Image provided by: Oregon City Public Library; Oregon City, OR
About Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1895)
Highest of all in Leavening v m. c WHAT A FROG'S CROAK DID. A Peculiar Incident That Led to tba In veotlon of the Telephone. It 1h not common kuowlodgo, except to those familiar with eloctrical aud telephone hixtory, thut the first telephone was oonatrnuted iu Buciuo, Wis., una that the inventor, Dr. & D. Cnnhmuu is now a resident of Chicago. Bis ofllcea are in the Stock Exchange building. Here the veiiorttble inventor, who built the first telegraph lines in this part of the "fur west,", pursues his businoss with more alertness in affairs than the average young man. In a corner of the room is a large, worn piece of muslin, on which is painted iu thin color a representation of a telegraph line stretching away in the distance, connected with a crude instru ment set on two logs, near which a frog is sitting by a stream. This old relic represents the telegraph line of "good cedar posts" which Dr. Cushman con straoted west from Racine for the Erie and Michigan Telegraph company in 1851, and the experimental lightning arrester which led to his discovery. It is a reminder of the days when Dr, Cushman was associated with Professor . Morse in the piouoordays of telegraphy. On his desk is the first telephone trans mitter, constructed in 1851, 25 years be fore the Bell patents were taken out It is a small, square box, with a speaking orifice and containing a mechanism on the same prinoiple as that of the modern transmitter. In 1851 Dr. Cushman undertook the construction of a lightning arrester, his object being to take the lightning that struck the wire and ran it into the ground, the instrument being so con structed that it would not interfere with the light current used in telegraphing. This instrument was placed out on the prairie on two logs, and in order to know when it had operated a triple magnet, with a sheet of thin iron at the poles, similar in construction to a modern "receiver," was placed in the corner of the box. In case the lightning passed through the instrument the elec tro magnet would pull this strip of iron down into the range of a permunont magnet; which would retain it until the instrument was inspected. A similar device was placed in the tiasemout of the building at Raoine uud .connected with the other end of the liue. One day while a thunderstorm was com ing up and Dr. Cushman was watching the instrument the oroakiug of frogs was heard 13 miles away. This is the 'explanation of how the old painting witlv the crude instrument and the croaking frog is identified with the dis covery of the telephone. Dr. Cushman is the inventor of the fire alarm system in use in Chicago. His patent office reports, he says, "would weigh a ton" and contain a great num ber of his electrical patents. Chioago News THE UNHAPPY CABMAN. On of the Gotham Fraternity Telia a Tale of Woe, I "A cabman's life ain't all beer and skittles, "said on np town Jehu the oth er day. "Nobody ever thinks of giviu poor cubby a tip, and lots of 'em seem to take a sort of pride iu never payin a cent moro than the legal fare. A man don't haggle over 1 Scouts in a store, but he will fuss over that rate enrd till he's black in the face for fear he'll give me too much. After that they'll walk off and stick out their chests as though the; had doue a good action. They calls it bein strong minded, I s'pose, and strict ly just and all that sort o' blarney mean, I colls it. More than once I've driven a well dressed man down town and had him jump out and go into one o' them big office buildings. "'Wait,' ses ho. 'I'll boout in a min ute.' "Well, say I If I'd waited till lid come out I'd be there yet. All them buildings has two or three entrances, and he goes in one and slips out o' the other. "Why a man should take a cab down town when he's hard up beats me. I 'pose he can't fool the cable eur ont of nickel, but he can do me out of a dol lar. Home of 'em will get out of a cab in some mysterious way when they gots to where they want to go. Von drive on to the address they've told you, likely 10 or 19 blocks farther on, and find your cab empty. How they do it is one too much for me. It makes lots of noise get tin ont of a cab when it's ruovki, but they do it Women don't ofteu beat a man out of his fare, but they're pretty bad about payin 'em. I'd rather take my chances any day on blnffln a man out of moro'n his fare than a woman. Yon can't rattle a woman half as easy and site's twice as obstiuate. "About the only time we get a cineh ia in winter when there's lots o' slush around. There ain't any talk then about drivin to the station house and askin the sergeant at the desk what's the fare from Twenty-third to Fifty-eighth street Take it all round, a cabman's life is a dog's life, and yet there's just as much competition as in anything else." New York Tribune. Bating With Finger. The Romans and Greeks ate with their fingers, and one writer of the former nation gives a conical story of a glutton of his day who, when he went to a feast, always wore gloves, that he might have the first chance at the meat before it was cool enough for the other guests to touch it with their flugera. Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Art In lea Cream. A positive cult has been reached in the service of ice cream. The caterers stop at no apparent obstacle in turning out appropriate dosigns. So cleverly is everything counterfeited in the frozen sweet that it is often a wise man who knows when he is eating his ice. A bag of rice for a wedding purty, the grains falling out with defying perfection, prompted recently a guest's refusal of his plate, and a confidence to bis amused neighbor that "he was willing to throw rice, but not to eat it raw. " A young bacholor who hud boasted of the skill of a certain caterer iu turning out different designs iu cream empha sized his assertion one evening lust win ter by promising a little supper to a email group of friends at which the ice should completely deceive them. In due time he gave it When the guests reach ed the table, a plute of Blue Points on the half shell, properly resting on a bed of crushed ice, with a bit of lemou at the side, was at each cover. No sus picion was aroused that they were other than they seemed till, beginning to eat, the company found that the oysters in deed were real, but the beautiful shells and the apparently succulent lemon were only frozen creams. A point was scored for the host, who declared himself satisfied, and a chafing dish was set before him for the prepara tion of mushrooms sautes. At the mo ment when they were ready to be served, a trifling accident occurred in the ex tinguishing of the lamp, and the serv ant was told to take the dish to the side board for service, where plutes with small squares of toast were iu readi ness. These plutes were handed around in a moment piled with mushrooms, plump and appetizing, thut every guest would have sworn wore prepared before his eyes. Bnt they were not, as was soon discovered. They were chocolate cream molded in marvelous imitation of the brown buttons and resting on genuine toast, the chafing dish of course having been a mere bliud. New York Times. Trolley and Bones. The remarkable extent to which elec- txioity bus alreudy supplanted the old fashioned modos of locomotion in the cities of the United States is revealed in a table of recent statistics published by The Street Railway Journal. Of the 976 American roads enumerated there are 10,003 miles of electric track, only 1,914 miles of horse railroad and 033 miles of cable liue. These figures show how al most completely the trolley has routed the horse iu the past three years, so to define the trolley's real period of con quest. In 1890 there were 2,851 miles of street lines, about three-fourths of which were operated by horses. However, in all, the street cor lines have never $ employed over 100,000 horses. The dropping of these equine servants from the roads of the principal cities of the Union uud the cessation of the yearly purchase of Btock can scarce ly therefore huve been the chief feature iu the reported great recent decrease iu horse values. The farmers and horse breeders of the country are said to have tost about $43-1,000,000 iu such values in three years' time. The fact is that the supply of horses in America has increas ed per capita to the population of the United States, uside from all questions of rise or full . in demand. The States possess today nearly as many horses as all Europe outside of Russia. In Janu ary, 1892, the farms and ranches of the Union held 15,600,000 horses, vulued at 1,000,000,000. Iu January, 1895, there were, it is asserted, 15,893,318 horses, worth only $576,730,580. Philadelphia Record. . Lifting the Dree. A recent writer from Paris says, among many other things, that "Amer icans are 'spotted' by their very conser vative or overmodest manner in which they lift their dresses at the back to es- oape the dirt If it is fair, a well dress ed Frenchwoman allows her gown to iweep along the streets, which are de lightfully clean, but if rainy she lifts it on one side nearly to the knees, showing a silk petticoat that perfectly harmonizes with her costume, fine, silken hose and well fitting shoes, aud I fully agree with the critics that there is nothing conservative about this. " The writer goes on to say: "I notice in the shops tome changeable effects in narrow strip ed hose, but have seen only black when viewing the uplifted skirts. The tan and russet shoes and hose are not as much in evidence as they were in London. The use of half hose for boys and girls up to 8 years for the latter and 10 for the former is universal. ' Knit Uoods Review. it A Minister's Query. Rev. Hugh Johnston, D. D writes from Washington to Zion'a Herald that the "woman question" entered largely Into the discussions that the preachers' meeting in that city has been having on the constitutions of the M. E. church. He asks: Since there is no sex in saint hood, in intellect or in Christian work, why should woman's absence from the "governing body" of the church be so marked when her presence everywhere else is so essential? When in our prayer meetings we need to use Sydney Smith's stress of emphasis, "O that men would praise the Lord, " and when . In the world's great Arid of acttoa. Ia the blTouae of life. Too will And the Christian soldier Bepreeanled by kit wife. WHAT DO THtV uO wiin ifT Hie Myatery of the Constant Clilneaa Dfl. maud For Ginarng. Passing through the wholesale district Hie other day u , reporter stopped in at aim of the large houses to ask about prices. When ginseng was reached iu Elio list, tho dealer said: "What the Chin wo use ginseng for is to the musses one of the mysteries of the ago, but that liiey gobble up every ounce of tho herb thut the kuown world sup plies is nevertheless u fact. Because the most thorough inquiry has fuiled to bring about a complete unfolding of the secret is not regarded by the average American as suffielout reason for refus ing from $3 to $5 per pound, on the ivernge, which tho Celestial offers for the root Some of the largest firms in China muko a specialty of hnndling the American export of ginseng aud coin money at it Somo of our shrewdest traders have coaxed for the secret, and bave offered money for it, but the gray mutter at the other end of the China man's cue doesn't seem to see it that woy. "The American ginseng is growing scarcer yearly. Tho cultivated root has not the wonderful power which fixes the value of the wild article at least it does not niunifest itself to the same de gree. This iuet renders tho cultivation of ginseng rather unprofitable. It might be planted aud ullovod to grow well for years and years and then be salable at good figures, bnt not otherwise. The older the plant the more pronounced the wonderful properties of the root In view of the fuct that it is growing scarcer, unless the demand diminishes, the price of ginseng must go materially higher within the next few years. "We encounter some funny experi ences in buying tho root. The diggers are often the poorest people, and far from enlightened. Well, the root is bard to get, and when it is thoroughly dried the weight shrinks like a nickel's worth of soap after a hard day's washing, so the digger resorts to all sorts of deceptions to fudge on ounce or two in a pound and reap more of the precious dimes and dollars. For instance, we havo frequent ly gotten in root which was well dried, but suspiciously heavy. Upon investiga tion we found that many of the pieces were loaded with lead, . thus almost doubling the weight of the whole lot This was done with a great deal of cun ning and iugonnity. When the root was green, it was split, and lead melted and poured or driven in in sings. The root was then allowed to dry, and in the process tho seams entirely close up, com pletely hiding the lead, which, in a case like this, was almost worth its weight in gold ' ' Nashvi lie American. The Club Question. There will be many women to in dorse Mrs. Helmut b's remarks iu the matter of inordinate club joining for wo men. In her recent visit to Boston it was mentioned to her that Mrs. Mary 1 A. Livermore was enrolled in 87 clubs, and that Mrs. Micah Dyer, Jr., belong ed to 23. This Mrs. Helmuth considered "intemperance," saying that it was about as reasonable to adopt 22 religions as to belong to 22 clubs. Mrs. Dyer, submitting to the inevitable interview, defends the position. "I should have an swered Mrs. Helmuth, if I had been able to attend tha reception, " she says,' "and should have told her that if she only knows Sorosis slie is in danger of grow ing selfish and narrow. There is no limit to the number of clubs a woman may joiu with profit, so long as she re serves time enough to look out for her borne duties." Eccentrlo Monkish Sculptors. The work of the monkish sculptors, both in wood and stone, shows a vast amount of humor. Witness the gar-, goyles of our old churches and the devils, half human, half animal, which adorn the upper galleries and form the corbels aud brackets of many cathedrals. These one can scarcely believe to have been modeled seriously as conceptions of the spirit of evil, for, if the doctrine of the personality of the devil were held faithfully, it is scarcely probable that artists would huve expended their satire upon as terrible aud vindictive a person as the arch fiend, nor wonld the monks have allowed their misereres and stalls to be decorated with burlesques of bis satauio majesty. Good Words. S.HALL FUY SWINDLERS. Bune of the meanest of these ire they who seek to trade upon and make capital nut of the reputation ol the greatest of American tonics, Hosteller's 8tomavh Bitten, by imitating Iu ou w.nl gulae. Imputable druggist, however, will nevtr foist upon you aa genuine ipurloua imitation! of or ubitltute for thin sovereign remedy for malaria, rheumatism, dvspeotla, constipation, liver complaint and iier'ouaneas. Demand, and If the dealer be honest, yon will get toe genuine article. The old physician had snt hit new awl. taut out to see a patient, -ma you take hit tem perature? ' lie asked, after several other q no tions. "Oh, no," responded the voung man with confidence, "I left It with him." AGENTS WANTED In every county In Oregon, Washington and Idaho to handle the celebrated Blick ensrierfer Typewriter, price $35, The only practical Typewriting Machine at a low price, eighty-four letters and characters, weighs (! pounds, no riboon, all latest improvements, every machine guaranteed. Only cai.lt agents wanted. Address Pal mer A Key, sole agent. Box 131, Port land, Or. MEW WAT EAST-NO DPST. Oo East from Portland, Pendleton. Walla Walla via O. R. A N. to tipokane and Great Northern Railway to Montana, Dakota. St. Paul. Minneapolis. Chicago. Omaha. Ht Louis, East and South. Rock ballast track; tine scenery: new equipment: Great North ern Palace bleepera and Diners: Family lounet Lara; jiunet-ijiorary tare, rite O. C. Donovan, General Arent. Portland. Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. A T. A., St. Paul. Minn., for printed matter and in formation about rates, routes, etc . FIT. All Fits stopped free hr nr Kllno'a tim stifa neiliirvr. flo r'ta altr tb? nral day's ue. ssarrehma rurae, Treaune trial brail Irrr to fit riM Ml Area St., PntiadVlpaia. fa. Piso's Care is the Medietas children's Coughs and Colds.) Blct, Bprague, Yi aa March 8, ISM. A THANKFUL GIRL. THE STORY OF A CISCO YOUNQ SAN FRAN LADY. A Sufferer From Childhood, and I'na ble to Perform Her Household Duties, Entirely Cured. From the Examiner, Han Frauolsco, Cai.J Miss Lottie Douell lives with her parents at 703 Natouia street, San Francisco. She is a young lady 19 years of age, and of prepossessing ap pearanoe. She is oue of many thous ands of young womon who ure blessed with many personal charms, but who are hindered from an enjoyment of them by a constitution impaired by constant disease. Ever since she was 10 years old Miss Douell has been a sufferer from a rbeumatio affection of the wrist, aud since she was 13 years of age she has been subject to various female weaknesses which bave kept her physical vitality at a very low stage. Thus, as she says, she has been a victim of disease ever since she can remember. When she was a little girl at school, she was always plaoed at a disadvantage witn ber playmates on account of ber frailty of body aud tim idity of manner. She could never join in any of the more boisterous games although she always longed to do so. But the embarrassing conditions of Miss Donell's life have all been elimi Hated within the past year, and the change is wholly due to the effective work of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. "It must be remembered," said Miss Donell in telling of the great relief that Dr. Williams' Pills had afforded her, "that at the time I began taking the pills I had been for years a con firmed invalid. My wrist was swollen out of all proportion by the chronio rheumatism that had long since settled in it The female complaints from whch I bad so long suffered had wasted my body away till I was but a mere shadow of my former self and I had really oome to think that the brightness and happiness of life was not meant for me. I had not the en ergy to perform even the most simple of my household duties, and, in a word, I was completely 'run down.' I began to take Dr. Williams' Pills while I was in this condition and be fore I had taken half a box of them I realized that they were doing me good. I began to feel lively again and to lose that lax feeling in my limbs. I felt so happy over the momentary relief that had been afforded me that I resolved to continue taking the pills. After tak ing several more boxes I was more than oonvinoed of the high merits of the pills, for I was then wholly relieved from the rheumatic pains in my wrist aud I had so far regained my vitality of body that I really believed I had never experienod the enervating effects of those wasting diseases which are so peculiar to women. It is a very great pleasure to me to be able to tell my young lady friends of the relief that has been afforded me by Dr. Williams' Pills and I will surely oontinue to recommend their use to all who are afflicted with the complaints from which I have suffered. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and rich ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sci atica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headaches, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on reoeipt of prioe, (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $3.50 they are never sold in bulk, or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Will iams' Medicine Company, Sohnectady, n. y. There is more Catarrh in this section ot the country than all other diseases put to gether, and until the last lew years was supposed to be inourable. For a great mauv vears doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly tailing to cure witu tocai treatment, pronounced it . inourable Soience has nroven catarrh to be a con siitutionai disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co. loleuo, uuio, is the oniy constitution oure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teatpoouful, It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it tails to on re. Send for eiroular and testimor.ials. Address F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, O Said by Druggists. 75o. Tav Qeawst for hraakfaat Peculiar In combination, proportion and process, Hood's Sarsapatilla possesses peculiar curative powers unknown to any othei preparation. This is why it has a re ord of cures aneijunlletl in the history of nielicine. It acts directly upon the blood and by making It pure, rich and healthy It cures disease and gives good health. Hood's Sarsaparilia Is the only true blood purifier p omlnently in the public eye todty. tl: sit for So. U-kH'e Pille u"e b'bltuel rouatlna nOOQ S THIS don. Price een is. a SURE CURE FOR PILES ttesdasT Pfa kaeiwa b anaan lit aataninttoa. aaoas tnlaMS fcehraawaaa warm. Thafcra Hliail ftili Ins) or PNtradiat Pilas yield at ta DR. BO-SAN-KO'S PILK REMEDY, wataa ar dwactlr ea parts aflWad. abmta awn, a. krs ttchaat. effectlM a pwaaatMiat car. Pnr Ksaiau a-d. fir. Ilaaaafcs, faUadaw. fa. V. P. N. U. No, 616-6. F. N. U. No. 693 aJf;.l r I to Dr. r - " ''r-iZ,. J I"""" iun$ rHl all USf rAHS. I C I I I Rest Uxada srrnap. TariM Uud, Cat I I to break nr J " '1.- ... ...... ., V. lax.M.U.' fBrr.ir - J I 4 Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts eenllj yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers aud cures habitual constipation. Svrtip of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale In 60o and II bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not nave it on band will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try iu I)o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO. 9H FRAHCI8C0, CAU towsviuE, tt. ' mi rornc. xr. At Last A PRACTICAL Type-Writing Machine... AT A LOW PRICE The Blickensderfer No. 5 PRICE...S3S.00 84 letters and characters. Weight only 6 lb Eauals anv hluh nrlwrt machine In citDacltr ana quality ot wore ana excels tnem an iu convenience. We Guarantee. Every Machine. Twelve Points Low price. Full ker-board. Writing always Iu slant, Portability, Kioellent mairtfjlder, Tyne-wbeel, Direct 'Tinting ai'd inking, Interchangeable type, Moat du able ma nine made. Leas number ol nana. Weight 6 lbs., No ribbon used. agents wautta in every county in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. THE BLICKENSDERFER MFG. CO. PORTLAND OrriCB WITH Palmer & Rev, Second and Stark Sts. DIRECTIONS for wingt CHEAM BALM. Apply a particle of the Balm well, up into the nott ili. A fter1 moment draw ttroiw breath through the none Ve three t met a day, after fiiralt preferrid,and before xrltnng. CATARRH ELY'S CBKAM BALM Opens and cleanses lbs Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflamma tion, Heals the Bores, Protects the Membrane from colds. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm Is quickly absorbed and fives relief at ouce. A partlole Is applied into each nostril, ana is agreeable. Price, 60 oents at Druggists' or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren Street, Mew York. FRAZER AXLE CREASE BEST IN THE WORLD Its wearing qualities are unsurpassed, actually outlasting two boxes of any other brand. Free from Animal Oils. OUT THE GKNIIIKK. FOR 8AEK BY OREGON AND WASHINGTON MKKCHANTSn aud Dealers generally. Walter Eaier i Co. UmllBl Tat Largest MaavaMtams af PURE, HICH CRADI C0C0A8andCH0C0LATE8 Oa this Caatiaaat, hart mdiad HIGHE8T AWARD8 frora ths gnat Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS IN EUROPE AND AXERICA. Caution: la Ttt sf the BianT Imitaaons lot the labals and vtappm aa aw itaal oar piaca of mafitifartara, Inamaly, Dareaeater. Maae. la printed oa aaek packaga. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER I CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. WEINHARD'S Thre "o e on It. Tt tt. NOW ii mm lit 1 M : GRASS SEEDS BUY IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT." TRAINED SERVANTS USE APOLI0 HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S PAIR. BSSgjtf THE BEST PREPARED SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CARLE A SONS, New York. . Engines CAS and CASOLIN NOTED FOR- SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH, ECONOMY -ANO- SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. These engines are acknowledged by expert an- rlneers to be worthy of highest commeadaUen for simpllcl 17, high-grade material and superior workmanship. They develop the full actual horse power, and ran without an Electric Spara; Battery; the system of Ignition la simple, Inex pensive and reliable. For pumping outfit for Irrigating purposes 00 better engine can be found on. the Paolflo Coast. For holstlug outfits for mines they hare net with highest approval. For intermittent power their economy la un questioned. .. MANUFACTURED BY- PALMER 1 REY TYPE FOUNDRY, PORTLAND, - ORECON 8nd for catalogue. OIIIGKEU BAisiQPsUS If you use the Pctalnm Incubattra a Brooders. Make money while others are wasting time by old processes. Catalogtelia all about H and describes every article needed for the, poultry business. HERCULES aS U UttUUMUll Ua EMQPES iriHPage Illustrated I 1 flj Catalogue wB The "ERIE IV wheel. Prettiest model. We art PaciBc Coast Agents. Bicycle cata- tofue.malled free,(iTes full description . prices. ec. , AOarrra w Aimeo. FETALUXA DICUBATOt CO.,Petalama,CaL Branch Houbb, 131 a Main St, Los Angeles DR. GUHN'S DtPBOraD UVER PUS A KILO PHYSIC. OMS.PTLIJ FOR A .DOSE. A ameauieul of tha bowols aalth, 1'uaae pills supply wl eacnaayai aaoeaaarr r tlia arauan lanka fiaae is fecuiar. -j ras, and clear th Tl mr? w NeinMre sooth.no iitiius iiinuiuii st avRUP - FOR CHILDREN TEETHING eeaaJalvadllrnass-late, Coata a awtus, The beat for stnmp and bank blast ing, laud clearing and general par pones. See that the name of the (iiaut Powder Co. la branded on the boxes, otherwise it Is not genuine. JIULiaUBICIilt,RFirnlLBirWfe WELL-KNOWN BEER (IN KEOS OR BOTTLES) Second to none TRY IT... lSomaiterwnerefrom. PORTLAND, OK. Soaatsa aSsa- CM par cure noanannaL twaimoa we Oeanpleiion bettor thaa oaaaaastoa tor aaithar trips aor sicken. To eonvuieo roe, wa wiBWUHkMnpioiraakoraiauooainriao. Bcaasvoaj. latasre, BuSaNKO HE& CO. RuladalBhav DO YOU 'JKL BAD? DOES YuUK BACK ache? Doea everv step seem a burden? Yon need MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. 80EIL LIHBEBSQJ 205 Third St, Portland