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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1892)
One Pure Baking Powder. like Telling a Secret. A story la told and it Is a true story that over seventy per cent, of all the baking powders sold contain either alum or ammonia, and many of these powders contain both. The ill effects upon the system of food raised by alum or ammo nia powders are the more dangerous because of their insidious ' character. It would be less dangerous for the people were it fatal at once, for then such food would be avoided, but their " baneful action because imperceptible at first and slow in its advances, is no less certain. - ; Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder is declared by all authorities as free from alum, ammonia or any other adul terant Its purity has never been questioned, and while it does finer and better work, it costs no more at retail than many of the adulterated powders. BEWAKI Or OIN1MKNTS FOR C.. TARKH TH AT CONTAIN MIKCIRV, Aa mercury will surely destroy the ense of mell and completely derange tbe whole eyetein when entering it through the mucous irm Such articles should never be used except on tn-esorlptione from reputable physlciaua, aa the damage they will do Is tenfold to the Rood you can poadbly derive from them. Hall'i Catarrh Cure, manufactured Ivy P. J. Cheney A Co., To leda, O., ooiilaina no mercury, and Is taken In ternally, aud acu directly upon the blood and . . - t . i. tH u.lia Catarrh Cure be tare yon gel the genuine. It la taken Internally and made in Toledo, a, by F. 1. Cheney Co. Sold by druggists; price, 7SC per Dome. On of the hardest lines of duty to a woman la the elothea line. The manufacturers of 8 tar Ping chewing tobaooo have made 8t Louis the greatest tobacco market in the world by furnishing the consumer a better tobaooo than is pro duced by other manufacturers and always making the dIuss of 8tar fulUUteen-ounce pounds. It pays to study the interests of we consumer, aa ne u - we juage ana we jT." Th Qotmbt Honss, Portland, Or., is the beat 1 a day hotel on the Pacitio Coast. Try it. Quiinby A Edwards, proprietors. Nsw Holtom Holds, Fourth and Alder streets, Portland; central; newly furnished: beat accom modaUona for the least money. Try it M. A. Dudley, Prop. Free 'bus to and from trains, etc CUT, wi uvsi 1 1. rni.ti "vi Tobicco is mass most uni versal luxury; the fragrant aroma of MASTIFF PLUG CUT starts people to pipe-smoking, even those who never used tobacco before.. J. B. Pace Tobacco Co., Richmond, Virginia. Test ttesearij of your i: jcoaT Before KuyU7f TXdl some water Is tb slev holdlnf X the end ttht aa br allows or aay- VHniM WIKIl UW. mmm . m Ktowaurttght. TberaaieiuoiUlnUMmanMI ....I...- ' k will la.lr at. .rw a.!.. 1 We warrant Tower's IMPROVED Pis Brand SlicHer to be water mht at every ! mici, and aouwiia oar dealers to make sood snySUeaeruiataulameluwrpoMt. There are two wava you eaa tall the Oenains Iinfiw tt Bntntf SBcker. J at. ft soft wooien coiiar. 4 34. Tbla Trade rArh (below.) Watch Uut lertwttitheMselaM! Sena for Catelogo. free. ' fcMOWQI. Nfr, Bates, . ''SSSI Beauty often depends on plumpness; so does comfort; so does health. If you get thin, there is something wrong, though you may feel no sign of it. Thinness itself is a sign ; sometimes ' the first sign ; sometimes not.' The way to get back plumpness is by careful living, which sometimes in cludes the use of Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil. Let us send you free a little book which throws much light on all these subjects. Scott A-Bow.s.Cbeiu, 13 Sow h jth A W.w York. V our druggist keep. Seotf Emulsion of cod-ever ail all drugciece everywhere da, li, I CURE FITS! 1 ma enrs I do not mew merely to 0tm then far Uom and than ha thorn return Again. I mean a . ndfesrictv. I bar made the d Matt of KITS, KPL LW'BYarFAIXINOfilCkNKSSalifWiidj. I warrant mf rented to on re tbe worvt oaaua. Beeaaaa atbata hmwm faiiad is no reoeua fur not now reoaMnf an. Sattvl at acta tor a treittiae and a Frae Bottle of akjr inlaliibla varaad. Cw l&ipnm and Punt Office, JUL G. BOOT Hf. C. 18S Feorl Ht N T 1 IMDIAN DEPREDATION I Pension " "i patent tNP I' HOMESfiAD I'POSTAl CLAIMS ThauIIiMlKfB" BUBKAU of CLAIMS okdss rmm disbptuw r San Fritnolsoo Examiner. , It ywa have s eulm of any deaerlptioa whatsoever asaluat the United Mtatea Movejomeot aod wish it apeedllj eradicated, adrtreaa aTOHN WtOUIKBCRK Maaacer, (XI if Hreet, H. W. WruMsvtSB, P. 0. HOW CROWS CATCH CRABS. Vfatchlnf Patleutlv for Theae Uelleate) ShellH.h for a Meal. Fislienueu In Havre de Grace at Ui mouth of ttie Susquehanna river, tf 11 amusing stories of the way crows catch crabs and prepare tlteiu for entiug. When the crows first come in the spring they visit the streams connecting bay and ponds every morning looking for crabs. They commonly arrive before eraba begin running, but the crows ex hibit great patietioe, sometimes waiting ten or fifteen days. The crows scan the streaiu from small tree tops or mounds of sand. .Others stand ou the batiks of the rivulet with beads cocked sidewise and an eye star ing at the water. When the crabs be gin running the crows dive into tbe water from any coign of vantage near by, clutch the crab, soar into the air and drop their prey with great precis ion on the stone covered beach which fringes the bay. Ky this means the crabs are reduced to pulp, and the crows, with much wing flapping and discordant cawing, voraciously bolt the meat ; " Captain Tom Carroll, of Chinco teague, says he once saw five crows teasing a crab. One of the birds caught and carried it. to a big dry sandbar. There it wan put down. The crow's cawing brought five of bis tribe. They pulled it about, turned it upon its back and fumed over it. These gym nastics were accompanied by bourse chattering and a gurgling sound, which Carroll avers was laughter. To vary tbe sport they would make believe to fly away, but dropped softly to the sand forty or fifty feet off. From that point the dusky quartet of practical jokers kept their eyes in tently fixed on the crab rolling along in the direction of the water, a hundred yards away. The crows, ' without a sound, craned their necks watching their hard shell victim Hopping labori ously through the soft; dry sand. Sud denly they broke into a wild chorus of. caws and made after the crab. One picked it up am) soared away to the beach, followed by his fellows. There he was dropped to death and the crows flew away to their roost. New York Recorder. - . The Telephone Baa Made Them Stout. The telephone is more used in Hono lulu than any other place. There are two rival companies in the island, and the rates are so cut that every soda water stand has its telephone, and the marketing is all done over the wire. Even railway trains are started by tele phone, and men we their legs as little as poHHible, now that the facilities for verbal intercourse enable them to avoid 1 to a considerable extent the inconven iences of a hot climate. An English electrical engineer who has been engaged in making a series of surveys in the island says that the in troduction of the telephone has had a somewhat ludicrous sequel. The ladies, who were wont to do their marketing with more energy than could be looked for in such a warm climate, now stay at home and send their orders by tele phone, and t he buslues men to a great extent follow suit. The consequence Is that there is a marked accession of avoirdupois among the better classes of the community, male and female. This phenomenon, which is vouched for as a fact, can be easily understood when tbe cessation of accustomed ex ercise is taken into consideration. Pittsburg Dispatch. Tbe Future of Silk. The days of the excessive costliness of silk have gone by, and the probabil ity is that in the next few year large additions will be made to the silk pro ducing area of the world. Southern California, many parts of the southern states, the West Indies, Mexico, Cen tral America, the northern part 0 South America and large districts in Africa are excellently well suited to the growth and development of the worm, as well as of the um1lerry on which ft feeds, and in not a few localities ar rangements are now being made, both In this and other countries. -by planting mulberry troves to prepare for silk cul ture. Good silk Is still costly enough, but the change in price from the time when licester imported his famous breeches to that of the present day au gurs well for a still further reduction In the future. St. Ixmis Globe-Democrat. Contented, A discontented king was told that to become happy he must find a perfectly happy man and secure his shirt to wear. He searched long, and at lout found one man who professed to be perfectly hap py. Now it only remained for the king to gain possession of the magic garment, but when he made liaste to buy it at no matter what price the "perfectly happy" man replied, "Your majesty, I never had a shirt." Youth's Companion. " Mary Queen of Scots' marriage con tract with Francis II of France is to be sold by auction shortly in London. It is quaint old manuscript of nine folio pages. , THE FOXGLOVE. tn rrftAdmanima'a (nrtlen. In shining rows, The bos amrlla aweot aa It trimly ruirt The mm dial quaint the uoura telle, 'Mhl foxntorea tall wilh spotted bell; And all la dear ami all la fair Aa childhood's self had dwelling thorn, In icmnilmrnnm,a trardt-n a child I plnyed. Wilh nanxht tin bem fo muk. afiaul; I counted the apots on Iho r.otnlovo'a cheek. And knew It could tell, if It would but speak. How cunning- rairuw In the nilil Bad painted Uiein by (Hint aUiiiKlit, In pramiinamma' canleu the fonKlovee gy With everr lnd would nod and awayi Full well I knew that thny wore wwe. And watched with childhood' vairor eyes To nee them whiKiwr each to earh, And. eaten the secrets of their mwevh. la grandmamma's garden atlll 1 walk, ' And aUU the foxglove seem to talk. Their som.-1i not yet my manhood learns, But when 1 urn tliein you. u return, I wonder at Uiein atlll ill vain- But with Utun am a child again. Arlo llatea in Youth's 0oninulon. THE SANCTITY OF LOVE. The Abbe Marignan, as soldier of the church, bore his fighting title well. He was a tall, thin priest, very fanatical, of an ecstatic but upright soul. All his be liefs were fixed without ever a wavering. He thought that he penetrated the de signs, the wishes, the intentions of the creator. Everything in nature seemed to him created with an absolute and admirable logic. The "wherefore" and the "be cause" were always balanced. The dawns were made to render glad your waking, the days to ripen the harvest, the rains to water them, the evenings to prepare for sleeping, and the nights dark for sleep. The four seasons corresponded perfect ly to all the needs of agriculture; and to him the suspicion could never have come that nature has no intentions, and that all which lives- has bent itself, on the contrary, to the hard conditions of differ ent periods, of climates and of matter. Only he did bate -women; he hated them unconscionably, and he despised them by instinct. He often repeated the words of his Master, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" and he added, "One would almost say that God him self was ill pleased with that particular work of his hands." Woman was the temptress who had' ensnared the first man; she was the being which is feeble, dangerous, mysteriously troubling. And even more than her weak body he hated her loving soul. He hud often felt women's tenderness attach itself to him, and though he knew himself to be unassailable he grew ex asperated at the need of loving which quivered always in their hearts. Woman, to his mind, had only been created to tempt man and to prove him. Yon should not approach her without these precautions for defense which yon woidd take, and those fears which yon would cherish, near a trap. She was, indeed, just like a trap, with her arms extended and her lips open toward a man. He had indulgence only for nuns ren dered harmless by their vow; but he treated them harshly notwithstanding, because, ever living at the bottom of their chained np hearts, of their chast ened hearts, he perceived that eternal tenderness which constantly went out to him although he was a priest. He was conscious of it in their looks, more moist with piety than the lixiks of monks; in their ecstacies, in their trans ports of love, which angered him because it was women's love: and he was also conscious of it, of that accursed tender ness of their voices when they spoke to him, in tfleir lowered eyes, and in the meekness of their tears when he reproved them. And he shook his cassock on issuing from the doors of the convent, and he went off with long strides, as though he had fled before some danger. He had a niece who lived with her mother in a little house near by. Ho was bent on making her a sister of char ity. She was pretty, and hairbrnined, and a great tease. When the abbe sermon ized she laughed, when he was angry at her she kissed him vehemently, press ing him to her heart, whilj be would seek involuntarily to free himself from this embrace, which, notwithstanding, made him taste a certain sweet joy, awaking deep within him that sensation of fatherhood which slumbers in every man. Often he talked to her of God, of his God, walking beside her along the foot paths through the fields. She hardly listened, Snd looked at the sky, the grass, the flowers, with a joy of living which could be seen in her eyes. Sometimes she rushed forward to catch some flying creature, and, bringing it back, would cry: "Look, my uncle, how pretty it is! I should like to kiss it." And this ne cessity to "kiss flies" or lilac berries worried, irritated and revolt.! the priest, who saw even in that the ineradicable tenderness which ever springs at the hearts of women. . And now one day the sacristan's wife, who kept house for the Abba Murignan, told him very cautiously that his niece had lover. He experienced a dreadful emotion, and he stood choked with the soap all over his face, bein in the act of shaving. When he found himself able to think and speak once more he cried, "It is not true: vou are lying, Melanier But the peasant woman put her hand on her heart: "May our Lord judge me if I am lying, Monsieur le Cure. I tell yon she goes to him every evening as soon as your sister is in bed. They meet each other beside the river. Yoo have only to get there between 10 o'clock and midnight, and see for yourself." He ceased scratching his chin, and he commenced to walk the room violently, as he alwavs did in his hours of gravest thought. When he tried to begin his shaving again be cut himself three times from nose to ear. A 11 day long he remained silent, swollen with anger and rage. To his priestly zeal against the mighty power of lovo was added the moral indignation of a father, "of a teacher, of a keeper of souls, who has been deceived,-robbed, played with by a child. He had that egotistical chok ing sensation such as parents feel when their daughter announces that she has chosen a husband without them and in spite of their advice. - After his dinner he tried to read a lit tle, but he ould not bring himself so far, and he grew angrier and angrier. When it struck 10 he took his cane, a formi dable oaken clnb which he always carried when he bad to go out at night to visit the sick, and he smilingly regarded the enormous cndgel, holding it in bis solid countryman's fist and cutting threaten ing circles with it in the air. Then sud denly he raised it, and grinding bis. teeth he brottght it down upoti a chair, the buck of which, split in two, fell heavily to the ground. ' Ho opened his door to goout, but stop ped opon tho threshold, surprised by such a splendor of moonlight as yon seldom Scv. And since he wits endowed with an exalted spirit such a spirit as must have belonged to those dreamy poets, tho fathers of tho church ho felt hint self suddenly distracted, moved by the grand and serene beauty of tho pale faced night. In his little gurdun. quite bathed with tho soft brilliance, his fruit trees, all arow, were outlining in shadow npon the walk, their slender limbs of wood source clothed by verdure, while the giant honeysuckle climbing on the house wall exhaled delicious, sugared breaths, and seemed to cause to hover through the warm, clear night a perfumed sonl. He began to breutlu deep, drinking the air as drnnknrds drink their win, and he walked slowly, being ravished, astounded and almost oblivious of his niece. ' As soon as he came into the open coun try ho stopped to contemplate the whole pliiin, so inundated by this caressing radiance, so drowned in the tender and languishing charm of the serene nights. At every iustant the frogs threw into space their short metallic notes, and the distant nightingales mingled with the seduction of the moonlight that fitful music of theirs which brings no thoughts but dreams, that light and vibrant melody of theirs which is composed of kisses. The ablie continued his course, his courage failing, he knew not why, Ho felt, as it were, enfeebled, and suddenly exhausted; he had a great desire to sit down, to pause here, to praise God in all his works. Down there, following the bends of the little river, wound a great line of poplars. On and about the banks, wrapping all the tortuous watercourse with a kind of light, transparent wadding, hung suspended a fine mist, a white vapor which the moon rays crossed and silvered, and caused to gleam. The priest panned, yet again penetrat ed to the bottom of his soul by a strong and growing emotion. And a donbt, a vague uneasiness, seized on him; he perceived that one of those questions which he sometimes put to himself was now being born. Why had God done this? Since the night is destined for sleep, for uncon sciousness, for repose, for forgetf nlness of everything, why, then, make it more charming than the day, sweeter than tho dawns and tho sunsets? And this slow seductive star, more poetical than the sun, and so discreet that it seems de signed to light up things too delicate, too mysterious, for the great luminary why' was it come to brighten all the shades? Why did not the cleverest of all song sters go to rest like the others Ana why did he set himself to singing in the vaguely troubling dark? Why this half veil over the world? Why these quiverings of the heart, this emotion of the soul, this languor of the body? Why this display of seductions which mankind never sties, being asleep i n bed? For whom was intended this sublime spectacle, this flood of poetry poured from heaven to earth? And the abbe did not understand at all. But now, see, down there along the edge of tho field appeared two shadows walking side by side under the arc bed roof of the trees all soaked in glittering mist. The man was tho taller and had his arm about his mistress' neck, and from timo to time he kissed her on the fore head. They animated suddenly the life less landscape which enveloped them like a divine frame made expressly for this. They seemed, these two, like one being, the being for whom was dostined this calm and silent night; and they came up toward the priest like a living answer, tho answer vouchsafed by his m;ist'r to his qiiestioa. He stood stock still, quite overwhelm ed and with a beating heart And he thought to see here some Bible story Uivuts w ' ' y like the loves of Ruth and Boaz, the 00- ... 1 .1 111'. T 1 l complishment of the will of the Lord in nue of those great scenes talked of in the holy books. Through his head began to bum the versicles of the Song of Songs, the ar dent cries, tho calls of the body, all the passionate poetry of that poem which burns with tenderness and love. And he said to himself, "God perhaps has made such nights as this to clothe with the ideal the loves of men." He withdrew before this couple, who went ever arm in arm. For all that it was really his niece; but now be asked himself if he was not about to disobey God. And does not God indeed permit love, since he surrounds it visibly with splendor such as this? And he fled in amaze, almost ashamed, as if he had penetrated into a temple where he had not the right to go. Guy De Manpasant. . The tCiaperor aa a Huslneea Manager. When I think of the emperor as the business manager of a practical polit ical corporation I am constantly In clined to look for the key to his success and popularity In Germany by quoting the laconic opinion of hliu expressed by an American officer who was presented to him for the first time at tbe Baltic maneuvers in 1890. Me came away from his audience flushed with excitement, and I expected a vigorous report from the fact that this officer had been drawing his Impressions of Germany principally from Paris and St. Peters burg. "What do you think of him nowf I said. "Immense; be has a genuine Yankee bead on him." It only need be added that this com pliment was the highest in the court vo cabulary of my fellow countryman. Poultney Blgelow iu Century. A Sermon That Slopped a florae. Tlie late Archbishop Tait. of Canter bury, once made an effective use of it sermon. Driving down Holloway hill be was confronted by a runaway horse, with a heavy dray, making straight for his carriage. He threw a sermon in it face. The horse was so bewildered by the fluttering leaves that It swerved and paused, the driver regained control, the sermon was picked up, and the bishop proceeded on his way. "1 don't know," he suld to his companion, the present Archbishop of York, "whether my sermon did any good to the congre gation, but it was of considerable serv ice to myself. "San Francisco Argo naut, in,- .- Tin Boya 60 Armed. It is bn, a short time ago that a f fo fessorinoMOf tho leading colleges ff&an Francisco slapped the face of a rich bank er who had published a long and bitter attack upou hi (the professor's) venera ble father, a divine of great eminent and fame. Th professor was at once shot down, although ho was entirely un armed, and had informed his adversary of the fact. Yet tho jury declared that it was a ease of jnstiliuble homicide, and the accused left the court without a stain ou his character. . . Even the children, aping their elders, carry pistols and knives with the utmost nonchalance, and a few weeks ngo, wheu the principal tr one of the public schools had occasion to admluister some much needed corporal punishment to a lad of U, the young rasyal drew a huge re volver on U10 head master, and the serv ices of tho chief of police had to lie called in for tho purpose of disarming him. At the request of the terrified princi pal tho police subjected all the pupils present to a personal search and examina tion, with the result that thirty-five re volvers of all sixes, from the "Colt navy revolver" to the "i!a caliber popgun," be sides a doaen knives of murderous ap pearance, were seised and confiscated. St. Louis Post Dispatch. TAKKlf KOll A CRANK. A aeint'flendlah delight often srenia to noeaeaa people of strong nerves In sneering at thiiae with weak ouea. The irritability of the uervowa hyp ochondrlao Is ridiculed al natural ill temper. The veiy genuine and dtatrewlng aymptoma from whli h he eitflvra are made light of. "He" or'helaaeraukl" la the ebeerlul sort 01 ayni pathy with which the nervous Invalid meela Imm the unfeeling and the thoaghtleae. At the aame lime noeoniplalntla mora denned and real, none hae a more eaally explainable origin when It Is chronic. Imperfevt dlgeaUoa and aaalmlla lion are always eeiHimpaiiled by nerveaadeblltty and anxiety. Build up thepoweraof aaalmlla tlon and dlgeaUoa with Hoatetter's Stomaea Hitters, and uervoua symptoms, ali'k nesdnebea and a generally feeble condition of the ayateu are remedied Remember that fearful ravages aie produced by la grlppeainong weakly, nervous people. Modeller's Stomach 111. tern eurea It, and prevents malaria, rheuaiatlaui and kidney oonv plalut. The else of your oiftring does not depend apon what yea take out of your pocket, but what you leave In It. A WEAK BACK KEPT STRONG, R. H. Gilliam, Hlxburg, Appomattox county, Va , says: . Allcock's FbASTtas have enabled mi to work and labor for the last two years, I hare been troubled with a pain across my kid lie v and a weakness of the spina, which at times rendrrv d ma almost help'eaa. The tirst relief 1 obtained was by wearing two Aluws's PbASTsas, and I lias about two every month, and 1 have no pain or aim oulty . I consider them the best piasters in use. I, tor one, cannot uo without mem u Kienae the liberie 1 take." at the convict re marked when he escaped from tbe Stale prl-on. Coiiihs and H oa sags gas, The Irritation which Induces coughing is immediately re lieved by " .Brown' Hroiukial Jrvchu." Bold only 111 ooxce. - Good looks go a long way, but Anally toe paint wears on and there you are.. Tst Osbmea for breakfast. Cleared away all the troubles and ailments that make woman's life a burden to her. She's relieved, cured, and restored, with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion. Periodical pains, weak back, bearing-down sensations, nervous prostration, all "female complaints," are cured by it. It improves di gestion, enriches, the blood, dispels alica Anfl nninn. hrinmt refriifthina , - - - , ... . sleep, and restores health and I r .. strength. It's a powerful general, as well as uterine, tonio and nervine, imparting vigor and strength to the entire sys tem. Contains no alcohol to inebri ate; no syrup or sugar to derange digestion 5 a legitimate medicine not a beverage. - If you're a tired, nervous, or suf fering woman, then the "Favorite Prescription " is the only medicine I that's guaranteed, in every case, to (bring you help. If it doesn't give you sausiacuon, you uav juui money back. Catarrh ELY'S wt "I iiwrm nun , a "V Nti'i nil li When applied into tbe nostril 111 be absorbed, effectually rue. w rWFEVER! cleanalng the head of catarrhal vl ma, caus ing healthy tecr tlona ltaltayelnfiam matlon, protects the membrane from ad ditional eolda, com pletely hfa la the eurea and restore sense of of taste and smeu, HAY-FXVER Tryth. Cure A particle la applied In each nostril, and Is agreeable. PrlcejO cents atdniKglata' or by mall. ELY HKOTHKKH, M Warren Street, New Yi rk. Syrup .tt- r cC.- Boschee's German Syrup is more successful in the treatment 01 con sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England, in the fickle MiddleStates, in the hot, - moist South every where. It has been in demand by every nationality. It has been em ployed in every stage of Consump tion, In brief it has been used by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy, d Tutt's Hair Dye drag hair or whlaker changed to a slosrr bntck by aalngleappllcationurthlaltya, Is Impart a natural color, acta lttauitatiootw ly and eontalna nothing- injurious to the hair, tioid bv drmrulste. or will be aent on reoeipt J of price, SH.OV. Vtttce, 30 fark 110, Si, X, 1 T I 7 "German 9J FARMERS: LOOKOUT! Tea are -posed toand- den changes .1 Cj f tempera- tare, aad t lalnrlei. ST. JACOBS OIL CURES RHEUMATISM, SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS, WOUNDS, 80RENESS, STIFF NESS. SWELLINGS, BACK CHE, NEURALGIA, 8CIAT. ICA, BURNS. A PROMPT AND ' PERMANENT CURE. tr T HE COOT 10 THE HARTMAN PATIKT iiiiiSiiil Coals no more than aa ontlnary clumay wood picket affair that oleUrucia Ilia view enl will rnt or rail coaling Ihem and la pmrlically avicnijurriiie. II.LIiHI'HA t Kl t)A I AMHitlf 1 1 II mitics AM) TKKl'lMt.NI ALU II.Kl. VKKK. Always mention this i-ir n wruliig.l . Msrlswi Mlf, Cs., Beaver Sslls. r. I. a. SMI. David M. Clarhson, Jr., Portland, Or. Holly, Maeen, terras ex EVERYTHING TESTED San fnrnhotoal ear trial ffroandA . L. I v II II V wa era Pacing Ooavt D.M. Ferry's Seeds A. I. WOT' Trees Free 'rest F. L POSSON I S83U1 w sell these Portland. Or. price, aenu wr it the name o! Woman's Friend. It Is - m s y ' uniformly sukuoss-(ulinrt-lievlnitthebackaehes.beatlashew tl L J ftr V. ""i w,hlh Imnlan and shorten a woman's w lUe. Tbotissmls oi woman testify tor It. It will iv health snd strength, and make life a pleasure. 1'UK BALK BY ALL DKUUUI8T8. GonsunPTion. i have a gaedive iwasdy foe the abee dlaaaaat by Hs aathoaadaef eaa el the went kiad aad rfL uaBHi have ba ewrad. IndesdaeeteMeilaaiytaitk lalMsilhiMf. th t w il ewil t w aorruu rasa, ens a VAI.U1IU.K TIIKAT1 IK ea Una Slinae team eat aweewae will asad aw thaw BUimaaawl tf, tk. tuna, T. A. Meaiaaa. M. t) I S3 rearl Kt- N. X. !,!ilL OBDEB BEPaRTKEHT. OUR HEW CATALOGUE la ready for mailing. Send In your name and have copy asul fie of charg to your aildrea. OLDS & KING. Br) Goods, Glotiiin;, Shoes, Etc., Fifth and Washington Streets, PORTLAND, OR. pOHTRIJi BUDS TEA A bteiut from the formula ot in old KtitUh Tut Mvirluuits Best Tea io the World for tha Price. to crnu per r. t your dealer's or potwld from the aolo lm purler, CLOS8ET DEVERS, Portland, Or. PIAtlOSOiieA(IS. ma t ElErEB. 71 Merriaen Street, Portland, Or, rm mox mm. Portland Seed Co., P. W. MILLER, Msosgsr, Mt, Tress, Fertilizers, Etc., No. 171 Second St., PORTLAND. ORECON. Bend for catalogue and mention this paper. J. McCHAKEN Ik CO DIALS KS W Seebe Msrtwe Lha. T evttsa e)st, wt. Sea eel and Utah SlMtav, Nlr, Fir (rMl sad Fir Claf. LAND fLASUa. CO Jlagtk rroa StrMt, Oar. D, rOKYLAMD, OH. IlinSfl Dynamite UUUUUil 1 1PGWEERC0., II CALIFOkNIA IT, ttM FSAHCIKO, It you want POWDKR for Mining, Railroad Work, Btnmp Blasting or Tre Planting, send for Price List. WALL PAPER, 10 sent per double roll. Send a-cent sump foi ample. BH0F1KU MOKIMN, ' m Third street, Portland, Or. FHAZ01 AXLE Best in tits World! Set the Csnaiss GREASE Sc'd Eyenrwhsrel IS Want asm aad AdSrsa of tmj laruiurin aawamaaaaa r.nrany,Bi.D. CUSED TO ITSV CUHEP. UFPSI.O.W.T, Ike Home Circle, Only n cents per yesr. Monthly, 40 pages. Send li cent in stumps. II will pay you and pleas you. Address P. O. ilox 16), Ban Francisco. J II Flos' Assavcrand AiiHlytlcalOliomlst, . II. rlwlt, ) WaahliigUmHt.,lMrUaud,Or. MORPHINE7 HABIT I Jtooksfrna SURE CURE radAe ktodfeto Oa, SSt Clag St. as Franclsoo. Plan's Kemedy tbr IMarrh I tb BMt., Knalest to I'm, and fheanent. Mold by dragglsui or sent by mall, toe. LV, UawlHu, Warrsn, pa. u Of. all kltuls anil laaniii.ntitywhol. sals aud retatl-at boil runk prices, e. J. now nn, 00 front Street, Portland, Or. ' Mint for catalogue. 't ""f btialnom you unip en lm. Haluma ran lm niadu la rl. lugChlrkvua tlikji lit my otlier biialnoaa or the capital in vest. I'd. Arxautlliilty 1. Itislralid tlatalogiwt tit lncnlMtorM. llmuii. era and all hliuls of DhlckuuFlsltigaFRlt Aucitla for Mann1 Bong Cnttef, Neon. Sity. Clover, Cutter, and eveiy thing ro quired by poiiliry raisera, PET&LUK1 IICUB.T0I CO., Pstaluma, Cat. ftrifmadmuinurayseaaiy Klaotrlcoorwia gafcaiansaiieelaltie, 11 v par oem proSt ene nut vneea. Haiimle free. Ur.Hrlilamaa.HmaSwar.N.Y, THE OAMEsTi STMU PI0KKT ftliCsV ' s "i" Hunt MofTttt, Taooma, Wash. mo., spensn rm, wasn. Ageuie lot otic: Ml SUfPLUS, reels aad Maaltwf, goods St Basts! eaiaiowwe. .. neoa. The very rewarkabla ami cortsln rolii'l given woman hf MOOKK't) REVEALED KKMKDY ha given OlSwxir WirKYovr rormrCKocs Lot's wife looked back, with a well known result Bellamy looked back in his dream. The smoker who has not tried "Seal" before can look back to wonder how he could have escaped the 'true excellence of the Seal of North Carolina. Paoked in Patent Cloth Ponchos and In Foil. Sportsman, Attention ! If roil want to shoot aomirataly, don't fall to sight your gun with tb eeleoraled LYMAN SIGHTS. UmI i, st .11 riHa. Peen SIshL 1: Ivorv llead Front Sight, fi; Ivory Hunting Front Sight, W eent. Sent by mall on receipt of price. R.T. HUD30N, 13 First Street, Portland, Or. Bend lot new Illustrated Catalogue. , A BICYCLE FREE. Writ for catalogue and particulars. Stale eg. FNED T. MERRILL, 17 Washington St., PortlandOr. YOUNO MCNI The Speolflo A No. I. ' Onres, wllhont full, all eaam of Woawe" hmn and Ulewt. no nialter of bow lol auuiillng. Pri'venw strlcliire, It hew an III" tcnml rumcly. cure when everything baa failed. Siild by all DnunrMa .... Manulwiturars) i'he A, av hiMnih.lt MMIrtn ui,, San Jose, Old. - Brtew. s.as. Bale?. 1 mill w n M W 1 1 1 Tllg.lathecnn4bgeJ I (.ailing remedy fore" J l"J ,t innnaiural amcnara-" -r frtv.dlsola"'-, Ieenam cur. i". r " t. taling weakasa peoullas ( sowonien. ,,-iaia i" ,,c . J,-TONFR,S0.,0M-TtJ,M. N. P, R. V. No. 432-S. 7, K. V. No. W9