ragsdale had known as the dugong, and, while she is “Sir, there Is no door in my theater episode I had tried to read law with my a great natural aptitude for acquiring lan­ more or less interesting to the naturalist through which God cannot see.”—Sau father, but I didn’t seem to get anywhere. guages, and it was told of him that when as being the Inoffensive cause of the mer­ Forgot as diligently as I read. So far as he visited a French man-of-war the officers maid myths, she is still more interesting Francisco Argonaut. »chool equipment was concerned, I was an would not believe he had not been educat­ to him because she is a dugong, for the advertised idiot, so what was the use? I ed in Paris, and that the German naval dugong has been battling for existence in NOVEL TELEGRAPHING. bad a trade, but it was hardly what I officers wanted to bet that he had been the marine world for centuries and is about It Looked Like Thought Transference, but wanted to do always, and my health was educated from infancy in Berlin. He was to lose her identity among her aquatic the Explanation Wai Simple. bad—very bad—bad as I was 1 quick witted, eloquent, a fop in dress and neighbors of the southern deep. The du­ “A doctor here in Greenfield advised me as a citizen a good for naught. His official gong Í9 becoming rapidly extinct. A speci­ A prominent lawyer thought he Lad dis covered a wonderful instance of thought to travel. But how the suffering Motes duties required him to interpret the speech­ men is seldom captured, and the one in transference the other day. He has two was I to travel without money? It was es of the natives into English and the possession of the San Francisco Academy typewriter operators. One works iu his just at this time that the patent medicine speeches of the foreigners into Hawaiian. of Sciences is regarded as au extraordinary private office, and the other has a desk iu man came along. He needed a man, and I The latter was necessary, as many of the prize. an adjoining room. Of late he lias beeu argued in this way, ‘This man is a doctor, native members from districts remote from Every nation under the sun has contrib­ puzzled upon giving instructions to his and if I must travel, better travel with a Honolulu and Hilo had little knowledge of uted to the mythical evolution of the du­ doctor. ’ He had a fine team and a nice any language but their own. The former private stenographer, to be delivered to the gong from a member of the manatee fami­ other typewriter, to find that she never looking lot of fellows with him, so I pluck­ duty, turning the natives’ speeches into ly of mammalia to a beautiful sea siren ed up courage to ask if I couldn ’ t goaloDg English, was seldom necessary, as the for ­ quit the room, yet the girl in the next room----- , . ----- v-. , with languorous eyes and flowing hair, would always execute the order just as if and paint his advertisements for him. eign members were naturally men who had who wooes foolish mariners to destruction, Riley smiled with retrospective amuse ­ been on the islands long enough to master and the folklore of every nation has a dif­ ■he had been told explicitly what was re- ”” 1‘J "* ment ‘jXrode otjt of town behind those the simple and easily acquired native lan- ferent idea of the appearance of the mer- quired. That Sinking Feeling. maid. * Ilio crafty ________________ Liiineso and Japanese have even manufactured a hideous hcui - blance to a woman lisli, and great paint­ ers have deigned to commit to canvas their conception of tlie siren. The unattractive, motherly dugong was tlie cause of it all. lhe dugong forms the connecting link between the real whale and the seals aud walruses. Like the whale, the animal has no hind feet, bur a powerful horizontal tail. Its anterior extremities are more flexibly jointed than those of the whale, and this is a distinguishing characteristic between the two animals. The dugong is said to have attained a length of 20 feet. The specimen at the academy is nearly 7 feet long and has been very well preserved. In appearance the animal resembles the manatee, or sea cow. Its upper lip is large, thick and fleshy, and its snout is like the trunk of an elephant cut short across. \\ hen the dugong is nursing its young, its breasts are enlarged so as to be almost human iu then- aspect. The nursing proc­ ess is carried on by the mother above wa­ ter. The baliy dugong is pressed against the exposed breast with one of mauima dugong’s flippers, and iu this position the animal swims horizontally through the water, using her remaining flipper to pro I>el herself along. It is this singular char­ acteristic of tiie animal that has given rise to the fable cf the nnrmaid. Sir Janies Emerson Teuuent, the emi­ nent naturalist, says: “The rude approach to the human outline observable iu tlie shape of the bead of this creature and the attitude cf tho mother while suckling her yotiug, holding it to her breast with one flipper, and while swimming with the oth­ er holding tlie heads of both above water, r.nd w hen disturla-d suddenly diving ami displaying her fishlike tail—these, togeth­ er with her habitual demon-.irations of strong maternal affection, probably gave rise to the fable of tlie mermaid Ten- nent traces the origin of the myth to the gilt edged tales of early Arabian sailors who had watched the strange antics of the dugong in tho waters of the Manaar. Still another characteristic of theanirnal that contributes to its immortalization in mythology and heraldry is the peculiarly humanlike, plaintive cry which it gives when its young is imperiled or becomes de­ tached from its motherly but inusculai hold. According to Rnopell, it was with the skin of Ibis mammal that the Jews were directed to veil the temple. The best proof that the dugoughas beeu but imperfectly described by naturalists is the contradictory accounts of it given by scientists. Tenncnt says it gives no oil whatsoever, and the author of “Wonders of the Deep ’ declares that 4,1)00 buttles ol oil Lave been obtained from one dugong It is a sort ot marine cosmopolite, for it has been found in the northern seas, along the tropical coasts and streams of Africa nnd America, in the Red sea aud Indian I ocean. Many years ago missionaries in South America ute the flesh of the dugong dur­ ing the Ix-nten season, imagining that it was fish. It. is classified as a mamma], however, so that the simple missionaries trauegressed too conditions of their fast without knowing it. But . he dugong isdoomed toextinction. 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I have, for many years, made pulmonary and other medicines a special study, and I have come to the conclusion that Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral occupies a position pre-eminent over other medi­ cines of the class."—Chas. Davenport, Dover, N. J. • Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. C. A yer it Co., Lowell, Ma?». Prompt to act, sure to cure EASTMAN KODAK CO. roches rtm, kodaks . to >(OO.OO. i wnm th.-r. <»t d,. r . h intiff van apply to the court for the relief praved for'in the com­ plaint herein to-wit: A decft.( dj?-M Jving the marriage contract now existing .between the plainmf and the defendant, and for »ijrh other and further relief as may l»e mewl in the premises. Thi> ummous is served by publicaliofl thereof tor six u wks, by order of Hon. Geo. JI. Burnett, jud^e ox said court, made JaniiMj-Sl, „ JNO. X SPE!*CER. Attorney fur / '