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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1902)
WEEKLY . OREGON STATESMAN. .'FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1302. :z c::G0N utcaY states'.ian I'ur-lifcbeil every Tuetcay and rri(Jy by the fcTATESMAN I IBUSJUJiU COMPANY . , K. J. HENCrUfKS, Manager. si year. In artrano;.. ...... .... . : mouth. In advance. .......... i f:rw months in advance,.;. ..,... uiis jtrar, n titac .,...,........ l.FO . JbO .L2S Tbe 'ateroan h beew t-tab!i!ted Pr neaHj f ;j--two year, and it iia noiuc aabcriber who iive rcei-d it nearly ifcai long, and auat who bjed ll '"r a ge.eriot. one of these object to having tne paper dia -CHituiued Itio tunc oi exiHauun of tlit-ir ut-rijtMfw. rr tbe Modt oi uee. Bi for other rmon n hTrcuaciMlr1 to dmcuntiiute tub crip ion f jf when imiftr to do fco. Ail pefwn paying uetr mMierUins. or paying in 'Ivhu-., )m Me tbe benefit of tbe dollar rie. But II tney oo not p-iy f r moaiht, the rate will be! fetr. Hereafter we will -uJ the ptr all responsible pervona bwikt it. ttifiy may notaend the money, with ihw co'reUixl. to that Uiy are to pay a yar, :u uathey I' l the ubcnplki -imjiiI . rim o.er mx trioinhB. la order that there may no rnUtift rienaaiidin. we will keep Uii notice aiacduig at th place in the paper. - - . - - -'- CIRCULATION (SWORN) .OVER 4000 UNlUN- -gun U I Ilousseau more ' than one hundred years ago declared that 'the world was ': over-clvillzed. lie advocated a return -:, " . .. to "nature." Truth is that tbe world - was not then and Is not now more than half civilized. ; The luxury and the : polished man ners which Rousseau mistook for over-clvlllzation were merely cloaks for savagery. The Tullerles and Ver sailles could not be homes of civilisa tion so long as they were neighbor of theooor in the fields and in the Fau bours Saint An tolne. The Little Tri- " anon, beautiful .rendezvous ofvlce, was not a monurnento civilization. ; So lonsr as there shall be tyTanny, superstition, '.bigotry,, class prejudice, ignorance and poverty there shall not be , complete civitizalionX Civilization, when It Is perfect, must permeate t every stratum of the people;- One jo ten or a thousand cultivated, -enlight- ; enetl, democratic, philanthropic nien can not make a civilization. The nobles who crowded the;court of lui ."- XVI. " ierfumed, elegant, immoral, witty, were not civilized. Civilization touches the . Intellec't, the morals, -the conncience! A noble. cannot b civif ixed who will keep a tired peasant out of b-ji all nljjht whipping the ponds so that the frog will le ilent and let his lordship sleep. A king cannot jbe civilized who will flaunt his Du Barrrrl before the world and maintain her ex tra vjfgahtly at the expense of a groan ing people. -. Neither was the Uevoiu tlon irlvinzcd,- although U made for tlvlAzatlon by wiping out" the barbar sm which in-tenled lo .b civilization. I During the past one hundred years w have nia.de. considerable progress toward civilization, but we art atlfl f.ir' from the goal. The abolition l ot the Uantlle ami of feudalism, thn cpread of books, the enlargement of public schools, the grow,th of the press have tended to nush mankind onward twar.d the light. One may speak his njjnd freely now on religion and poli? .tics without fear of beins burned for sedition, or heresy; but 4v.cn yet com plete freedotn of speech docs not ob tain. How many matters are there which the political orator or the news !!pe; tlares not touch? How many restrictions does society impose ! on speech and thought? How much prej udic-, bigotry and superstition Is stilt in;; the world?. What - weight these things' still have in the councils j of nations! How little allowance j is ; made by strong majorities for the hon est and correct opinions of little mi norities. .".A ;.: i . V:'; f ;. ': t " J U In a century, the savagery of human nature has mitigated a little. Wtar is still hell, as It. always has been, but the army of today gives medical at tention to the enemy's wounded t and the women of the conquered ere not outraged at least not as a matter of 'course as they were in the time of Frederick therGrcat. "Out war has "not been abolished, and so long as there, is wir there will not be perfect civiliaa tion. , . ),.. : ; A writer in the San Francisco Bulletin-insists that our life In this age, Is far safer; and pleasanter thati It would have been in any other age. ,We re the heirs of past generations and have inherited all ihat they .fought . and suffered v to gain. But .the combat against selfishness and Ignorance goes Two years ago my hair was fining out badly. I purchised bottle or Arer'afUlr Vigor, and soon my hair stopped coming out. I - Miss Minnie Hoover, Paris, la. Perhaps your mother had thin hair, but that is no reason why you must go through life with half- starved hair If you want long, thick hair, feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor, and make it rich, dark, end heavy. . . i JI M s ketlk. All SreaWs. If ynr flrw rr't eartna sneply va. nd ntftMdniHr I ana we win (iprcM i a tom. Be ante ami rle tbe aaate at yonr rt tiwi office. AditrfM, J. C. A V E.a CX.. Lowell. Mate. Tf our Ham asssssssBsBBSsssssaaBa ! Humors Are Impure mutters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there is ach an accamulation of them. . They litter .the whole system. . Pimples, boils, eczema .and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired fading, bilious turns, fits of indiges tion, doll headaches and many other troubles are due to them.' Hood's Sarsapar Ma and Pills Hcmore - all humors, orercome all their effects, strengthen, tone and invigorate the whole system. m.l ba4 salt rhenm on my hands so that X could not work. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla : arid It drove oat the humor. I continued Its use till the sores disappeared.- Mas. ISA O. BaowTr, Hum ford Falls. Me. , Mood's Sarsaparilla promises to cure and keeps ths promlsa. on slowly.- Civilization wins ground Inch by inch and has to fight for every foot. Behind our polish, and 'culture much savagery lurks and what we are pleased f call civilization ; occupies only a small' part of thef globe, i The life about us Is full of pain, inflicted by' meij noon their brothers.; jntoler ance, falsehood, - insincerity, :, dishon esty,; cruelty are stilt .rampant i It Is almost disheartening . to think " bow long It will be before these mjoiuters4 t disappear from the world Thit they will disappear, eventually, is the hope of most men and the certainty of none. Even those- wno none jor tne millenium do not expect it for many, a hundred . years., to arrive '. i TH RIGHTS OF AUTOMOBILES. And now there Is rejoicing In the ranks of 'the horsemen. The lUnited States Circuit Court of New ToJ-k City has Just handed down a decision in a case brought by Jos. B. Hughes, a resi dent of the metropolis, against a bank er, Felix Varberry in which the plain tiff is given $12,070 damages. In 'his petition Hughes- claimed that he was flriving- a team, through the streets of the "city when Warberry's autombblle whizzed by and crazed the horses with fear. They ran away, and one of the valuable animals jwas lost' and the in plaintiff': himself received serious? urifc abmit the splnef for all of which-' he aked damages In the sum of $59, 000. 1 Harlerry's lawyers- fought the caa.v from start to flnlnh, but th best Ihey coqld do was to cut down the ver diet front the enormous sum asked to the' more modest amount;. of $12,070. t ; This cas is remarkable in! that ;it is a precedent. The automobile, is a comparatively recent Invention, and while there have ben -any; number .of teams frightcned-and caused- to ! run away by the strange macbinev'no big case previous to-the Hughes-Warberry Suit has as . yet bwn brought into court. ; ' . " Automobilists throughout the coun try will doubtless line up; against the conrt's decision and Indignant editor ials and personal, letters 'will probably result from this test case. The horse men, on the other hand," will f rejoice with exceeding-great Joy, for the decis ion riot only settles the question of the amount of actual Injuries sustained by the driver rf the tears, but also lays down the law" to the automobilists. The admirers of the horse think the decis ion a.'great victory for horseflesh, and doubtless "many consider it the begin ning of the end of the automobile fe ver, for. even millionaire automobilists cannot afford to pay out $12,070 every time Ihey frighten a team "of horses Into running away. : : ; 1 : "-; ' When the bicycle first came into gen erali.use in the early . '90s, t this same question was mooted before the public. The wheelmen refused to pay-damages demanded from the sufferers lit runa ways and the controversies had to be settled in court. Feeling ran high for some time, the horsemen claiming that the bicyclists should not be permitted the use of the roads, and the wheelmen claiming that they paid their taxes and had as much right to the highways as did the own ers of horses and carriages. All kinds of 'wild schemes rwere advanced as to the best jrnethod of getting over ,th, difficulty. . Some suggested building elevated eauiseways for the wheelmen while others held that the Ideal way to avoid frightening- the- horses would ' be for the w heelmen to keep off the roads during the day and the horsemen do the.same as far as possible at ntgnf. Probably these remedies will again b brought forth in regard to the autnm bile In the' hope that a peaceable -method of settling the dlfRcplty can be arranged- ' . f :; A"hlle the men of bot,h factions are Struggling over the matter trying to obtain their own wayto the exclusrion of the opponent, they overlook the 'fact that there i .one -factor that can settle the question In the aiest. quickest and best manner 'possible, and th'at l.t no Olher than the horse hi melf. If the owners of - horses and automobillMs would devote one-tenth of their-' time sp?nt In the court and ' concocting schemes,j.,whereby , they could circum vent each other to accustoming -4he faithful horse to the sight of the auto mobile, three months-time would see runaways on account of automobiles almost a. strange and rare occurrence. Our friend, the horse, needs but a for- mal Introduction to the automobile to place him on the most friendly terms with the Iron machine that wilt In fa- ture serTe to take a few bf the marry burdens off his shoulders.: WHAT 2J0OQ GIRLS COULD DO. f Two years ago Mr. James A Norton was elected to represent the Thirteenth Ohio district Irf Congress by a ynajority oit S.00O. f This was Mr. Norton's third election, and ; when', the -'Republicans demonstrated this year their approval of his course In the usual manner, he considered himself as good as elected. But subsequent events proved that 2,000 girls employed In an underwear factory had the power to change the political complexion of the district. This fac tory was owned by a man named Jack son, who had conceived the idea that he would like to "go" to Congress. It was not difficult to. get a Democratic nomination in." a district that had a clear Republican majority of 6,000, and In due 'time Mr. Jackson tnirprlsed his 'friends by declaring himself a candl- date for Congress. -There was another surprise in store for the people of the district. ;Mr. Jackson gave his 2,000 girls a two weeks' holiday, and in the letter communicating his intentions be reminded. them that the best of rela tions had always existed between the young ladies and himself, and that these relations would not be interrupt ed If he should be .elected to -Congress. The girls nook the hint. 4 Whether a majority of them were Republicans or Democrats ; Is-not recorded, but they employed thelt holiday persuading men tvote for a Democrat. The. 6,000 Re publican, majority was wiped out arid a. Democratic majority of 2,000 record ed in its place. This is not referredO as a bit of feminine caprice on the part of the girls." Mr. Jackson had been a model Employer. He had' established night schools, libraries and hosaitals, had glven them a good time when they were well, and taken care of them when they were sick. lie had also paid them liberal 3 wages, but not so liberal that he could not pile up a snug fortune for himself. . ' . THE REAL MOTHER OF TRUSTS. , While the leadinsr topics that Presi dent Roosevelt- will discuss in-- his forthcoming mes-sage to Congress will be the tariff and the trusts, it is said he. wilt "discuss them separately,, be catise he holds with other Republican readers that the tariff If not responsi ble for the trusts." This is not. how everf a mere party view, adopted be cause of partly exigency. It i. a truth that Is readily apparent. The catch phrase of the Democratic orators . that "the tariff, is the mother of the trusts. It would be much nearer the point to say that prosperity is the mother of the trustst When it is de clared that the tariff , la Ahe mother of the trusts, the demand la that the tar iff be killed. When It Is said that prosperity )a. their source, who wants to kill prosperity? If there were no capital there would bo no trusts, but wlto wants to rid the country of, capi tal? The tariff bears equally through out the whole United States. It gives no advantage to one more than to an other. I Any "man or combination .'of men may make Iron; no one within the national boundaries will be - fa vored above them by conditions es tablished by legislative enactment. It Is so in every other Industry. -TThe tariff gives protection, and protection for all. The trusts could get along without It much -better than could those who complain of the trusts. ' That there' jrnust be some 'way found tOr control the operations of the trusts Is generally admitted, at least, some way must- be- discovered to help the smaller firms and companies and to U -.' ... . r : 3m l After He Gomes I he has a hard enough time. Every- J thing that the expectant mother can do to help her child she should do. i One of the greatest bl5sirijs g she can give him is health, but' to do this, sua must have health her- f self. - She should u-ms every means Jj to improve her physical condition. She showld. by ail means, supply herself with Mother's 2 m J?rieiid. It will take her g throtagh the crisis easi 1 r and ft quickly. It is a liniment which gives strength and vigor to tbe S muscles. Com tnoa sense will JJ 9a snow you that the stronrer the ft muscles are, which bear the strain, the less ft pain there will be, 2 A woman lirinu 'ln Port Wayne, ft Ind.. saysi , "Mother's Friend did Jj wprt'Iers for me. Praise God for, a your liniments V ; ':a- ft ; piesd this from lionet Cat. m. Mother's Friend Is a bfessins; to ft all 'women who nadersro nature's ft ordeal of cbfldbirth." 2 ttt Mother's Frlewd at tke Vf store. SI per bottle. csADnao ntciiAicn co., Atlanta, Co. WiWa tmr awr Otniwtad tmak. " RtSww t s a For salt at DR. STONE'S drug stores. b5 A - encourage Individual , effort. : But ' to discontinue the protective duties would ; discourage Instead of encourage - ef- forts in this direction. HOME AND FOREIGN MARKETS. The latest figures given out by . the Treasury Bureau of Statistics show a change In the tide of 'foreign trade. In the. vear 901'there was" a decrease In exports and an Increase in imports. In nine months' of this year there has beta an Increase of $13,000,000 in ex ports. This sum does nofloolt fbrmid able; wheri compared with the total of exports, but Itshows that the falling off In. 1901 was only an Incident of for eign trade. "The , decrease in the ex ports of last year Wjas clearly caused by the Increased home demand for our manufactured product. The" principal reduction was caused by the inability cf the Iron and steel plants to supply the home market. The German manu facturers bf iron and steel made great efforts to help the American manufac turers out. They even-went so far as to 'establish two prices for-steel pro ducts, one for horn consumption and one for export. Mr. Carnegie was clearly1 right when he said that an active home' market was the real basis of . foreign trade. Objection may be made to the sale of products in foreign markets at less than the home price. but in this way a surplus of products may ; be converted Into cash without loss to the manufacturers. If ' there were any class of consumers who are not also producers, these consumers might complain; but as all classes are interested In providing employment lor our people, the consumer- derives some benefit from a policy which at the first glance seems to be injurious to the consumers as a class., '' AH; these people who- are talking abont irrigation of the arid lands of th state, by the Government, or by pri vate individuals, forget one. thing. The forget that the people who are expect ed to buy and settle on the lands art likely to be possessed of some intelli gence. Under, the -rule of caveat emp tor, r they Will look out for themsel ve to some extent. It Is contended b some of the jeople who are opiosed to private enterprise' that the Carey law docs not make any provision to furnish the settlers , with water perpetually. Bjut.ihe private persons or corpora tions would have to see to if. that the laot ; was sold before they could . ge! their profits. They would have to fine buyers. And they would have "to offei them some inducements in order . It' sell :them the land.-Nyer in Washington,'-perpetual water -rights are sold with, the land, by Irrigationand lane companies, who are not -Operating un der any act at all. They offer this in dwfeetnent In order to get their, mony and' profits out of their lands. They could not find buyers In any other waj If they offered less.r The thing for the profile of Oregon to do is to get all the at id lands' Irrigated possible, and ' as fast. as possible. " - . . At the meeting of the American Fed eration of Iabor In. New Orleans yes terday a, resolution was (ntroduced and discussed, instructing the Federa tion of Labor -to use its best efforts to induce the Rational Congress to pass a bill securing to x every 'wageworker who shall have , reached the age of 69 years without having had an average annual Income of $1,000, a pension p $12 per Vionth, provided the wage worker isa citizen 1 of the .United States and has resided in this country for 21 years when the application for pension Is made. The resolution was unfavorably reported but It was con tended by one of the speakers that "the wageworkers of the country" have as much right to a pension when they are worn out", in the harness as any man who was directly employed in its service." The resolution was' opposed, one speaker declaring that the work ingmen want no 'charity. He said that "if we must have old age pensions, it should come from the trades unions, not from the Government. The reso lution was unfavorably reported and was not adopted. . ' Without entering Into a discussion of the controversy in Eastern Oregon concerning the irrigation of arid lands it would seem to the Statesman that there is ample room for the operations ofboth the private" parties and com panies, under the provisions of the Carey act, and the Government, under the new law passed S by the last 'Con gress. There cannot be too much of the arid lands of this state brought under cultivation, until It is all in profitable use, , nor t can tbe , work be done too soon.' Of course, the actual settler must be.' protected, for thti 1 the object of both laws. The areas of arid lands s re tars t, snd there is room and to spare for the operation of both systems. . v The Statesman has for years urged action Upon the part of the state or H citizens " under the Carey act. -The regret Is that it has been so long delayed v The real friends of Oregon will not spend any time In ' bickering. They will ; urge measures that will brine about .early action, and persistent work. The state of Alabama Is about to abandon the policy of - leasing her con victs to coal raine operators and own era. Governor Jf Ik la in favor of the neWi move. Th2 old sj-Ptem of ieaelnr haa been a foul disgrace to that stjte. Goytrnor Jelki is In fattjr f the stit itself contracting for the mining of 1 ' , '", -".:'"- " , : n to bar in th txwaa mui hVToohiaier7prw wtWr y. You excellent ts m" ' "iJ le oOeit to your trieada. wails as a SWAGWroVb jtYNB WHISKEY you save the OUARANTraol SZUmihu vsoruarSteilUiaa yonr money wtU be prompUy Srutt-oUySttafl t . . - . I V - . A L7QJLLL U 1 m wmm wttt T. ttatm mn RYE tlkOO, eipreai ebarsespaid Ta - our expense sua tae next niu wu nmi rw ry" " l rairerf ThU offer is backed by company with a capital cjMOOOoa, ipsid iTfulL and the proud reputstion of M years of continuous sueeeas. V baye OTwaquarter it a million satisfied customers. proTtns conclusively that oar whiskey U ail right sad Uta ws do exactly as we say. Shipment mads LTa plain sealed caseT with so marks or brands to iadlea&e co&teata. "wTvr.;. y tfuZhrttosr:, frjzz mVW sa-oo. ..',.---;'. .-;..;' . ' '-'- rrt TV. With each four quart order ww will send free one sd-tippedwhtakey UU ruas and on eor kacrew. If yon wish to aend an order to a friend, as s Christmas present, we will enclose with the shipment aa elegant souvenir card, wis-a both your names neatly printed thereon. Write our nearest office sad do it NOW. Sa. TIIE IIAYKED DIGTILLiriQ COMPANY CT. PAUL, BI. OATTOM, OHIO T. MJUi M DBTJUHT, TBOT. a Toal, In order to put tbe control of the" , work under responsible supervis ion, in the interest of humanity Ir Alabama the convicts are mostl blacks, and their Imprisonment ha been made profitable to the tate in stead sof being a change upon th commonwealth treasury. , The fact that the system has yielded a profit has been the main reason why it ha been adhered to for so long. A local character of Memphis, Tenn created!, a laugh .Wednesday, night when he presented President Iloosevelt with a box of roses and told him: "Take these to the White IIousm? anc? present them to your superior officer.? The President promised to so. He will probably present them to Mrs Roosevelt. There ctn . Ijc no superior officer to the President of the United States In alt the world excepting only his wife. ' A graduate of a New York college wrote an essay on the - Kthlcss ol Mwralst for : hla graduating addrcsv lait June, and It was so good that it ?4n 'or him a beautiful bride; more-ovc-,xthe faculty were- so -proud of It th-at they printed and circulated It, with theTcault that a woman bobbed up and claimed the youth es her, long Itst husband, mid he is now lcing prosecuted , for bigarny. AH of which shows' that bad men should not be too eloquent on the subject of morals. The New Ifork Press, by studying the result Cthe polls in that city, has discovered that "Color's big majorities were obtained not in the Demcoratlc but the Republican districts and were obtained by reason of the failure of Rtpubilcans to vote.- It Is another case where overconfidence came very near causing a loss of a great state. In the Democratic districts Coier's plu rality is' said to have been lass than that of Van Wvckover Koosevelt it 18'J3. - There has been some complaint that the apple market'is duJL But the men who have raised apples of the right varieties, fcee from worms, are not complaining. They are disposing of their product to good advantage, and at profitable prices. There is plenty of room for still more orchards, planted by men who know how, to attend to them, and who are willing to make ap ple growing a business. . The American Automobile Associa tion is urging a National highway from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The help of Comcresa tw be asked for. The movement will finally succeed, without a doubt. The highway 'from Boston to New York Is already nearly completed, as the Statesman said some da-s ago, only a feW gaps remaining to be filled. :,:-."."-,' The best Jove story of the season comes from New Jersey, to the effect that a mart of 65 met a" woman of 74 in a horse trade, and as the woman got the better o; the bargain, the man fell in love with her, shrewdness while she loved him , for his ttonVaty. so they were married, and now each of them owns both horses. ' .' If., as is reported. Mrs. Jefferson Davis objects to the plan of the Jcffer rtn Davts sreh. to be erected in Rich-' mend because It is of a trinmphal arch and not of a memorial arch, she Is right. Erecting triumphal arches In honor of 1 hero of the broken Confed eracy would be in the worst taste.- Mobile.- Alabama. Register. Work has been commenced on the first experimental ec! road in one of the streets of New York, where the traffic is hesrleef. on Murray street, putting into Broadway at the lower end- i Eu7 s uu UAruuoa PQEPAID ntrt'1'L.Ea of HAT NCR'S Eev eN-TEATV- by us. Try it and tf you dewit Bod it aU rig b EWiHJBEID 1 The ministers of Salt Lake City are organizing to oppose the election of postle Reed Smoot, of the 'Mormon church, to the .United States ,Sn;'t. The trouble seems Jo be that , Sinor't has the vOtes, and votes count in I't inl as elsewhere. .""'- ' ' . Populism Is practically a thing of the ast. Kansas has dropped it. Colorado s returning to the Republican fetid, tnd there are not enough Populists left" !n Nebraska to act as pall-bearers a t ,he Democratic funeral. Philadelphia Inquirer. While the Preeldeut is after tje bears in the Mississippi swamps, the betm: -nf Wall street are having Iheir inniut-K: 3ut it will not last-. The country is oo prosperous. ' v For once the big lawyers of the stvte lid not get the front of the staae. utt ier the full glare of the-electric IlKlit.-. They were ,swamped by the irrigl! jt convention. IN HANDS OF PRINTER STATU BOARD OF HORTICUI.T1. 112 DOING GOOD WORK FOR. - INDUSTRY. .GeoMl. Lamberson, secretary of the State Board of Horticulture, was in the city yesterday, having brousrht the biennial "report of the officers of '" the" w . board and ptaced , it In the hands' of the State Printer. Mr. JLamltei t:'tn says the report is yuite volumiti-uia, rM covers In detail every subi.tt of- Interest and Importance. pertaining to the culture of fruit and the numeious pests which infest It. He would eny nothing about the contents of It, how ever, as the board desires these kept secret In order that they may be frtsh and of interest to tbe Legislature when' presented to that body. - The' board has been working very, assidiously in its efforts to prornot" the industry and to gather oil us'ful data obtainable for the benefit thertr of,' and. although very greatly-h tndi capped by the lack, of authority vested In ihtf "ofrice,rs and commissioners by the Legislature, it has been emlncnlly successful. . ' - .', . Under the present law governing that body andi prescribing its duties the commissioners are obliged to travel about and make , a personal Inp"-t i u of all shipments of nursery stf ks. which Is all very welt when it cau be accomplished, but. oftentimes, during the rush of the Shipping season. It becomes impracticable for the commis sioners to cover their territories satis factorily as Is often the ense that therc servlees are demanded In a number of places at the same time, and it not In-' frequently causcsr much delay and un satisfactory results, both to 'the ship per and the commissioner. , To overcome! this condition It Is un derstooil that a measure will In; drafted and presented to the coming Deglsla--ture recommf ndlngan amendment to the orsent, act whtrir will rant th several commitwloners , authority to apiK)int c-omiejent deputies In the dif ferent parts of their respective dis tricts, whenever It beeomes imiossible for the commissioners to visit and make a personal Iniuectlon of ship ments, to make the. necessary Inspec tion and report to the commisiotVer -at a rsonble conipensation. thus elim inating a-great amount of expense to tbe state, which would, otherwise be incurred' through a personal lnsp tlon . y' the commisalonsr.Tand more natls factory results would-be obtained,. Lock In Thirteen. By sendingrU mMes Wm" Splrey. cf Walton Furnace, VC, got a box of Bncklen's Arnica Salv. that wholly cured a horrible fever sore on bU lg """""s vise-couid. Positively cures Bruiaoa, Felons. Ulcers. F.ruptlops. Roils, Burns, Corns., and riles. Dniv Guaranteed by Dr. Stone's Drug Stores.- ATter January first : next, parlor rnafhxs cannot be lawfully used In' the city, of New York..ana the sulphur match of our grandfathers or safety matches will be allowed. Over 1.300 fires were caused Jn the rreat Ameri can mstropolis last year, by parlor matches, and eight lives were lost la these fires ...... a.a.Jaa.sx.aJl3 01 r i