Not Unenviable. Mr. Gadabout That Mri. Hard head next door doesn't seem to have many friends. HosteBS (wearily) No-o; I wonder bow she manages it? Judy. A West Indian Hurricane Recently traveled up the coast at will, and toted In an entirely different manner from my other storm. Sometimes dyspepsia lets the same way. It refuses to yield to treatment which has cured similar cases. Then Hostetter's Stomach Bitters should be taken. It has cured stomach trouble for half a century. . . . A train running from New York to Boston made over 80 miles an hour re cently. ' ' In France advertsing posters must bear revnnue stamps varying in value according to size of the poster. Circumstances Alter Cases. In cases of scrofula, salt rheum, dys pepsia, nervousness, catarrh, rheumatism, eruptions, etc., the circumstances may be altered by purifying and enriching the blood -with Hood's SarsaparttU. It is the great remedy for all ages and both sexes. Be sure to get Hood's, because' ' ' - - "An Oddity In Railroading. "The craze for fast time on railways Is taking a new feature," observed a prominent railroad official to a Star writer recently. "It is the shortening of lines and reconstruction of surveys in order to make a given line as straight as possible between two points. It is, in fact, a scheme to make , time . by saving distance. A railway , with out a curve or a cutting is, of course, a Splendid thing from an engineering standpoint, but it is a very tedious affair to the passenger. : To thoroughly . realize how extremely monotonous a long journey on a railway without a curve or cutting is, one must travel on the road from Buenos Ayres to the Andes. That railroad beats all known records for having 200 miles of tracks almost on a line, such as mathemati cians describe as the shortest distance between any two points. No one who has not seen this remarkable stretch of road, straight in front and behind as far as the eye can reach, even when aided by a field glass, can grasp what it means or what an amount of wearisome monotony it involves and entails." Washington Star. . - Improved Train Equipment. The O. R. & N. and Oregon Short Line have added a buffet, smoking and library car to their Portland-Chicago through train, and a dining car service has been inauguarated. The train is equipped with the latest chair cars, day coaches and luxurious first-class and ordinary sleepms. Direct connec tion made at Granger with Union Pa cific, and at Ogden with Bio Grande line, from all points in Oregon, Wash ington and Idaho to all Eastern cities. For information, rates, etc, call on any O. R. & N. agent, or address W. H. Hurlburt, General Passenger Agent, Por t land.'"" -" The Betrothal Kin, First Boarder Did you hear the re port of the engagement of our land lady's daughter? Second Boarder I should say I did. I was sitting in the next room at the time, and it was a pretty loud report, let me tell you. Richmond Dispatch. Bostonlans' Manners Abroad. . Fuddy The Hulcums are very dis creet. Duddy In what way. - Fuddy They never smile when they are in public together. They are afraid peo ple will think they are not married. They both of them hate a scandal above all things. Boston Tanscript. . The largest mass of pure salt in the world lies under the Province of Ga lica, Hungary. It is known to be 550 miles long, SO broad and 250 feet in thickness. London annually consumes 40,000 tons of imported meat. " Germany manufactures 70 per cent of the world's production of . coal-tar colors. The New York Varnishers. Union reports that all its members are busily employed, and its business agents have applications from employers for more men. All union varnishers receive not less than $3 a day, and some are get ting $3.25 and $3.50 for eight hours' work. . , ' An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, Strop of Figs, manufactured by the California Fia Sybbp Co.; illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing1 the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening' or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. . In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the California Fie Syrup Co. only. In order to get its beneficial i effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, OAL. JJOTJISVIIXB, XT. HEW YORK. X. T. Per talc by all Druggists. Price JOc per bottle IMCUXlUUa ALflNG THE COAST. items of General Interest Gleaned om the Thriving Faolflo State. The Stage Bobbery. It transpired that Van C. Alexander, the man who gave up $170 of the money stolen from the United States mails on the stage near Weetfall Or., on -Sep-! tember 22, is admittedly the main pert son responsible for the hold-up. Thej indications during the examination in United States Commissioner Hailey'i court hore on Saturday, pointing to Alexander as the one planning the rob bery, with the two boys as his accom plices, are confirmed by the develop ments. It is announced here that this phase of the ease will be called to the attention of Judge Bellinger, of the federal court at Portland, before whom the two boys are to be tried. . T Big Steam Heating Plant. " Upwards of $600,000 is to be spent by the Boston capitalists who have pur chased the plant of the Seattle Steam Heat & Power Company, and six of the street railway lines of Seattle, in the erection of a new and modern power plant and in the rebuilding and the distributing system. This part of the plant will be almost wholly recon structed, new mains being laid in con formity with the latest ideas of steam engineering. This is but the beginning af large improvements whioh will be made. Plans are now being drawn for the new building and plant, which will be finished by January 1, and for the rebuilding of several of the street car lines recently purchased. . ' Motioned Sustained. - . Judge Burnett, of Salem, has sus tained a motion for non-suit against the plaintiff in the case of L. H. Mc Mahon vs. The Canadian Pacific Bail way Company. The action was begun to recover about $550, alleged to be due the plaintiff on account of advertising in the Woodbnrn Independent and the Salem Independent. ' The defense claimed that the agent who made a contract for the advertising had no au thority to do so, and that the newspa per company was to take pay in trans portation. v . - r-. Labor Soaroe at Fairhaven. Labor is so scarce in Fairhaven, Wash., that railroad contractors and others are delaying work on various enterprises until more plentiful supply of workmen are to be had a change from three years ago, when laboring men were sitting around on the curb stones, waiting for something to turn up. . Fairhaven's pay roll is almost 16 times larger than it was two years ago, with a certainty of an increase next year. ' Hillsboro Tonng Man Hurt. - ''. Charles V. Doughty, a young man and resident of Hillsboro, Or., while riding a bicycle at a rapid rate over a crosswalk, was thrown from his wheel and seriously injured. ' He was render ed nnconsoious for about two hours, and received a deep out across the left eye and his upper lip was badly lacer ated. The wheel was completely de molished. Young Doughty was a mem ber oicompany.H Second. .Oregon vol unteers, and enlisted from Hillsboro. Landlords Smiling. Portland hotels are generally doing a good business these exposition times, and would soon be filled to overflowing were it not that guests keep going away as well as coming in. About two days is the average length of the out-of-town visitor's stay in the city, and his place is taken just about as quickly as he has vacated. The principal hotels have good long lists of names on the daily registers. . A Ninety-Pound Pumpkin. A clothing house at New Whatcom, Wash., gave farmers pumpkin seeds last spring, and offered five prizes for largest results. The first prize went to R. D. Perry, of Clearbrook, whose pumpkin weighed 90 pounds; second, Cal Watkinson, of Edison, 88 pounds; third, Cyrus Bradley, of Lynden, 61 pounds. The fourth and fifth weighed 42 and 87 pounds respectively. ' Gold HUl Water Ditch. Engineer J. S. Howard, of Medford, Or., has completed the survey of the Gold Hill water ditch. He employed a party of 12 men, who completed the permanent survey in 98 days. Much interest is shown in the ditch, not only by local enterprise, but by many East ern capitalists, who are ready to invest money in it. - - To Propagate Steelheads. ' The Willapa hatchery will be com pleted this week. As steelheads are more numerous in Willapa river than in any other stream in this section, a special effort will be made to propagate them here, and to stock other streama form this hatchery. The propagation of steelheads has not as yet been at tempted in any Washington hatchery. Catches All the Fish. Lew and Sanford Mayhew have one of their floating traps located near the Point Francis portage; near Whatcom, Wash. It has 800-foot leads , and catches all the fish that come its way. The boys say the trap's success is as sured, and they will have it towed farther np ' the Sound, where the fall, run of fish is better. . . ' A potato phenomenon is being dis played in Colfax, Wash. The growth consists of several large vines, on which there are scores of potatoes ranging in size from a bird's egg to a man's fist. The potatoes grow entirely above, in stead of under the ground. The exports from Taooma last week inoluded 2,100 tons of coal to Honolu lu, 5,000 tons of .wheat "and barley to Antwerp, and 4,000,000 feet of lumber to Honolulu. The imports were 8,000 tons of tea, silk and curios. The Sunday Law, ' The cases at Fairhaven, Wash.. against Loux and Beck for violating the Sunday law have been stricken from the docket, the evidence being deemed insufficient to conviot. Bor- genson Bros., who run a bar in connec tion with a hotel, were tried and ac quitted. - Dynamiters at Work. It is retported that dvnamitera are at work again on the Wallowa river, below the bridge, and that salmon are being . slaughtered in a very reckless manner. BRADSTREET'S REVIEW. Distributive Trade Is Still of an En. eouraglng Volume Bradstreets says: Distributive trade, While smaller at some markets, is still of encouraging volume, industry is ac tive, railway earnings heavy, prices still tend upward and bank clearings increase, while failures lessen. Fall festivals and other celebrations at sev eral cities have had an appreciable effect upon retail trade, and proved a stimulating factor in wholesale lines. Industrial activity Is widespread, and strikes are fewer and less costly than in most years. Though lessened by holidays, bank clearings, swelled partly by heavy October disbursements and partly by general business expanding, tend to enlarge as the season advances. Business failures are apparently, at a minimum, and liabilities are certain ly less costly than for many years past. Prices as a whole manifest aggressive strength. Farm products are especial ly prominent in this direction, the South's greatest staple, cotton, owing to short crop, advancing, and, owing to active speculation leading in extent of gain with an advance of nearly a cent for the week, of nearly 2 cents as compared with a year ago . and of quite 2 cents as compared with the low water price touched in the season of 1898-9. Iron and steel holdall of their old strength. , Wheat (including flour) shipments fot the week aggregate. 5,183,889 bushels, against 8,872,455 bushels last week, 5,497,273 bushels in the corresponding week of 1898, 4,823,461 bushels in 1897, 4,050,772 in 1896, and 2,244,828 bushels in . 1895. Since July 1, this season, the exports of wheat aggregate 55,699,413 bushels, against 52,498,121 bushels last year, and 60,980,412 bush els in 1897-8. . r . - PACIFIC COAST TRADE. Portland Market. . Wheat Walla Walla, 6869o; Val ley, 69 60c; Bluestem, 6162o pei bushel. , ' Flour Best grades, $3.25; graham, $2.65; superfine, $2.15 per barrel. . Oats Choice white, 8586o; choice gray, 88 84o per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $15 16 .60; brewing, $18.5019.00 per ton. ;- Millstuffs Bran, $17 per ton; mid dlings, $22; shorts, $18; ohop, $16 pel ton. Hay Timothy, $9 11; clover, $7 8; Oregon wild hay, $6 per ton. Butter Fancy creamery, 4550o; seconds, 4042o; dairy, 8085o; store, 2VlQ. Eggs 2122jo per dozen. -'.:" Cheese Oregon full cream, 18o; Young America, 14o; new cheese 10c per pound. .. - Poultry Chickens, mixed, $3.00 4.00 per dozen; hens, $4.00; springs, $2.008.50; geese, $6.007 for old; $4. 50 6. 60 for young; ducks, $4.50 5.00 per dozen; turkeys, live, 12)6 14o per pound. . " Potatoes 6060o per sack; sweets, 2 2 Jio per pound. Vegetables Beets, $1; turnips, 90o; per sack; garlic, 7o per pound; cauli flower, 75o per dozen; parsnips, $1; beans, 66o per pound; celery, 70 75o per dozen; cucumbers, 50c per box; peas,- 84o per pound;-tomatoes, 25o per box; green . corn, 12 15o per dozen. - - Hops 7 10c; 1897 crop, 66o. Wool Valley, 1213o per pound; Eastern Oregon, 8 13c; mohair, 27 80o per pound. Mutton Gross, best sheep, wethers and ewes, S)4c; dressed mutton, 6 7o per pound; lambs, 7 Ko per pound. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $5.00; light and feeders, $4.50; dressed, $6.00 7.00 per' 100 pounds. . Beef Gross, top steers, $3.504.00; cows, $3. 50 4.00; dressed beef, 67o per pound. Veal Large, 67o; small, 8 8Ko per pound. - - ; Seattle Market. Onions, new, $1.25 1.50 per sack, Potatoes, new, 75c$l. , Beets, per sack, $1.10. Turnips, per sack, 75o. Carrots, per sack, 90o. ' Parsnips, per sack, 90c.. Cauliflower, 75o per dozen. Cabbage, native and California, $1 1.25 per 100 pounds. Peaches, 6580o. Apples, $1.25 1.60 per box, . Pears, $1.00 1.25 per box. ' Prunes, 60operbox. r Watermelons, $1.50. . Cantaloupes, 6075o. -' Butter Creamery, 27o per pound; dairy, 1722o; ranch, 12jt17o pel pound. Eggs 2728o. Cheese Native, 18 14o. Poultry 14o; dressed, 15 o. Hay Puget Sound timothy, $8 11; choice Eastern Washington timothy, $1415. Corn Whole, $23.00; cracked, $23; feed meal, $23. Barley Rolled or ground, per ton, $21; whole, $22. .. . Flour Patent, "per barrel," $3.60; blended straights, $3.25; California, $3. 25; buckwheat flour, $3.50; gra ham, per barrel, $2.90; whole wheat flour, $8.00; rye flour, $3.75. . Millstuffs Bran, per ton, $15.00; shorts, per ton, $16.00. - Feed Chopped feed, $20.60 per ton; middlings, per ton, $22; oil cake meal, per ton, $35.00. " San Francisco Market. Wool Spring Nevada, 1214o pei pound; Eastern Oregon, 12 15c; Val ley, 1719o; Northern, 810o. ... Hops 1899 . crop, 912o per iionnd. - .- Onions Yellow, 7685o per sack. Butter-rJTancy creamery 2728c; do seconds, 24 26c; fancy dairy, 22 24c; do seconds, 19 2 lo per pound. Eggs Store, 2126o; fancy ranch, 8638o. . Millstuffs Middlings, $17.60 19.60; nran, $16 17. Hay Wheat $79.00; wheat and oat $7.008.60; best barley $5.00 7.00; alfalfa, $5.00 7.00 per ton; straw, 20 85o per bale. Potatoes Early Rose, 4050o; Ore gon Burbanks, $1.25 1.50; river Bur banks, . 45 70c; Salinas Burbanks, 90c$1.10 per sack. . Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valencia, $2. 768.25; Mexican limes, $4.00 6.00; California lemons 75o$1.60; do choice $1.75 2.00 per box. Tropical Fruits Bananas, $1.60 2.60 'per bunch; pineapples, nom inal!, Persian dates. 66jj0 per pound. Followed lilted I ftoctofs Advice Mrs. O. W. Palmer, of Jonesvllle. Vt., said! "Two years ago 1 was afflloted with stomach and bowel trouble. My ease passled the doc tors. I subsisted only on the lightest kind of diet. My stomach would not retain solid food. The pain In my stomach and bowels was so Intense that I oannot describe It. I continued to grow worse. I lost 4s pounds, my nerves were com pletely shatter ed, and I was very weak. Dr. O. W. Jacobs, of Richmond, advised me to take Ur.Wll Hams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I began to use the pills, and the first effect was the restoration of my appetite, and the quieting of my shattered nervous system. I be- f an to regain my lost strength, and n one month after commencing to take the pills I was able to do my housework. 1 have gained 80 pounds and to-day am la good health." ... From the Fret Preu, Burlington, VI. Dr. William' Pink Pills ler Pile People are nser sold by ths down of hwiarsd, bet always In packages. At all druggists, sr direct from (he Or. Wllllama Medicine Co.. 8chenactady, N.Y.. B0 cants par box. i Doiaa SZ.BV. - V Not Always. Bertha "It's a curious expression, 'She went in bathing.' Why is it not enough to say, 'She went bathing?' " Bobby "Sure enough. When a girl goes bathing she doesn't usually go in." Boston Transcript. , : - i i Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth Ins; Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. At Tacoma tinsmiths and men skilled in regular tin an sheet iron work are hard to get and are getting $2.50 a day. At Dawson City eggs cost 50 cents a dozen. ; . The number of mining firms using coal-cutting machines in 1898 . in the United States was 86 per cent greater than in 1897, and the gain in Pennsyl vania was about 50 per cent. - ; Men buried in an avalanche of snow hear distinctly every word uttered by those who are seeking for them, while their most strenuous shouts fail to pen etrate even a few feet of snow. . The distance from the farthest point of polar discovery to the pole itself is 460 miles. . : ; ' - - The . animal that lays the greatest number of eggs at a time is the - white ant of tropical countries, which, ac cording to a high authority, produces 86,400 each day during the season. ilyses made recently t by the agri cultural department in Germany showed that of 557 samples of fertiliz ers, 198 were adulterated, and of the samples of bran 74.1 per cent were adulterated. ST II 13 will be promptly paid to any one furnishing us evidence on which we can secure conviction of any substitutor or dealer who attempts to palm off inferior imitations when Cascarets Candy Cathartic are tailed for. ; Be on the lookout for imitations and counterfeits )f Cascarets, and don't you ; ever buy preparations that are made and sometimes pushed by unscrupulous dealers whose intention is to mislead the buyer and infringe on our trade mark and trade-name. As soon as some one tries to sell you something else when you ask forjCascarets, look out for him 1 Get all the details and confidentially write us on the subject at once. -. .: THIS IS THE TABLET CASCARBT8 re absolutely harmless, t purely reeeUMs eompoani. Ho mercurial or ether mineral pill-poison ia Cascarets. Cascarets promptly, effectively and permanently sue every disorder of the Stomach, Liver and Intestines. They not only care constipation, bnt correct any and every form ol irregularity of the bowels, including diarrhoea and dysentery. Pleasant, palatable, potent. Taste good, do good. Herer sicken, weaken or gripe. Write for booklet and free sample. Address STERLING RBHBDT CO., CHICAGO or NEW TOUT. PORTLAND DIRECTORY. Fence and Wire Works. PORTLAND WIRE A IRON WORKS; WIRE and iron iencing; office railing, etc. 834 Alder. . Machinery and Supplies. CAWSTON & CO.; ENGINES, BOILERS, MA chlnery, supplies. 48-60 FirstSt., Portland, Or. JOHN POOLE, ' Portland, Oheoow. can give you the best bargains in general machinery, engines, boilers, tanks, pumps, plows, belts and windmills. The new steel IXL windmill, sold by him, is un equalled. SURE CURE FOR PILES rrOHINu Tpiles prudaoe motiturs andoanse itching; This form, well a J . Piles a Btops .lmrt m about your case. DR.BOSANKO, Philada.,Pa, t3 I us JMJ III 3 CURE llfifS WHFRE All fISF FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. TJse in time, poia Dy arupffiHts. ire cured b7pr.Bosanko'4 Pile Remedy , VLil ftcbinff and bleeding. AbBoros tumors. ftOoi, j ??k. A War-Time Mistake. Ia a Missouri court recently a rather novel case came up for decision. Dur ing the. civil war a certain Northera soldler went into the service, leaving a young wife at home. In due time the news reached him that his bride had died and when the war ended he did not return to his old home, but settled out West. He married again, and with his second wife accumulated a large amount of property in Uratt county. Not long ago he learned that his first wife had not died, but, supposing him to have been killed, had married an other man. This man died, leaving her a widow. When the Pratt county man learned these facts he brought suit for divorce, and the woman in the EaBt heard of it and went out and fought the case, asserting a claim to part of the Pratt county man's property. However, after the lawyers had made a great fight before him, the judge granted the divorce and left the Pratt county man free to marry" the woman who has been living with him for many years as his wife. N. Y. Tribune. -Conscripts in Cologne produced symptoms of heart disease by , taking pills recommended ' for that purpose by local doctors. Several of the physi cians have been arrested. There is more Catarrh in this section of the oountry thaa all other diseases put together, aud until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pro. nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man ufactured by F. J. Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Ad dress, F. J. CHKNEY 4 CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75o. Hall's Family Fills are the best. ' ." Millions. ' A small boy was one day asked by a clergyman if he knew what was meant by energy and enterprise. . "No, sir, I don't think I do." The clerygman said: . r "Well, I will tell yotr; my boy. One of the richest men in the world came here without a shirt on his back, and now he has millions. " "Millions I" replied the boy. ' 'How many does he put on at a time?" Spare Moments. While in Washington women are in disfavor as government employes, they are in creasing in number in the Brit ish civil service.. ?- Jonas W. Thompson, of Pine Plains, N. Y., found a black snake milking one of his heifers. He struck . the rep tile with a stick, and it attacked him, sinking its fangs in his leg. Thompson finally . killed the snake, but it is thought that his leg will have to be amputated. :'.. ', ...... . The city council of Akron, O., re cently passed an ordinance requiring the union plumbers' label to be affixed on all city work. Telegraphic communication will be established between the Scottish is lands of Muck, Egg, Canna and Bum. They are all to be connected with the mainland and with the Isle of Skye. ; So ereat has been the improvement of the storage batteries of late that, ac-1 cording to an English engineer, a car . now requires 500 pounds of cells that two years ago needed 1,600 pounds. , ! andBESlUilLIL ,00Jeet DRILLING 2060 ft. MACHINES UM LOOMS ft KYMAN, TFI W. OHIO. Rupture treated scien tiflcal ly and con fi den tl al ly. Cirmpoolmci C, H. W000ARD CO.. 108 Second St. Portland. rARTERSDNK Its good enough for Uncle Sam . and its good enough for you. OR.GUNN'STIPILLS ONE FOR A DOSE, Cure Sick Hesdsche and Dyspepsia, Remote Pimples and Purify the Blood, Aid Ingestion andPreTent Biliousness. Do not Gripe orSicken. Tooonrince you, we will mall nam pie free, or full hox for 3So. DR. BOSANKO I CO., Philnda., e cana. Bold by Druggist- ANNUAL SALES. 5.000.000 BOXES. X. "!1I5V - ' - I The Youth's Companion Issued Every Week. $1.75 a Year. FjTAMOUS soldiers and Ua tailors, statesmen, scholars, travellers, hunters, and the most gifted writers of stories will enrich the pages of The Companion during 1900. Send your address on a postal card, and we will mail you our Illustrated . Announcement Number, giving a full Pros pectus of articles and au thors already engaged for the 1900 Volume. THE YOUTH'p COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. Danish lighthouses are supplied with oil to pump on ' the waves during a storm. . '" - 4 ' SHAKE INTO YOUR BHORS Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting, nerv ous feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for Ingrowing Nails, sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. We have over 30.000 testimonials. Try it today. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. - By mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package FREE. - Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Eoy, N. Y. . - , . Coffee tobloids or lozenges are com ing -into use in Brazil. One of them dropped into a cup of boiling water produces excellent coffee in three min utes. -; ! ,.- ... The Compania General of . Manila, the largest cigar making concern in the world, employs 10,000 hands, and turns out every year 80,000,000 cigars, 40, 000,000 cigarettes and nearly 8,000 tons of cut tobacco. ' Hereafter bells that can be heard a distance of 500 feet must be attached to all private scavenger wagons in Chi cago, and these bells must be rung con tinuously while the wagons are in serv ice, which may be between sunset and sunrise. ' - ' ' " : - The authorities in Algeria gave $40, 000 toward fighting the grasshoppers. In one section 8,200 camels were em ployed to carry the material for burn ing over the place where eggs had been deposited. - In the ship bulding and engineering trades of Belfast," Ireland, 270 out of 8,000 members of the union are em ployed; in the linen trades, 60 out of 1,012; building trades, 43 out of 2,168; furnishing and - wool-working, trades, 20 out of 880; printing trades, 48 out of 058; miscellaneous, 86 out of 1,864. CANDY CATHARTIC RELIEF FOR WOMAN That tired, languid feeling, the pains in the back and tbe chronic headache will disappear quickly if you take :--- - Hoore's Revealed Remedy It is an ideal medicine for women, easy and pleasant to take. 1.00 per bottle at your drug gist EE. HARTIL'B BOOK. lief for Women" Aentyrw. In plain, sealed enTelope. Write vue7 ior urn hook. containing rarcicu Urs ead TesttmonUOs of DH. MA RILL'S French Female Pills. Praised by thousands of satisfied ladles aa safe, alwan reliable and without an equal. flv on top In Blue, WblteandRed. Take no other, fteiiob Drug Co., 861 883 Pearl Bt,, Mew York Cltj. niiiunTBii sin uu-iriirain m.rai iw rMnnsi MACHINE RY, all kinds ...TATUNI a BOWEN... f te 35 First Street PORTLAND, Oft, Now ,Is the time to subscribe for the volume for iooo to take advantage of the special offer.below: . CEND $1.75 at once with this slip or mention this paper, and we will send you THE COMPANION FREE for the remaining weeks of 1899, and then for the 52 weeks of the year 1900. The Companion .;. Calendar for 1900, given also to all New Subscribers, lithographed in twelve colors,- Is the most beautiful one ' fn the long series of exquisite Companion Calendars. ' ' . O 303 In the United States 890,000 cubio feet of pine is used annually in making matohes. v - ... FITS Permanently Cored. Ko fltsornerTOusnes after first diiv's uka of Tr. KIIha'r ftrAMt aerve sutorer. uena for rMKK mx.QO trim bottle and treatise. DH. B. B. JOSIS, LML.SM Arch street, Philadelphia. Pa. The National Association of : Master Bakers has placed itself on record .in the most emphatic manner in favor of pure food legislation and the regulation of bakers in the interest of perfect cleanliness and sanitation. I know that my life was saved by Piso'a Cure for Consumption. John A. Milter, Au Sable, Michigan, April 21, 18SKS. - Areola, 111., with a population of less than 8,000, leads the world in the broom-corn industry. The machine shops of the Northern Pacifio railroad are compelled to run half a day overtime every other , night in some departments in order to catch up. All the engines of the railroad company are in service. There are 850,000 men in the world who gain a livelihood chiefly by fish ing, making an annual catch of $225 worth of fish for each man. ' The fish eries of the United States supply 800, 00Q pounds annually, and those of. Europe 1,800,000 puonds. At Tacoma while in some 'lines the supply of skilled labor is equal to the demand, there are .others in which em ployers complain of lack of help and could employ more men if the right kind offered. Men employed on scrap ers and graders on the streets are paid $1.75 a- day, while men : in positions requiring somewhat harder work get $2 a day. Skilled artisans, such as car penters for finishing . work, get from . $2.25 to $3 a day, Machinists' wages run from $2.25 to $3.50,. depending largely upon the ability of the man and the nature of the work. . v .. JOc : 25c. 50c. DRUGGISTS IS CURE Y0URSELFI Uiar 41 tnm e.....u discharges, lnfisnintatlons. frrUettent -or ulceration! t t MrUiart. ol ttvoou mem branea. illiu aorjtsriAta P nil Asia mnA ItheEMS OhemichCo. or poisonous. I .an sy urncsTUta, or sent In plain wrapper, l .00, or s bottlss, S2.T5. Circular .ent nn request. vr .Apia... pr.UKlQ. Of YOUNG MEN! For Gonorrhoea and Gleet ret Pallet's Okay Spedflo. It b the ONLY medicine which will cure each and Tery ease. MO CASK known it hat erer failed to cure, no matter how serious or of how Ion? standing. Results from its use will astonish you. - It It absolutely saia prerenta stricture, and can be taken without inconre aience and detention from business. PRICE, $3.00. Fa sale by all reliable dnifrirlsts, or sent prepaid by expreaa plainly wrapped, on receipt of price, by ' PABST CHKUICAL OO,, Ghloaffo, Hk Circular mailed on request. ir CLAIMANTS FORnTRICI AM Write to NATHAN rcNblUN I p IICKFURU. Washington. 0. C. they will re. I I ceive aulck replies. B. 5th K. H. Vols. Staff 20th Corps. Prosecuting; claims since 1878. M. P. N. C. MO. -'. WHUN writing to adTertlsers pleas mention this ej.r, . . M Oa.mul M v. 4)