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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1900)
Health, and Comfort, too it's the beauty end ytuttf) t the lediet' form that it attracts the gentleman'! eye, and nothing .nll note to its beatit) than a nicely fitting wrapper. We neve the most nobby line o( winter wrappers In the city (ratal )OC up: Call ami see them. A chance toi I goM watch niven witli a?very dollar purchase. THE MAGNET CASH STORE Clements di Wilson. Court and Cottonwood Till ksdav, novi:miu.i: 1".. I'.wu. DAILY. WEEKLY NI SEMI-WEEKLY V 1HI- Knit OrfffonUn VublNMn,; Company 1 NHL! ION - AT- Dne up; ft I , T " Borth. Iv wail 1 rial auf-M ni-tifii III - u .11. r . mi wsarti-v M Hi pi it in IAIWi Oao ttp. yar 1 1 . . , i a lonifei . h , Btumb-rit wmLv IMHMHIMI MM ) uv Dt ' V it . 1 . Ml ". nUtt Trial lute) 11 t -i 1 tVaf I c.py AtVtri$lNt BATSA One inch. rf lata, in ek l i tuoruh , lin in. n. 11 Irak, in iiativ per enoniii ft OKI liU.V S H .f'90 I 5 : 3 ... 3 T lm Imk. ft lata, in ll.il, anil tt.atla ajt m.nic, Cat I hi.. In. h. v. Sam . v. ti I,, pa r mill p., in. .nt!. I i, r I ' aa ll. I ' . I ' 1 . l"l 1 'i "lirliti.lil I', rt ii re in. ha. In l.ail. anittt a. L I v. pa i Inch ptr minih a 91 lm la. h. til ir.t. In V. a.fcl pt m.inii t OA t,t llire. la. haa. In Va.il, ,WM Itw h p., moBlh . . . . 14 Oaar lht.e Inrhtt. in Tueajav't iu. 1 1 brmi-WMkly, p.a in.a per month .... M i I in....l a war: i..an.nt. in .rni. V. v. k . . 1 aakl v cat Ua.lt. httt tnaft..., pet ln.ti.fi.... , cacti autj..ue.t lttMf taw., a--. UM.al Qtrtiitk, ten .tun pet Lisa. A-B loamioat. CIVIC PURITANISM r.x-.1uilte Stephen A. Lowell, nl l'cn dletnn, MoiitUy niiilit laetore the 0eOa irrtynt innal Club, at Oregon City, de livered a strikiuiilv ititere.tliik.- address, whit'li the Kast Dretionian (jives tn Its readeri an fuliuv. i The hrl puritan was horn neitbl r in Kiikiiumi nor At genera, bttt at Tarsus, aud lie said when tlic fur roll of htvuiau water- broke upon In- ear "I have fniixht a ifiMitl liitht. I have finished mv course, I have kept the km'1 We are wont to think of Hill I tail 11 .1- a peculiar branch of the I'rotenlant laith. anil o( the puritan a neeewarily nl Hritinh Moek, but the truth la pun- ii i hiii i o( every relifiou, ami the puritan of eve'y race, lie i the cruaatler of the ge, everywhere a ilia., neuter, usually a tighter, ainl he keapi the lailh, theoltmical. moral. rial ami political, ai he nee it. In every walk of I lie, in imnahiue ami in ntorm, be holilri hitiieielf tn the injunction 01 liif k'reat prototype, "whatsoever tbiaM are true, wliatauwver thinu- are lionecl, whataoever thnufH are jum. whatamever IbiaKi "e pure, whatMiever thihtli are lovaly, whatwever thnniK are of pujtl repott; if there lie any virtue ami if Uiere In- any praine, think on ibei-c thinu." lie ih a inarketl man be iaute lie nan the courage tn Hand IMWi The hixheit courage in human oxporieiice in tn etpouw an unpopular eauae, but the world b.- (atUM itr heroes in the rank of Hie men who have been willinu In do it. The gibe,, it 1 1. 1 pernerutioni- ol vuntetl wrmiy have pureiiitl them living, but the laurel lulonif their Ht-puicherr. ami the chihl reu of thoee who hatetl them aiutt paeaim to their memories The puritan Hpirit uupelH men to the rank of the minority becauae it array- them at any rout on the mile ol the poor ami lowly, make them in Mtinclively advocatea of juHlot ami aqnaJ riithtaj, eauxen them to itrike al ways for the weak ami ana i nut the piwerful, to ttuilain rikjlit ami OMMMM wroiikj, ami tn live liven which, though olten marreil by intolerance, make in the final balance for rithlenui nena and a better world. The church cannot claim u monop oly of puritaumn, although im puritan ever livtil wlm dul not itoHi- ami chtirmii the vital prilicipler of the Chirrtian faith. loubtleaj many rea hoiii might be given why the church nruahii'.atioii IaiIn to IncluiJe all wh accept the teachingH of it- Koumler hilt the duel reason ai- applicable tn the non-eliiirch puritan wouhl be that thoae mental characterlatica which make a man a puritan impreic him with the aerioutueitii of thin life, ami ,mvc hiin aMKurance of the eternul 4. Title- ot Ih. hereafter, hence he hax little Ijeipathj with either aguoatic religiun or religiour agnoaticiim. There m nothing in the genum of puri tauimii which tmka a varioloitl of re ligion or countenance a tentative faith. Character, en irageoiiM certain, ag greaaive, made the early pulpit a BtMMN ami the laiety a imaitive force in civiliiatiou, ami there the puritan wan at home, liut the mdtenihg influence of our aiatarialiltic age ban louebaal the church, the viaiou of the waittuv: caiuel am the needle' eye in blotted out, ami abarehman are bailing with the world at the feet of the folded calf, while the pulpit, refloating, ti e eaay liberaliim of the pewa, it too often tilled bv a preacher who, failing to ap preciate the xaited ilignttv ot hia calling, bin kiipreme authuriu a- am baaaador of Ih. Master of all the fu ture, ha- yieldeil ho- leaderahip, and preiteiith from the wicred deak neitiier the fierce warilinga ol the prophet- nor the unchanging moral law ot llim who alone la the re- in . ! . ami the h, but rather did e- out In the lew ,t ho deign to liaten a aerie- of ornate, vapory platitudea upon a rote colored moral philosophy, weaklv bullre.-ud with augar-coale.l theology. The Cliur.di had prnacher once who neither Imwed to the worldh deinaeda of the people, nor yielded to the com mand of earthly authority. Craoatoin, next to Ailguatinc the uioat llluatrioUN of the lathera, parting with a ripieudid palriuiouy to feed the hungry and cloth the poor, abandon ing a secular proleaaion of brilliant in ..i.ii- to enter the miniatry ol Chriat, aMuuied tin- full authority with wind, liia calling clothed him, ami ruleat in spiritual matter throne and populace. waying by hi elo quence prince and proletariat, mould ing sentiment by the loftiness of In teaching, inculcating humility by the RMtkneei of hi example, he brought lu repentance flatted And turbulent AUtioeh, conlrolled it- tnol an.l held back the vengeful hand n( the angry emperor who threateneil to detrov it. tlalletl to the imperial city a- the higheat prelate of the at. he there aaaerted the utile d ignitled . an-tere authority! pMtly magnityiiik! hia iai Hon ita miniater and temporal re pre aentalive of the Killer of the univi r e and MMBMd the apiritual lliotatOrihlp alike of throne ami subject. rahaklDg follie chid in fustian and in- mbed in purplet Havonarolii," a inurtyr because as mlnlatar in the church he bravely at tacked the corrupt inn and vice ol the IttthOrltlM of the church itaell, urged from the pulpit of St. .Marks tefnrnia timi upon MM people of proud Klnrenee, and hurletl at the lawhritakers of every degree anil every station the eertaint:e- of eternal retribution , Refuaini ablu tion tn the mightieat nf the Medici be cause he had refused to restore the liberties of the I-birentine-. he maiti lalued hi coiisiatency after the death of that prince by directing a- a Ciiris tian patriot the establishment ol ni..n atitutional government, promulgating from that fanmua pulpit nriceleas principle of human right- in an age of absolutism. Daluflueaead by either the plaudit nf the maaaes of the curse til the nobles, he wa- -teaol.i-t 1 1 true to the ideals ol his sacrtsl re aaBDibility, and treely exposasl hvpn uraey ami crime, iie-eigbed against sin ami censured evil doer, ail by virtue nt the aiwer and in the great inline nf Him who sittuth on Die great white throne to judge mankind. Hut those nieth.sl, it will ! said, cannot I.. f.d lowed in these dava. No, tirobably not. Very likely the man wlm at leniitH tn exemplify the former Would promptly find another Kudoxia power till enough to drive him from ti e pulpit, ami to the desert todie: and an age and country which apparently excepts politics from the purviOU tn morality, probably would not joylully welcome a iuccessor tn the monk of l-errara. lint tin- olllv empluiaiea the truth that the church neetls a PUfiten revival, for puritanirm fears neither sacrifice nor martyrdom, but aeeapbi Isith, if necessary, for conacieuce sake Nor iwcause of barrier doe- it turn to tin- other aide. Nor because of rebuff tines it retire from the fray. "Mir," said a friend tn the die tlnejuifbed Pennsylvania jurist, Jere miah illack, a short time before hi death "Do you not notice a tendency toward greater lils-ralitv in religious mAttera?" "Yes" replietl the vener able judge "I observe the passing nf the sturdy religion of tin' father- and I observe too that tin- nice distiiictioii hetween right aud wrong which ob tained with them is pasaiug also." Thus are joined the church ami the world in the same indictment, uml I fear inv court in Christendom wouhl attain the charge. Is the hope nf the is it liut if the church, which -till it-litre of temsirul g-asl and tin of humanity, need- a n iiai-.-aiu c puritan spirit how much more command of the Almighty. Hut the end of this republic is ami yet, nor ia our Christian civilization t, find in commercialism it- garden of tiethsemaiie. We are in a period of struggle, ('loud and thick durkne have compassed tin world belore, and the (iod of nation, lor His own purposes, baa held it in it oaqftt until the sunlight pierced the gloom. It i again the war of the boats of Michael against the armlet of evil, and here again, aa in Milton's story, the Measiah will turn the scale, and righl euusiiKSs will be triumphant, hike tiie battle of (lie chimsik and the north wind on the foot-hill nf our moun tain where for a season one will pres ide other had., and then will yield until the laws nf nature determine the oer-i-N-nt current. Ibis moral contet will continue until the lawa nf (iod determine the national trend aright. make a ilnal -I linl i'l Ihn 'inevitable struggle f.o n.itcpi iidi-m e, the brain of .loltci-wi ai d the high patriotism ill the ettiitinvntal itungreM gave in the world h n-'w magnt oCarter, to which the o iire--ed ot i arlh will ever turn, and upon the truth of which civil liberty will over rest. When a cry went out from KnghthdV colonies tor the abolition of slavery, ami, as usual, wealth, conservatism and commercial interests were arr ived on the side of the masters, Wilher foree answered the call of the opprced with fortune, time and talent, and after twenty years of struggle -aw bis cause vietorlouti HO slave existing within Die realm. When the eOUmleiMO of America seemed dead, and the eve- ol a free tuition tloted to the horrors of negro servitude in the siiith"rn state, and material greed wa seeking by violence to silence the few voice raised in pro test again-l the infamy, Wendell Phillips dedicated his life to the eaue and with language of surpasing elo quence confronted the fofeet nf oppres sion on every pletform, and with Harri son and Mr. Htowe, moulded opinion ami revolutionlted public tentiment, He lived to withes not only the triumph of his eAUe at home, but the passing of both slave and crown Irom the we-tern world. These men were puritans beeante they I. lined self in the cause they labored tor, struggling forward, some times falling, hut always forward, their live a perpetual protest against in justice ami dcpuir. nt felon alike of scorn ami ridicule, called fanatics and charged with sedition, yet coniUering in tl ml baOUMe "f the truth they advocated and the unfaltering energ) nf their CtToftti The puritan It alway a fatalist, not that sort which it foraetful of the Power which is another name for fate, vet which controls it, hut rather that higher character nf fatal i' which fnl lows duty regardles- nt personal couse- qttenceti If doty leadx tn dimppnlnt- mentt sacrifice, ntferitig or death, In still follow, accepting the result a the fate insl mi intended ami used him for. Puritanism is usually arecpttd a synonoiiious with intolerance. It i m start ly that (or right must always he intolerant of wrong, progress of reset ion, hu I despair. Therefore in the moral decAdcnce now darkly settling over our civil life, the unscrupulous grasp tor wealth, the essential to business, society and poll tic, each of which seems speeding down ward toward the Ion level of BO--'lute materialism. These elements in OOt national life must be lifted to a higher plana or our institutions are sorely doomed. Commercial ism must yield to morality! the dollar mud be subordinated to duty; and the ambi tion ol our vouth must be turned to ward manhood and away from mono) The contest of justice against greed will never is- determined by political panic, because candidates ami v. tor alike are ever ready to sacrifice princi ple (or success. ami neither of the great panic- dares to antagonize interests which can make or destroy them. Only a revival of puritaniam in tin i I v walk ami conduct can cure Hit evils which effliei the body politic purl let are wo better and wo worte than the Individ' mil- who compose them. It is an era ul commercial opportunitm, in winch the glitter of the guinea seems to tlazel every eye. a condition certainly upon which neither christian nor patri ot caii place the stamp of his approval. When i stie cities pandering to vice to set lire vote- or money to pay their debttt I b ar that the spirit of Plym outh stock it hut a failing memory. When I realize that tin- total we eat, the tiotbet wa wear, the lights we burn, the hunk- QUI children stmiv, ami a hundred thing of daily need ami use, are controlled in price and output by trust and pool and aggregattd Wealth I wonder if the inalienable right ot the Individual to hwelf labor! learn and live, i drooping down to death. When 1 observe it iimlenicd that elections are controlled by cash, merit forgotten and money triumphant, I feel that our boasted government ol the people is but tin- emptiest sham. When it is admitted by holiest men that often political COOVentioOl as semble but to register the will of DOM ol state or city, that laws are enacted or defeated at histlict.ltii.il, that public franchises are peddled out for pelf, I sometime think that at the doac of the nineteenth century a second pagan age I being ushered in. When ll i patent that machine controlled as semblies throw aside men of character, patriotism ami convictions, seeking only availability, there is reason lor fear that the -pirlt ot Hamilton ami Franklin ami Adum is dead in Ameri can public life today. When the hah hath the father sternlv . observed to keel, it bolv i I. ecu, . ,i h. Inlay, when selti-hneas covets all its surr iiinilint.' and hesitates pot at the method of the securing, theie is danger that the nation, to its curse, has with the vandal In ml of utility, re-writtcu the vice of i ur great center of population, Hp- arrogant d iminance of the liquor power, tliAtorrilpti.ili of Politic-, the euiuscniaemii of the dooaloHUOi to uml ap- wltneetetl i abstract prinolpl what human (nroethall we appeal tor vol i.-f , evp! to that puritan spirit, tlnrmanl nuw, bill which hak never tailed In resiMind i I at 1 1 and tl unit b--y in etery moral crii in even age lie (ore. safelv profound eonlldener can '"' placed III the ii.ate integrity ol the mattes nl men, in the purity nl their ttpiratinnt and their loyalty to i igbi : but they are dltanttrsi. dlAheartennl nd ilisl ourageil. They see the leaders ol society, business and politics stoop tug to quest lonnble praetleN to attain the ends of selllsbiie., and realising the power of wealth and potltlort, ttW surclv but unwillingly drilling toward socialism, In the honu that the power of the state directly exerted, ma cure the evils which societt and repren n tatlve government recognixe. pear Iti approve. The present century has tin- enthronement ol tin ,,iit,,.it.l,. at iiiiiuil riafhta. -a original neither with .leuersoii su Rooteeau. but the natural ontarowth ol the lea, hitig Ol the giver ol thai Be) commandment, "Thou thai! love thy neighbor us thyself. " The problem of the coming century will be the application ol the principle in the concrete, fol there can be no true elvlltatlon while one man lives It splendid ioatiry ami another die- in terrible t.overty'. while kings rule and subject- loffer, while right i prw irate and WrOHl exultant. Hut the problem will be solved; -solved when the com pact i f tie- Maynowcf cabin i re-accepteil by a people re elothed ill the stem virtue Ol the men who signed It. The lirst 1 1 tempts to stem Die rapid currents of prosperod error will prob ably fail, as they haw iii all the age gone, but to the leaders wl ay he martyrs there i consolation lu Iht poetic sentiment 'I ruili lorcVM on Uie erToil, wroei fervtrtr tin the thronsi Vtl Hist StsHMfl rule- I In- lUtUr, Still lOBO tit.- .Itlll till If 0 el II sui. ii i, mi tv ii tun Hie abstos kesplnt wMtu HlnU e til- Hit II The Qod nf nation, tn whom a thousand year i aa a tingle day, will rarely ilnd Inttruments to aoeomplitll hi millennial plan-, ii not in our race then another when wa, a failure, have putted from the -tag" And Hit uplifting agency then, at In Hie past, will be the puritan spirit, selfless militant, triumphant FALLING HAIR Kit 9' 1 ' cri-i-'r.r rwan n hut -. winn "Tl ft Bo',M.,. ll.-kt l i-i-i - "f ('-rt. iw. par. ,. t,.r i.:- near Tlilsti strut si topa rftlimg hnlr.cUeta IrslMS of , , . .. i,nml ilaad tnt.t wl'i atHt wti, UmuMta i'ic H ilr li : n m ,1 in , ii,,. hair gsrrw np-n n i i.waeh , . , ,. hj ..-tit. wsjtrn ail else I ' BAD COLDS , . , i, ,r. Is i I OiM i Btj rant , h inii , MKMIMtl.1t PY imp rAn ills , .ii, .i tiyns ii tin ir i ii.T.-t rule, .i mtih'a ..r.iiu.ir, trssttatnl ini" iwslt-s hoars saw kbMt It. SnSTSl tg mills erst ttjllt "It ru Uk -rtsai ssss at tttp I evr htttl I htn rtsmb had i sitrsa soil II hutsj uB. It nl WSJ le. IMli'Ttlll I.I -. Tn im StSflt Us -i....l Isit LI I at "a' I' mvlii rmsltana m.l i mlts-ial U In ttta tarti HAKCI HI INI.I . st ti. ml i 1 ' - mi AtttWrsq-, i'l s.ii ii . Hse In.,.. i. ... .lull 7 ItOtl . ., . . -We '.-r .til- no. lw,a I.iii, ..r,i"l- tlllliK-t" in. 'tin i SIS h.ir.l it.'l -I.ii for ln wu -l.. ..-l .mMthit le. MI'M'I . H IIVMAMII tuj if n.iiii o.ii.a. sasi otSil illsaisjassrsd rat , nil, .,.1,1,11. NelMn. ll- ittSMI till- Ht IM UBS. I'MMA I 1101.1 IV. II a ' . s.c, Irnii .if' niMacrtsat the ale ' rrtmi tree mi miu'I.' pYNAMIt' MBI ll - sdl Tltttl i. htst I llr-i ,,,' ,1,,,,, "l . -i... . .IN taiMMSlt in. 1. 1 1 I lisik wllli im- (er -ill wtl trHann. when I ., -..., ii i v t N WINHLK. ltillallsl, iltT Win.iuimt.iii ttrssla tsit nvnclsBH .tii.nti iii. I ... I Saiat laatpsiil hrr Seetit. I" siini. hj IM HP PIP i . i o . CI l Wk.lllllKtisi sir., a. - I" bi,,...i. tl ii -it. in ....i i" ii sarss t, ROKFel t s pharmaui IF YOU WAN I' A gini livery rig call aa u. II vou iranl i ah night or way M us kaaiaw. We'll be there. NEW LUMBER YARD. NORTHE w,. .ir,. now ready lor Inttlneet near Vnbington ,t Oolumhll Iti vor freight lost with a general aasnrlntent ol lumbar ,1 m et Irom OUI own saw mill, and can furnish anything promptly. Oouatry nrders in cur 1 1 on Ih shipped direct from our mill In carload lots at correct prices, liive us a obi I, HUNS 5Sl8Hi triiiii Kl VIN i i: tn: fn.prlctiir Depot Stahle A. C. Shaw & Co, W J SE WELL, Mgr Equal to any in the world. PILSNER BOTTLED SEER. BHKWKRYH OWN llOTI'LINti. Highly rawtmmvndetl to family trade ivert bottle tally ana van teed a To Til ROUC.II U. . ... I, A ll 1 I II. I .. -"lll 1 HK.I.kv ?' Schultz Brein Co. See our Ranges I Hardware 73 1 Sporting Goods , 73 en - -aSM) 1 of th market. c.i-t Btovel and AlrTighl Heaters, Beet line Ii Rnalern 3 Oreion W select from and pm e- that are right. I all and I examine mv stock before biiving. I We carry a full line beat cutierv on the l arge in,,-,,( p. nun tbowmn ammunition! Hptehili on atova's ami ranges. -art m MW Yoitv "A "'I all point, Etan)U Thrntiirh iisi.. . . Tst-om. ,, ,x,1,lh;:'J'Jt- M sun tini rti.n in.,. "ow r'MH SCHtDUti 1 tl' I II I' ll ... t", ,l, Kt A Mi li m "'""'"Milium 'li Ilr. ' a I is- n. .,(. nu ii.. -,t rr t laKctne... a.shinjrtonti Columbia? Railway lor Chicago. St. p, v "A City, st. .!.., OnJJJ All Points East mm Portland and pont on the Souod. Arrlv- Mi.,1.1,1 . Wpiiii(i,atu.w-' I': ll in It 1 hnraj.,tlll3i arttAiN tn ' "tsssj t'.'l'.o i ilsll) ItaMM tWstWaSSaa her lufiirmallun ri-ssMtBsritja. il''1' or admb i Una. S. B. OAUaKKHKAn .1 sf"" ' ml wan. Walk Vet wanted. vvavtkiC'mbn " Ami ytmm sisl cliara. ie, ,. rslmsas a iii nil esal ll-lie I,,,,,.. huuTS Im -t.lv.itt.-.-,,,. x.l.ira-a. f. O kTwwl ATTOtNITS t' ARTE II V liAI.KY. ATTi'RVSYI aVaa a'fl.at- aaiastan- i.. r.i :.t , Mill, ijiajagn. c i . aa t 1 1 i i i ii-i-ui. j . ,' aa.a.t.t.l 1-1 H I ML "f I 1 I 1 .mini ruiuiiuii. Ci liilirloii. nrftM Taylor, the Hardware Han 1 W I). Hansford & Co. I Tl ZliKH.U.h ATTllDVIt J Htn A li... . Ilrxl. TH08. IIKKKK.I.KV. A TTUIINKY iT UtJ limn 111 .lauirlallnil HIOCI 721 .M.i in Street. 72 77f ii4tUUiUuai..iiiUtiiiliiUiiiiii..n.Uiiii.utUi1aiaiU.iv You want to yet the best When you buy Harness l make on 1) hand towed harnott ami guerantoe even piece of leather. Call ami gel my pricea P. A. HARVEY, Court Bt.t op. Golden Rule Hotel ICE I K. I'. la'VU. A TTtlRNHY AT Lit. t 'oiari n, AMI-KICAN PLAN. $.,.110 per l)u and lipvaru-. avxWI Also Wholesale Ag ut lor BCHUTZ HILWAI Kl l BEER iaa buttles, barrels, or catia. a HI. D I I nest lltitel I he 'allk North west Kverv 'i.ii einergeiicv has found -tmiig hands and eoiiragenu brains rwady, and they have la-eat the hands and brains inspired by puritan pur pose. When in the tilth century (loth .mil Vended 'lMI' done their cruel work. and that mighty power which had ruled the world for more than six hun dred years lay dying in its splendid ruins, the senate in oxile, society le moral ixt-tl uml the world without government, M, the Greet, sternly confident in the power of the church tn save, Miiiiiiiiined drifting humanity to submiaisiuii to the only autburity which cnllld nrt-.ervt. civil iiat inn ..m. lahllshed the punt ilic ate.and sale, i the I decaying empire (nun universal anarchy When tin- marvellous organi.alioti which lax i founded bad become a I corrupt oligarchy, int.ax icatml with I preeeeteea glory, and the trorM was tgun ovi-rwhelintd with the debris of voluplious chaos, that massses de-' pressed and liope iadiu.', I. other nailed 1 ilia fuiuou these upon the door of 1 the church at Wittenberg, and Ignatius! Uryola, upon the star-ht hill above the capital of trance, organized his wonderful Society ol .leans; uml both! together, whatever the later orrora of the lollowurs of either, saved from utter wreck the church and civiliaut- i linn. Wiieu the geiiiii of Hid i v idiin I iin , bona of the reform.it ' was stirring the corn-lit of human thought toward. constitutional government, and states-1 men were blindly gropiaig for some avenue ot escaoe Irom the thraldmn of throne- Cromwell's rough courage iiruahid aside the liarriers and demon strated tliat a nation could live with-j out a king. When the American colonies, ini mical with the spirit of liberty, were seek in, common ground on which to a. a 53P 1 THE PORTLAND PORT UANH, OHEUON. feeeil Retee to Heaetet , .;,,., peupie viasiticiK f0,ti4n,i. tieBiiuuaner. 'r,,,trUt 'oM,.,caaii-elera. t. c. MOWIiH.S I Manager HEAD-ACHE la only one form of the suffering result ing from a diseauetl OOaBdltiOW of tbe aensitive womanly organism. The only way to cure tiie headache is to cure the diseases which cause it. Tin- use of Ur. Pierce's favorite l're tcriptiou has been the means of curing thouaaauls of woauen of headache, back ache, female weakness and other forms of diaeatM- peculiar to women. It estab lishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heal inflammation ami ulceration aud cures bearing down pains. "I think If ia ware taut tor your ' Favorite Pra cripttura ' I would ttavtr bem in any grave," write- Ml. Kdwill H i.nrdutr of ligypl, I'ly tauuth Ca, ai.. bos 14 " I had psiii all over in. sad .a. 1 1 a tirasgiits (aeliug it acruic.1 I could tut do my hou-, work I had to ait down to wash Ih. diitnrt, rvrn lu the vear 1S97 I was so sick I did not care to live t prayed maay tttuea thai l.i.l would tkr tut- Our day I thought 1 would write lo Ui l-ierrc lu a lew day. 1 received an inawtr 1 derided to try his ssediciuc. .nd to-day I sin a well w..uiau. I Itsac ro headache im pain st all. I uacd alwav to ave hsttdachc previous, to the monthly pet iod. asd such oaiu Unit f would roll 011 tbe floor iu agony 'I lu. aoiuetlauca would occur ever. tw. weeks, an.l 1 SSDtlld be verv weak ulaerwartl 1 was Is pain all over My feel would slip troan ttodcr nic when t would try to go scroa. the rooajj. and I could not walk suv diaiauce with Ml being iu aiu. I took Hut. bottle- ol ' Favorite Prcacriptiou ' sud three of ' Golden Medical Discovery ' aud three vial, of Doctor aistrce's Pellets, and was coiupleaely cured " fir. Fierce PelieU aiiumuu Uu uvar. - z. J VBBBBB S dRf ' jLUaHf Be' Vtt! "li i ' nl 1 jtj" is! SI. M (Hit) DARVBsiUi I'rup UtfaUtt) Kurnisiied. steam rieatufl I -ar.ipcan I'lan. Bleek aud alteR from dc-p at Sample kn11.11 in Goaneetien. Rqooi Kait- Byers' Best Flour To make aTOOd bread nve " u. ... W- S. BYEKS, Prop WtBaB premium . the Ch cal W ,?.d . . Ur 'l ,U,ik fi,s! tio, ami gives excell - ,t IP' Ve! a11 - Pendleton Roller Mills 1 BVatl I If lllt i Hi H. KOPITTKE. Insurance Hire, Mfr, Aceideiil, I'lale talaas, etc. Lou ns I on City uikI ('-mniy f n;.rr v . I Real Estate Imnrovetl mid Unimneowtd Qtiy lais' Hia-k Renebea ami Wheel l-'aruas Rt J- R. DICKSON, Kast ftrepnien Balldiasi OregonShortLineRailroad T ihkhi t Kait tax to Mtmtotttv Utah, CoUindo iiiivJ all I-astem Points i.tjlnv '"""' '" 'vorlte routes, vis tlaa aaaiua. I,C. ,'"1 Mail Urn or the Kit No Chartfjc of Cars tu'ewvai"11"'1 WhlaP 'ipve'sl. "tin- Ouaal la "lalnisva witu SOC, 7C. Sl.00 :l,ef"n, s,-'- Sleepor. - t ne Now Ordinary (Tcuriat Sleepers Superb Library -Buffet Cera -Splendid Ulnar. . meale a la cum-) Free Kecllnliiar Chair Cars Comfortable Coochea and Smokera Entire 1 rain Completely Veatlbuled Korlnrtbei ualoruaailou apply to if K WAM8LKY, Agent I) K ... N. Ot,., HedltaMt Or J. K NAUKI. w, aj noMAN, Irav. I an Agt. lieu'lAgeul l Thlra St., Portland. Orogon. TAXH8 WILL BK DKLINMUKNT. tll K.roua laidyUtad to tliautllls eoiuity lor buS! OtuZt riU' "'-'vl-y aave coai. s- S ?.. declared .1,1 liniusalUv i.. 10, m MM llf.AKIJt,blirllT J A M KM A HnlldlUK 1 wi-.. LAWorruxis PHVSICiAHi. UK. V. . 1.. I i.i.K. IlKKICt ton HnvhiK- ami. mil! tins to I.' s an . i tn , i i-j Tslepsa K. W. VI VI KNT. M ll. orrii KUJ nl Kirai Nallnna! Hani OBr. lannllsl s. in 1 to I p as. t.aa 1 1 otaiTLj hi.. I'L SB '"inii ,i,nia- 114111 isapajr sat 'It-llCl I. i-C ...III,' at. n . ' ' . 1 , . 1 1,1.1 . 'i 1 , it'.s -'m i I' ,:. .ml burfsou. Ml -a St Hon Lie. i, TelesktaBi .. rtaUiW piiolle, I'l.- a. I, u.-1 Koi'.t 1 lib I'HVHH liW m 1. n.o . no.-Hurt sslaa toil slot.-. 1 . r:v. ........ ...i.arl .. 1 o e ' 1 . 1.1 .1.. 1 n . ... . ... . . a genu. I kiali. oregiio. Uli. 1 1 NN K. Ili-AKlsvLMt , I Mil. I in I lull- .ll-cM;t mUkl illaajua. tlpu, Ilnd I, oil Water and Main ion. lire 0BNT1ITS. ft. a. a ' iii".'. '.-- In Jilild liuilditai a 1. i'.k.v 1 ih b. s. orricu Ssvllia- Kant lai sdulslssWI' " ! . i.i t Tiar It! ft. A. .ti.A..... -...- lion HI.H'l .ivvrKn .0WP ABCHIiaCTS AND IIMlMtt, I a.u. lr imil.liurt Is Uv Oil sr Haauui 17, JuiM VUlKliai I,,- v M IS LUSTIbtl I L.ial.1. I -iuu.iclurBi.a""' BANKS AHD IIOUM- 'Ullhl NATItNA,a3 ' l.iisllifM -a,. I liil rut-- war- !,, W ,..,,. u,l ABMB1 aoassi. vice-l'rt .",','', 11 lit - I III" 1 . i. --- I I ...till. 'Hi 1. 1- r. IU.' a- ' . aa.k I 1 1 tirraft'ij ui":r...i mi ....-. V ai lklUKt .Ml ll UlTl'ltH'l " ..... t . lAi1kV" sf Wl 1. Adsvt. liinieetl .'i -t i. lieuij jr 1 paw .. . ktaL' fit lie-'.iW. THK l-AKMhl's.-T,! . ..I,. 1 1.111. a ..niUilUM"' ..hi 1" ..;,: 11 JasaeUi.rr?a. ero.'ii- '-LoaiBflt StTTr-a bj I. 1 1 i.iri'. W " ir . . T 1. 1 m :aII.."'.::.'SI"' ProaJh.lei iJlTT . ..'".a III . . 1 , II kMI'l.i ... 11.01 ., 1 r 1 1 1 . . aai. .1 i uaatat uisll I'dbl '1; i.ii'kTuI .1.1 pnr V.'rtl 11 1 . r nii.tLf .AMI-KIN. .'.iela')' . ! - ,1'lir..". ,. .tagtt. T, ..nl ,....ir..in' " ij,rtsi """" "". Bruu, Shorts, Fnerf, etc iii ai.sials r.llU"uev I affl -B ui- ."--aW- leal whurc toulastia tt III.