j t lUbere Ba ns .- Ilaby Dress at a Baby Price Made in sbls Sizes from jji 1 to 5 yeass ; jlllS& : of Pink and yfeaffijA. Blue Percale 'faiisSjs'6 Trimmed ' JeJ with feather Stitched braid Price 49c. j 10 day special on ladies spring and summer, dress igLods. This will include all the latest novelty in woret 7 ed and cotton fabrics. We wish to call special attention X' to this sale '-and cordially invite yo ; to call and inspect i, quality and prices. Remember the place. US! o .. FAMILY CRESTS. Strange Symbols Adopted by Fam ilies in Tills Country and Their S'8rificance, ! 'A Philadelphia family of Huguenot descent preserve a curious story of one of their ancestors. During-the persecu tion of the French Huguenots, 12 of the leading citizens of a disaffected town were forced into a small brick house in the suburbs, the openings of -which were securely walled up, and the pris oners were left to starve. '? s After three -weeks a body of Hugue-; not soldiers captured the town, and the -walls of this prison -were torn down: Inside they found 11 dead bodies and one living man. . " ''".'." ,"" . ". . " : When asked how he had survived, he showed a small hole in the foundation of the building, near which, he lay. Every day a hen had crept into this hole and. there laid an .egg. The eggs, and the air thus admitted, had kept him alive,.. His descendants have taken for a crest a brooding hen. ; Another family in the same city have adopted for their symbol the figure of a cat holding a rabbit in its mouth. One of their ancestors, a widow living in a cave on the banks of the Delaware with other early settlers of Philadelphia, was j reduced to starvation by a long, hard winter. She knelt and prayed for food for her children, and soon after her eat brought in a rabbit, which it had killed. Another American" family have taken the india-rubber tree as their crest, they being the descendants of the man who was eminent among the men who have made its sap one of the most useful servants of mankind. Henry M. Stan ley is said to have adopted a map of Af rica as his crest. . ,"-"., There can be no objection to the use by any family of a sign, .' or symbol, which recalls some striking instance of Divine mercy to their ancestors, or some great achievement by one of their ancestors for the benefit of their fellow men; but for an American family whose progenitors have been simply worthy . traders or mechanics, to borrow or steal the crests of old, noble European (houses is not only. an ethical offense it is an inexcusable blunder. Youth's .Companion. : y '-.'J ''If ; ' . i- i Progressive Javin, . '..'. I . Japan, not to be behind European states- in civilization, is going to send out an- arctic expedition. The reason : given is that, if Japan is ever to com pete with England on the seas, it must develop in the Japanese the spiritof ad venture and" discovery which has made the English powerful. The only places left to be discovered are the north and south poles. .. ' : -f: - Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powdet Awarded- Gold Medal Midwinter Fair. San Francisco- Greet Buyers BINDERS, MOWERS, ,. AND HAY RAKES FOR SALE :BYy:.:: . S. L. KLINE Catching? Salmon in Scotland. . To form an approximate estimate of the sums disbursed by the. renters it salmon fishings is a difficult matter, but, leaving out the money paid for salmon, fishing incliids.tl in a spooling rent, the money paid for salmon fishing, together with the incidental expenses incurred, may be put down at 80,000, j not one penny of which would Scotland ; see if there were no salmon fishing. I1 have arrivnii at this sum in a rounda bout sort of way, but believe it is under the mail;.' Thus, when I first began to fish on my own account in the early 60's, I could rent a month on a fairly good stretch of .water for, from 40 to 60, the services of a gillie being usual ly included in theent.. For that outlay I used to average as nearly, as possible, a fish for every sovereign; my worst month, which cost; 45, was 16 fish; my best 86 for 35, and both of them were on the Dee, About 1867 the rents began to rise and fish were costing me quite five shillings each, which speedily went to five pounds a head, until, from 1870 up to the present, angling rents have increased by leaps and bounds, forcing me to retire for as anglers became more plentiful good angling . became scarcer, and nowadays it may be reck oned that fish cost the catcher quite 10 each. Chambers' Journal. . - - " She Couldn't Get Him. . 'Ethel (showing her engagement ring) Don't yon admire his taste? Maud Y-e-s, so far as jewelry is con cerned.i Cincinnati Enquirer. WILL BUILD WARSHIPS NEXT. Marvelous Development of Ship building; by. the Japanese "' ... Government. Latest reports" to the state depart ment tell of a marvelous development of ship buncfing in Japan. United States Consul Harriss,. at- Nagasaki, says.tbat there has just been delivered there T the largest steamship -ever launched outside of American and Eu ropean waters. ; She is the - Hitachi Maru, biilt by the Mitsu Bishi - com pany, at Nagasaki and her displace ment is 11,660 tons. She is classed by Lloyd as a 100 A-l. , Her sister ship will be buili si ; SUSS ' '. ; ;T&ef 8 wjjS. alg opened at Nagasaki a new granite dock 371 feet long, and besides & complete and powerful plant the ship building" company has laid its yards for- ves sels up to 500 feet long, which can also be docked there.' The' company em ploys 2,000 men. ' ' " ' Wanted. -; A thorough, reliable and energetic woman,, to nil a permanent position with wholesale house. Address "Whole sale," care of the Times, Corvallis Or B Lovely Picture 8! of Queen Louise . A fac-simle in colors of the fa mous painting by Gustay Richteri! will.be ffiven to each nurcbaser of y! a -. . shoes during the iiext'30 days No advertising . appears upon this uicture, which is a veritable wori f silt Tcatvnoit he jtur. chased $w 3s ibaii e dollar. ; 'Tie edition 5s limited.. . Sold exclusively at KLINE'S The White House, -Corvallis. Oregon. The conscripts belonging to this year's contingent are now rejoining theirrespectiye regiments, and Paris has lately been afforded the rather pic turesque spectacle ;oi the departure of xhe bleus, as the young soldiers are pop ularly " termed. - Squads of young bel lows in charge of a. corporal or a ser geant were to be met wi'th at every jura' and corner. As they marched through the streets they presented anything but a military appearance, for jhey were all of them still intheir civilian clothes, and the infinite varieties of cos tume made up a very motley picture. Most of them carried a little hand lug gage, made up in the main of provisions given them by friends to cheer them on their route. Not a few had screwed up their courage for .the, ordeal , that awaited them by copious libations, as Jhe result of .which they exhibited a merriment that was .noisy if, .a little forced. At the railway stations which were- specially guarded for the occa sion by small detachments of soldiers, the animation was great, since the num ber of conscripts contributed by Paris was nearly 20,000,, and most of them were seen off by their friends. The. total number of conscripts this year showed a reduction of nearly 15,- 00O on that of last year.. This notice able, drop has caused some uneasiness in France,, and efforts were being .made to account for it in as satisfactory a way as possible The - fundamental cause of the diminution was doubtless due to the stationary state of the popu lation, but it is also a fact that there has been a special cause, this year. The medical examination of the conscripts has beet far more severe on this occa-. sion than , for. .several years past. In 1894 Gen Mercier " alarmed at" the dwindling of the annual contingent, or dered the military medical boards the conseils de revision, as they are termed to' pass men who, though they would not be fit to make active soldiers, might yet be utilized for duties that do not involve actual fighting. i Their, pres ence in the ranks would thus set free a number , of men capable of going to the front, but Whose occupation would -make them noncomba tan ts in the event 0$ wjr.5 Theje, feajsjacj plaints that some of tie men passed as the result of Gen. Mereier's instructions suffered th their health in consequence Of their incorporation. M. De Frej--cinet,. in response to. public opinion, decided to return to the old system, and the military doctors have, there fore, had to show . themselves much stricter. - The resulting deficit that has to' be faced is, however, a serious mat ter, especially as there is little hope that it will disappear in the future.'. Paris Cor. Pall Mall Gazette. . ,JiOT,s WAVE.. PHILOSOPHY.,-..??. When all tiie sky seems blazing down and s-:r.h:ne curls the bricks And General Humidity puts In his biggest licks, I welcome to my eyrie with a moist and dripping palm - A placid old philosopher who runs a little farm,' . - -- Who says imagination helps a deal in keep ' ing cool, And who to comfort other men makes this his simple rule: -To talk of piping, .biting days, and drifting winter storm -Whene'er the weather pipes it up and gets too thunderin' warm.. They're better far than fizz or smash or . juleps, sure s you're born, The honest little narratives of Frigid Weather John. - y For though the sizzling summer time may boil and steam and hiss. Who'd ever, ever think of it while listening to this? "I never see'd a winter have a darnder, - sharper aiage Than in the year of sixty-one, the year that I drove stage. I never had so hard a job attendin' to my . biz For everything 'twas frizzable that year you bet was friz. At last I done a caper that I hadn't done for years, I got a -little careless and I friz up both , my ears. The roads was awful drifted and I trod ten miles cf snow And all the time that thund'rin' wind did cothin, sah; -but blow. Them ears cf mine was froze so hard, stuck out so blocmin' straight I thought the wind would snap 'em off, it blew at such a rate. - .... And when at -last I hauled up home, the missus bust in tears And hollered: 'John, ch massy me, you're - going to lose your ears.' But I why, land o' goodness, I was cooler'n ' "r I be now." And ho passed his read bandanna up across his steaming brow "I jest got cut my hatchet, and chopped two cakes of ice And held 'em on my friz-up ears 'twas Granny Jones' advice. I didn't dare go in the house, but set there . in the shed A-holdin' them two junks of ice to either . side my head. The chunks weighed fifty pounds apiece . - that doctorin' didn't cost. And so I got 'em big enough to take out all the frost. Ay wife at -last came out to see what made " -me .keep so stiil ... - -And here 1 was, sab, sound asleep and Bnonn' lit to kill. - - "She jgot -me in and gave me tea and helped me inter bed "With that ere ice a-frozen tight and solid to my head. 'Twas sort of curl's, I 'confess, but Btill I slept complete, , .... - A crystal palace on my head and soap stones on my feet. It wasn't what you really call a calm and .. restful night. - -, . But when the ice peeled off next day them - ears came out all right.' -, They're better far than fizz or smash or -! . juleps, sure's you're born; : ... - These honest little narratives from Frigid Weather John. -Lewiston (Me.) Journal. f Lottie's Blue Eyes THE harrowing conviction was forc ing itself upon Miss Sophia's mind that her brother, liev. Harmon Pen dleton, at the mature age of 44, had actually fallen in love. This fact was in itself an oifense to Miss" Sophia, but it was "not ..all;- for the minister had committed the supreme folly of losing his heart to a chit of a girl, and a most objectionable young person altogether in Miss Sophia's eyes. . ' .'"v0Tr, if ae had only fallen in love with Mary." mused Sophia, '"She is a most estimable young woman. But that doll-faee-d, vain, frivolous Lottie" .and Miss Sophia groaned. "A man of his age and a minister of the Gospel to lose kis wits over n pink and white complex ion and vellow hair! Oh, it is too bad. If .. I only knew of some way to disen chant him." , . . - . '.;. r - Just then two girls and a young man passed along the street. ; One of the girls was tall, dark-haired and stately; the other was pink-cheeked arid yellow haired,. Her hands were full of roses and ; her laughing eyes were uplifted .in the face of the young man by her side. ...... , v.;. ;" , Miss Sophia snorted with disgust. "Flirting,, as. usual,! the shameless piece!? she ejaculated. "A nice min i ster's wif e she would make ! Harmon's an idiot!" ; V " - The:n Miss Sophia suddenly awoke to the fact that the hired girl had been left much too Jong at her own devices, and rose hastily to her feet. ; In so do ing, she tripped over a stool and gave her ankle a severe wrench. A little later Bev. Harmon Pendleton returned home and found Miss. Sophia with her foot on a stool and her ankle swathed in bandages. "Why, Sophia, what has happened?" asked the minister. ;., . ; -'' "I've sprained my ankle," replied Miss Sophia, with . grim, disgust. "I can't so much as put my foot on the floor." , , , '-: - . "Wbewv this is indeed; bad!" mur mured Kev. Harmon. , "And it is not all," added Miss So phia. "Martha has just had word that her mother is very ill and to come home immediately. What to do J can't imag ine." . - - --;r.--h;.vi-: :.; "Why, get another girl.". , . :" -- VSince when has it become so easy to get help in Westonville at a moment's notice?" ejaculated Miss Sophia, with supreme scorn. . - . : . . : -? "I met Miss . Armiger down : the street," said the minister, with sudden, inspiration. "She intends stopping on her way home. , Perhaps she can think of a way out of , the difficulty." , "I don't doubt it; Mary Armiger i a at g,ie ung woman," gay Miss Sophia, with empnasis.. "7"i!--. "Yes, she is, indeed." readily assented the tninister. , "So uterly unlike her sister Lottie," supplemented Miss Sophia. - . "Yes, they are quite unlike, certain ly," said the minister, quietly. . i "Did.' you meet Lottie, also?" asked Miss Sophia, .fnrtiveiy .watching '. her; brother's fac. , "She passed with Char He Saunders, molting eyes at him as What an audacious flirt that ."P.h,. I.have not seen Lottie," replied the-nrinister, and then he added: "Here comes Miss Armiger now." - He passed into the hall, returning in a few miuytes with Mary Armiger, "WThy, Miss Sophia, I am so sorry to hear of your accident," she said. She had soft'dark eyes and a low, sweet voice.- .- . "I was just telling Sophia, that per haps you may be able to help her in her present awkward predicament," said the minister. "Martha's mother is ill, and she is going home this after noon." "Why, that is too bad," said Mary Arminger. "How long will Martha be gone?" "A week at least," replied Miss So phia. , . "How would it do for me to come' and keep house for you?" asked Mary, after a few moments' thought. "Fa ther and mother are going away to morrow for about two weeks. There's the Widow Mason's daughter, Sarah, who would, I am sure, be glad to come and do the rough work." "You would be doing me a kind ness I should not soon forget," re plied Miss Sophia, with surprising eagerness. In fact she was really delighted with the plan.. What an opportunity it would afford to bring Mary Armiger's ster ling qualities under the observation of the minister! He was fully cognizant of her usefulness in the church, her good work among the poor and suffer ing of the parish; her domestic virtues could now be demonstrated to him. Miss Sophia looked at her brother. He .was gazing gratefully and : appre ciatively at Mary Armiger. "No one in trouble ever appeals to you in vain Miss Mary," he said. "But this is really something of an imposi tion." "Not at all. I shall be very glad in deed to come. Only,'.' with a slight hes itation, "I am afraid I should be obliged to bring Lottie, as there will be no one at home." . ' ; '.'... . Miss.. Sophia's brow darkened; the minister's "face flushed slightly. "By all means bring Miss Lottie,'-' he; said, as Miss Sophia remained silent. ' Lifting her eyes, one evening aweek later, Miss Sophia saw upon the porch quite distinctly. for the moon was shin ing. brightly, Mary Armiger and Char lie Saunders. She stiffened in her chair. Mary and Charlie being together it fol lowed that Lottie and the,' minister were bearing each other company.. There rose before Miss Sophia's mind's eye a distracting vision of Lottie, lovely in her white gown, with pink roses in her yellow hair.. The next moment, however, all thought of Lottie, engaged in luring the minister to return to his former folly, was driven from Miss So phia's mind, for Charlie Saunders had placed his arm about Mary's waist and kissed her upon the lips. , Miss Sophia gasped in astonishment and horror. Could she have seen aright? Mary Armiger, the model of all that is best in womanhood, permitting an in nocent boy to kiss her unrebuked! As Miss Sophia sat bewildered the couple "moved toward her. "Why, Miss Sophia, you are all in the dark; I'll light the lamp," said Mary,' as she stepped through the low window into the room, followed by Charley. , Miss Sophia sat in grim silence until Mary had lighted the lamp. She fixed her eyes sternly upon Mary. Certainly she had never seen the elder Miss Armi ger look quite so pretty before. There was a pink flush in her cheeks and her dark eyes were soft and bright. "Mary Armiger, did I really see that young man kissing you a few moments ago or did my eyes deceive me?" asked Miss Sophia; with uncompromising ab ruptness. " - Mary blushed, while Charlie, to Miss Sophia's intense indignation, began to laugh. "I I am afraid that you did, Miss Sophia," faltered Mary. ."You see, I had just promised to marry him." "What!" gasped Miss Sophia. "That worthless young scamp, who does noth ing but flirt with your sister." "Now Miss Sophia, that's too bad!" cried Charlie. "Lottie and I never thought of ueh a thing. - She knows that I ve been in love witn Mary lor ever so long ' . ;. i .;; , Before Miss Sophia had time to col lect her scattered wits sufficiently to make a reply the minister and Lottie entered the room. Lottie's cheeks were pinker than the roses she wore in her hair, and the minister" eyes were ra diant. - - :, ; .- . ; - For a moment Miss Sophia's eyes lin gered first upon, the girl and then upon her brother, and she made a quick movement to rise from her chair. The minister came to her assistance. "I wish to go to my room," she said, laying her hand upon her brother's arm, but keeping her face studiously avert ed from him and the other occupants of the parlor. "I suppose you will permit me to re main until you are married to that doll," she said, t.s;-;,.IISUi.;,, . . "Why, Sophia, surely you are not thinking of deserting me now that I shall need you more than ever?" ex claimed the minister! "You see if I were going to marry a woman like Mary Armiger, now" and a suspicion of a smile crossed his lips, but was quickly suppressed "I should not require any one to keep house for me. But it's be ing Lottie makes it .quite a different matter. .. : , .... . . . For a moment or two Miss Sophia said notliing. ."',"' "Humph!" she at length replied.' "I'll think about remaining." Chicago Times-Herald. . - : To Make an Ic Poultice. - An ice poultice, is iu-de by mixing cracked Ice with, sawdust, putting the mixture into a' .flannel bag, and wrap ping this in oiled silk or thin India rub ber cloth, i It is sometimes, used to re duce, the temperature in children r in cases of fever when the head-is hot, but its application requires great care. Ladies' Home Journal. ,- ' - i -- S UK A VEYARD FOR PETS p. ' Where Aristocratic Dogs and Cats . Are to Be Buried. The New Cemetery to Be Located In Maryland, Across : the Line from the District of . Columbia.. t The deaths of many valuable pets of fashionable mn and women of Wash ington's inner circles have suggested to some enterprising mind the idea of establishing a dog and cat graveird. It in intended, also, to allow parrots and monkeys to be interred in this cem etery, and, in fact, animals of any kind7 if they are pets of fashionable people who have money enough to spend on this new fad. A petition has been sent to the dis trict commissioners requesting permis sion to conduct such an enterprise. However, this could not be granted, as Ihe commissioners decided that such a cemetery could not.be established in the District of Columbia. This did not daunt the orignatcrs of the scheme, however. 'Ihey at once decided to vn jusL beyand the district line and start the business in Maryland. ; The plan is to obtain about a quar ter cf an acre on the prettiest site pos sible, atd make a beautiful little park out of the place. The grounds will have an attendant, and will be kept in splen did order. Money will not be spared to make the cemetery attractive, and only the dog& of the rieh can afford to rest in this exclusive and fashionable little graveyard. The owners of Doggie and -Kitty, and Polly and Jaeko, as the ease may be, will have to put up their money in order to plant their animals in this particular spot of ground, as the space ,will be limited, and only a few hundred , graves will be madel These will be costly."- The poor bootblack, however, with a "yaller dog,'" will have to let the garbage man cart .his pet away, or sneak over to a .vacan t -lot on .ay-.dft.rk night ansl."jut sway' hfe faithful com panion. - ".'. , '. v nen Admiral uewey. a dog tioD died , ini Kew York the admiral telegraphed to the hospital where the. collie was and ordered that he be given a good burial. The -best that the hospital authorities could do, however, was to. send the re mains of the dog over to New Jersey to be interred in a vacant lot.. Mr. Perry ' Heath's little Cuban poodle-shared a like fate last week. Several days ago, when an old cat, one of the pets of the i white- house, died, one of the servants dug a little grave in the backyard by a rose bush, and "Tommy" was laid, to rest.. It was all right for "Tommy," for he could not have been in a more aristo cratic or beautiful place, but as one lovely woman who loves her dog more than her bonnets, said:, "It was right hard on Dewey's dog not to be buried in the white house yard also." The.plan of the dog cemetery is not al together a sew one, but rather an Eng lish adoption. There is in London just such an enterprise. It is situated near Kyde Park and is about 150 feet square. Dr. Cecile French, the well-known canine authority, says that when he was in London last summer he visited the institution for the purpose of ascertain ing just what it was. He says: "It is a beautiful spot, with large, old weeping willows and hedges. It is surrounded by a wall composed of boxwood, which is so thick and dense that it is impossi ble to see what is going on inside. After much difficulty and persuasion, I was permitted to enter and investigate. There are numerous miniature walks, so narrow that only one person can walk in them. There are many little graves about a foot ' and half long. They are kept in ;perfect order, and most of them have little headstones and some of the people hae gone so far as to erect monuments over their dead pets." ' ' .'. l nave nere a iew epitapns wmcu x copied from some of the gravestones," said Dr. French, to a "Post reporter, "and if you wish you may' copy them." . Here are a few chosen from abouta I hundred which the doctor had copied in his notebook: ' ; To our dear Kibbs, ' . Tin fnno 11 '93: died February 25. "97. - After life's "fitf ui fever," she sleeps well. "Betty," And when at length my own life's work is I - o'er . i I hODe to find her waiting as of yore. Eager, expectant, glad to meet me at the door. '' '. To Rover.' -A faithful companion, more loving and ' trustworthy, more constant than man. Sir H. Sebon-Gordon, Bart. ; The time will surely come when the Washington dog and cat graveyard will be so attractive that pet animals will fade away and die in the hope of being interred in tuch a congenial and beau tiful spot. Washington Post, 'gm 'f-ssemmsss: f Exaltation of the HohenaoIIerns. Germany leaves the direction of her foreign affairs to the emperor': and trusts that the sovereign will do the best he can, choose the most able coun selors he can find, and that he will be prompt as well as prudent. -Since all he does for the nation he does also for himself, for his own -greatness and glory, for the splendor of his family, and for the future of his children and posterity, all his interests depend upon and are included in the success of Ger man policy and the welfare of Germany. The house; of Hohenzollera never caR be separated from, the fortunes of the nation. ; Therefore, . the nation . may safely confide its fortunes to the house of Hohenzoliern j atd even now, When public opinion has evidently taken quite a different view of things from that of t heeAiieror, or at least from that which he seems to hold, no public organ would propose, nor would the reichstag itself xvish. to alter the German constitution with resrard to this particular point. Prof.. Delbruckj in NorthiAmerican Ke-'