The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, October 28, 1892, Image 4

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No Substitutes
Return to the grocer all substitutes
sent you for Royal Baking Powder.
There is no substitute for ROYAL.
No Vary Encouraging. :
Al7 had spent a long evening with Mlsa
Edith. 'At last be rose to go. Her hand
shake was not cordial enough to suit him;
to (act, it was very limp and exhausted.
He was disappointed, for he had expected
very different parting, but in ft rein of
pleasantry he said, "Oh, shake hands with
man, Miss Edith!" - '
"I should be pleased to, Mr. Brown,"
was her quiet rejoinder. Algy has not
called since. Harvard Lampoon.
;. A Bran Packer,
A novel invention tea bran packer for
the use of uiiUors who do large export
business and to whom economy of space Is
desirable. The apparatus consists of an
augur Working in the funnel that fills the
bag. It constantly revolves, at the same'
time having up and down motion. On
the down stroke It forces the bran into the
sack, paoking it solidly ftt tho asms time.
Xew York Hecorder.
The Roumanian has, in every walk in
life, fierce and savage pride which
causes him to abhor the idea of medi
cine and surgery, and to consider the
loss of a limb as terrible as that of life
itself. - - v , : .,
Nine-tenths of the stuff used aa bay
mm in New York, and other places as
well, is not bay rum at all, but mix
ture of the essential oil of bay with com
mon rum or alcohol.
( Mr. Goodfellow writes that "toast la
more easily digested than ordinary
bread, insomnch an it contain greater
percentage of h-"d '''"'' "
Good advice to pipe smokers
is' to. try a pipe full of Mastiff
Plug . Cut Its the lavonte
with all who delight in the sub
tle charms and fragrant aroma
of a pure, mild-flavored, slow
burning tobacco.
" J. B. Pice Tobacco Co., Richmond, Virginia.
Babies are always happy
when comfortable. They
are cdmfortable when well.
They are apt to be well when
fat ; they worry and cry when
thin.
.,, They ought to be fat ; their
nature is to be fat.
",. If your baby is thin, "we
have a book for you care
ful living free.
Scott A Bowks, Chcouste, ija South $th A venae,
New Vork. ,
YourdrueeMoeScott'eEmulionofcod-Uver
oil ali dmtSuM everywhere do. ft.
"ixerman
Syrup
99
William McKeekan, Druggist t
Bloominzdale, Mich. "I have had
the Asthma badly ever since I came
out of the army and though I have
been in the drug business for fifteen
veata. and have tried nearly every
thing on the market, nothing has
given me the slightest relief until a
few months ago, when I used Bo
schee's German Syrup. I am now
glad to acknowledge the great good
it has done me. I am greatly reliev
ed during the day and at night go to
sleei) without the least trouble."
MARK.
ERADICATES BLOOD POI
SON AND BLOODTAINT.
SEVERAL bottles of Swift's Specific (S.S.S.)
entirely cleansed my system of contagious
blood poison of the very worst type.
Wx. S. Looms, Shreveport, La.
CURES SCROFULA EVEN
IN ITS WORST FORMS.
Iiiad scaorutA In 1884, and cleansed my
system entirely from it by taking seven
. . . r c 1- (- , 1 ... I .1 ...... .nmn.
bottles of S. S.S,
ioms since.
r W Wir-r-nie.
Spartanburg, S. C
"., '1 HAS CURED HUNDREDS OF
1 1 CASES OF SKIN CANCER.
Treatise on Blood and (Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Co, Atlanta, Ga.
oooooooooo
If yon have MIr, File Sink Hawl
f ae&e, Coee Howela, Dumb Ague or Q
f V your fowl Oorm not assimilate,
?TuilsTiny Pills?
IM will ran uiou aronmee. jeuao v
TRADE
frloe SSo. iinoe,Birrarueo,jw.
oooooooooo
Knd at ft Long Lawsuit.
' An extraordinary lawsuit, which com
menced Sept. 15, 1768, has just been con
cluded, after having lasted 121 years. In
the year 1410 Bishop Demendy, of Neu
tra, in northern Hungary, died, leaving
hisimrnenseestntestoliUfaniily. Owing,
however, to the Turkish invasion of
Hungary at that time, the bishop's rela
tives were unable to take possession of
the property. After the invasion it was
found that the number of persons who
had a right to share in the property was
pward of a thousand.
i As they wero unable to agree among
themselves as to the division of the es
tates, an appeal was made to the law.
The courts of justice were so afraid of
doing injustice by precipitate action that
all the original heirs, and even the next
two generations, had passed away before
a decision was arrived at. Meantime the
expenses of the law and administration
had to be pxid, and while these have well
nigh swallowed up the once vast fortune,
the heirs have increased in number to
more than 8,000. Now that the jtiuR
ment of the court has been delivered, t!ie
bishop's descendants find that property
that should have now been worth prob
ably a quarter of a million has melted
down to something over 3,000, out of
which they have still to pay a lawyer's
bill of 1,000. This will leave the for
tunate heirs at least a sovereign apiece.
London Standard.
A Pauper's Sad Ufa,
Recently a poor, demented being,
about 60 yrars old, was brought to the
Waterville house by a man by the name
of Light, from Palermo, who left him to
be cared for until the following Monday.
The man, Amos Murray, has been a pau
uer since he was 3 years old. From time
to time the support of Murray has been
sold at auction; the last time he was bd
off by a Mr. Light, who was to clothe
and feed him for HO per annum, the
balance of the expenses of keeping him
alive and in working condition coming
out of his body as a slave. Light sub
let Murray to another person by the
name of Prescott. The pauper ran away
from his last owner and found his wy
to Waterville. He was a mass of raco,
his feet being incased in pieces of o'd
gunny sack?., and he was hungry, tired
ind exhausted. Landlord waite Kinuiy
cared for" him and, finding him sick,
iravehimextraattention. The man who
brought him disappeared, and when he
returned next day his poor unrortuua'e
was dying. Saturday be died, and his
remains were taken away by the person
who bid off his suppert. Kennebeq
Journal.
A Saint's Skull.
A saint's skull is soon to form the sub
iact of an action of law at Lyons. The
taint in question is Jean Soanen, wl-o
was bishop f Senez, in the department
of Basses-Alpes, during the reign of
'uouis Quinzo. The skull was for mary
rears in tbo possession of an ancient
family, whose scion, however, disposed
of it a short time ago with someo'd
lumber to a local dealer in bric-a-brac.
He was at a loss to know what to do witb
the skull, when s broker, hearing of '
dilemma, bethought of a devout lad;
one of his customers who happened o
hn the nroDrietor of the lower jaw of t"-e
self same saint The broker conduo I
the ladv to the shop, and a bargain w
concluded whereby, on the payment of
40, she became the possessor of this ad
ditional relic. After the lady nad quit
ted the house in triumph, with the bis.v
op's skull neatly packed up, the brok-r
claimed half the money as the intro
ducer, and, the dealer having refused to
hand over more than 1, he is bnngi.ij
the matter before the law courts. Lon
don Globe.
French Cremation Society.
The French Cremation society, whirh
was founded in 1883 for the purpose of
familiarizing people with the idea of t'w
new method for disposing or. tne aeaa,
has for its president M. Koechlin-
Schwarz, mayor of the Eighth Pa'
ward, where periodical meetings a-i
held, and amone the members who ma
np its committee are a goodly numneroi
deputies, municipal councilors, engineer
and doctors, in oraer w oecome a titu
lar member of the society a minimum
sum of $3 must be paid the first year, and
tl for each successive year afterwar'i,
Donation members are expectea to con
tribute at least a sum of $30 on entering.
The last report shows that the body num
bers at the present moment npwara oi a
thousand members. The receipts for the
first year of its existence were $500.
Paris Letter.
Railroad Building- Id Russia.
There have never been such large or
ders for rails from the Russian govern
ment as at present, and these are all be
ing given to home manufacturers by the
minister of war. The Jastovo line to the
Austrian frontier is to be built on a
double line of rails to be laid down on the
Kursk-Kieff line. In fact, all southwest
ern lines aro to be furnished with doub'e
rails. The strategical line to Petrofsk,
on the Caspian, is also to be commenced
in the course of the year, and probably
some progress will be made as regards
the great Siberian line. What is consid
ered as rather ominous is that all the
new and double lines in European Rus
sia, for which orders are now given out,
are to be finished by 1892. Cor. London
Times. ' '
Carefully Selected.
Of the Gladstone library at Hawarden
The Pall Mall Gazette says: "Mr. Glad
stone is not only himself selecting all the
books and arranging tlieiu on the shelves
with his own hands, but in each case he
is marking those passages which seem to
him most important and which have had
most influence on his own mind and life.
The library will thus be an actual collec
tion of books that have influenced him."
A Modern Robinson Crusoe.
A solitary sailor has been discovered
on a desolate island near Santa Cruz
nearly dead from exposure.- He gives
the name of Robrignez, and claims to
have lived eight years on the island. He
lias been sent to his home in Spain.
Public Opinion.
I ALL THINGS NEW. Will icioiecu wr ov". ..
'I I mm
OKI sorrows tuat alt at the heart's sealed gats,
Like sentinels grim and sad.
While out in the night damp, weary and late
Ths King with a gift divinely great.
Is waiting to make us glad.
Old foam that hang like a changing cloud
Over a auulees day;
OM burdens trtt keep the spirit bowel.
Old wrong that rankle and olaruor loud,
rjoall pass like a dream away.
In the world wi'hout and the world within -;
He maketh fie old things new.
The touch of sorrow, the statu of sin,
Shall flee from the gate when the King comes in.
From the chill night's damp and dew,
anew In the heaven the sweet stars shine.
On earth new blossoms spring; .
The old Ufe lost in the lite divine,
"Thy wUl be mine, my wlU be thine,"
b the song which the new hearts sing.
. Washington Post
The Laughing Plant,
The "laughing plant" grows in Ara
bia, and has been given its name from
the effects produced by eating its seeds.
The plant is of moderate size, with bright
yellow flowers and soft, velvety seed
pods, each of which contains two or
three seeds resembling small black beans.
The natives of the district where the
plant grows dry these seeds and reduce
them to powder.' A small dose of this
powder has similar effects to those aris
ing from the inhalation of laughing gas.
It causes the most sober person to dance,
shout and laugh with the boisterous ex
citement of a madman, and to rush
about cutting the most ridiculous capers
for about an hour. At the expiration of
this time exhaustion sets in and the ex
cited person falls asleep, to wake after
several hours with no recollection what
ever of his antics. New York TelejTam.
Theatre In Japan,
' The theatres of Japan begin in the
morning and last until sundown. The
audiences sit on the floor, and the people
aro as muoh affected as children by the
plays. Whole families come and spend
the entire day in the theatre. Some of
them bring their provisions with them,
and others have them served from the
neighboring tea houses. In some thea
tres, when a person wishes to leave the
hall and come back again, he is not
riven a return check as with us. There
is no passing of your ticket to newsboys
in Japan. The doorkeeper takes hoiu oi
the right hand of the man going out and
stamps on his wrist the mark or tne
theatre. When the playgoer returns, he
presents his wrist, -the seal of the theatre
is shown and he is admitted. Boston
Flag. -
Chinese Medicine.
The San Francisco Examiner reporter
says the doctor pulled out a drawer from
under the counter and exhibited hun
dreds of mummy grasshoppers.
"These are good for little children," he
said. "In China, every spring millions
of these bugs come in the fields. Pretty
soon the grasshopper dies and the meat
turns into a fly. The hind legs and little
tail drop off and the little fly goes away.
Then there is nothing but the shell left.
The laborers in the fields gather these
and dry them In the sun. They make
good medicine in powders.
"Chinese babies never die from con
vulsions when teething like white babies.
This powder acts on the stomach when
the stomach teeth are coming through
and makes them good and strong."
Shearing by Electricity.
Sheep are now sheared by electricity
in Australia, Frederick Wolseiey, a
brother ,of Lord Wolseiey, having in
vented a machine for the purpose. The
method of using the shears is very sim
ple, the operator having merely to throw
a friction wheel into adjustment by
means of a handle, and then push the
comb into the wool, pressing it continu
ously forward and keeping it as closely
as possible to the body of the animal be
im; operated upon. From one to one hun
dred shears can be operated at one time.
Bv this mode the shearing is done more
mercifully than when done by hand
shears. Excbango.
Forestry la Germany.
The Germans have been the pioneers
in scientific forestry, as in so many other
lines of progress. With a total forest
area of only 84,846,000 acres, of which
11,234,000 belong to the state, the Ger
man empire has no less than nine schools
of forestry, and during the three years
ending with 1888 it published 177 books
on the various branches of the subject.
There are also ten periodicals devoted to
forestry, and a general association of
foresters with annual meetings and ten
local societies. Montreal Star.
From the Sixteenth Century.
The peculiar bauds ornamented with
lattice work of narrow parchment strips
seen on the back of every ledger are a
reminiscence of the way in which those
books used to be bound as far back as the
Sixteenth century. ., They had a broad
band of leather brought round the back
and stitched through and through with
these narrow strips of parchment They
have survived, like the buttons on the
back of a man's coat, long after all use
for them has gone. Once a Week.
A Self Extinguishing Candle.
A candle has recently been brought out
which extinguishes itself after it has
burned for an hour. This it does by
tiny extinguisher of tin which is fastened
in the wax by wires', and which effect
ually performs its task. It is only neces
sary to remove this diminutive ex
tinguisher when its work is done, and
the candle is ready to burn another hour.
"The Author" Did It,
The writer of a recent book of travels
continuously refers to himself as "the
author;" "the author" saw this, and "the
author" was reminded, of something he
had met with in some other region. To
the mind of "the reader" there is a self
conscious awkwardness in such a styla
Had he said simply "I" Instead, "the
reader" would not have smiled so often
or so much over bis pages. L. 8. Q,
The Writer.
rish.
in
. Agassiz always taught his pupils to
kill fish as soon at caught by a blow on
the back of the head, that they might
not suffer before dying. Such fish keep
better and are better to eat, and the best
fishermen in Europe and America always
kill their fish as soon as they catch
them by ft blow on the back of the bead,
Exchange.
a cnean Affidavit,
it w. .hnurn In a lawsuit in New
England town the other day that one
Ebenezer Skinner made affidavit tnai a
certain remedy had cured him of rheu
matis of twenty years' standing, and all
he charged for this swearing was fifty
eu ,u ".""r "6 . y
cents. He had never baa tne rneumaus
in his life. Detroit Free Press.
the Mild Winter Necessitated the Vat ol
a SubitHnto for the "Beautiful."
; In the lushber regions of northern
Pennsylvan1 a curious expedient b l
been resorted to for the purpose of g V
ting the lost out of the woods. Hun
dreds of barrels of crude oil havft been
sent to the c-mips, and this fluid poured
over tho "slides." This was intended to
take the plae of snow. Logs can only
be got to th market over slippery paths,
to when thre was no snow or lue thy
greased the mountain slides, but in spite
ot that the vast lumber Interests of tie
state have suffered to serious extent
from this ir-Ud winter.
The snow that fell Friday gave the
lumber princes of Williuuisport and the
idle camp men a gleam of hope. Tho
thaw recently, however, knocked out
all this hope. I understand that snow
would have to fall a good week and I
maintained by thirty daya of freezi"g
weather to bring into the streams the
lumber now lving in the forests.
This is the" first time that crude) pe
troleum has been used to lubricate the
slides to any extent. Some of the slides
are twelve tuiloa long, starting away
back on the summit ot mountain ard
running through the passes; in some in
stances shooting up one hill ami down
another in a series of inclines. The mo
mentum the logs gather with distance
sends them along with a furious rute of
speed, and the crude oil has been found
not to wear off for nearly a week.
There are today 850,000,000 foct of tim
ber lying in the woods which ought to
have been in the booms of Willinmspp-t
before this time. In other words, Feb.
1 has usually seen all that wonderful
amount of timber lying in the river hero,
and much of it in the mills being llnlsh-'d
for the market. This forest blockade is
worth miliums of dollars. The logs rs
they are feKod aro worth $4.80 per 1,000
feet tor hemlock and from $11 to $15 for
pine.
Twenty different firms of Wllliatnsport
are sufferers from the blockade, wh'le
5,000 wood cutters in the camps are id't,
drawing no pay. In addition to all Ihii
there are scores of saw mills, portable and
stationary, up through the forest country
which have been shut down most ot tne
winter because they could not get the
logs from the woods. This would !d
tens of millions of feet to the above fig
ures. For instance, A. C. Hopkins, ot
Lock Haven, has 81,000,000 logs lying in
Elk and Clearfield counties. Thus f t
ho has only been able, with the aid of
creased slides, to get enough tim'et
down into Siunamahouing creek to form
thirty rafts, and even since he has had
them there, there has not been wat-u
enouirh to bring them into the west
branch of the Susquehanna.
Cochran, Payne & MoCorraicit and
Deemer & Co.. of Williamsport, are fio
largest operators in the state. Mr. J. C.
Payne said to me today: "There Is mrt
more than C j,000,000 feet on the river in
the neighboi-.iood of Williamsport. Tl's
is less than -. fifth of what we umia' y
have on hand at this season of the ye-
As it will r mire at least one month ol
continuous old weather to get the 25' V
000,000 feet of logs out of the woods,
and as this .. already late in February,
it begins to look doubtful whether we
will have la: je stocks on hand this sum
mer. Of coarse 1 think this will anV'l
market pries for Pennsylvania lumbf-,
The very fact that we have had to go to
so much trouble to get out what little wo
now have, such as greasing the slide,
and buildin..; stretches of tramway, and
buving additional horses, must make a
difference on prices.
"What if the mild winters continue in
the future? I asked.
I have heard some people advance
the theory that the climates are chan -
ins, and if that is true the lumber bu
ness would be revolutionized. Of coun e
we would have to meet it, though, as
we have beet doing this year in a meas
ure. I sup; ' e the building of great sys
tems of tra ways, or even narrow gauo
railroads, vjuld bo the solution of t'-e
problem. ' though costly at first, tby
would provt- cheaper in the end than the
present inet.;od oi hauling on tne snow,
because then we would not be at the
mercy of the weather. There would then
be no such Interruption to traue as we
have suffer-i this winter. I know
one firm now which has a narrow gauo
railroad wi, i a light locomotive, and It
works successfully." Pittsburg Dis
patch. . .
Photography In the Court Boom.
The adaptation of photography to legal
uses is the newest thing in the trade. A
firm of Bror.dway camera experts are do
ing a thriving business photographing
letters and documents for lawyers to use
in their cases, of doing up views of
buildings, interiors of rooms, objects of
furniture and the like, to help the learned
counselors make their cases plain to the
gentlemen of the jury. As the average
lawyer's powers of graphio description
are not very gTeat, this latter branch of
tho business should be of decided advan
tage. The scene of a murder or a sui
cide, the window by which a burglar
forced an entrance, or the iock ne Durst
to get into a bank, are very important
parts of a criminal trial. Heretofore de
scription hai been the jury's only reli
ance in the matter. Now the unerring
eye of the photographic lens will serve
them as a silent witness. New York
News.
A Burled Forest.
Well dieirers on the Crowley place at
Little Prairie continue to find further in
dications of a buried forest. The cedar
or pine found at a depth of thirty-five
feet appeared to ne tne orancnes oi a
tree: at forty feet the growth was larger,
as if near the trunk; at forty-five feet
larger still. The first thirty-five feet was
through light gravel and the next ten
feet through blue clay, exceedingly
hard. The impression prevails that a
swamp will !e struck at a lower depth,
as has been the case in previous instances
where the-wells were abandoned. Good
water in that locality Is rare, though the
land lies high and the surface soil is
light. The matter is attracting much at
tention. Evening Wisconsin.
A Hypothesis.
Stranger (in New York) Why is it the
city authorities won t permit you to play
except between the hours of 9 o'clock in
the morning and 7 o clock in tne even
ing?
Orean Grinder 1 notta know, jnayue
zee Cruelty to Children societa arraua
we overwork munk. New York Weekly.
It is estimated that $62,000,000 Is spent
in America each year for cosmetics, of
which $33,000,000 Is reinvested in adver-
'....,,. tf th HmslnrUllli..
"""' "
I 'w " !ul"
Aur. a Porous Plastiks aw unap-
.hie In onratlvs properties, rapidity
and safety of sotion, and are ths only reli
able plasters ever produced, iney ht.
successfully stood ths test of ovw thirty
years' ue by the public; their virtues have
never been emiaftd by the unscrupulous
imitator whol.ave sought to trade npon
lh reputation of Atuwrt bv making
plasters with holes in tlitmi and claiming
tliemtobJt as good as at.LW(g s.
and they stand to Uaylndoraed by not only
the higiieKt mvdioiri authorities, but by
millions of gralKlul patients who have
proved their allleaoy as a household rem
edy. , ....
Hewrt or Imitations, ann.uo tun uw. -
oeived by misrepresentation. Ask lor ai
cock's, und lot no solioitntion or explana
tion induce you to acoept substitute. . -
There is nothing more tiretentlons than ths
er"i l
Now Is the time to treat catarrh of long
standing. Kly's Cream Halm reaolies oiu
and obstinate cases, where all other reme
dies fail. Do not neglect procuring a bot
tle, as In It lies the relief you seek. ,
Rev. It. H. Kairull, 1). D .editor of ths
loum MethmtM. says editorially i " Ws have
tested the merits of Kly's Cream Balm, and
believe that by a thorough course of treat
ment it will cure almost every case of ca
tarrh. Ministers as a class are atUleted
with head and throat troubles, and ratarrh
seems more prevalent than ever. We can-
. J ... .lain, ,ut
'''in'nl'v Balm Into each nostril. It Is
quickly absorbed. Gives relief at pnoe.
1'rioe, au cents at aruggiew or uy man.
60 Warren Btraet, New York.
Curld is a sure shot, sltho gti h make many
lira." , -. ...
8rT or Ohio, Cmr or Toi.d,
Ll'CiS uocktv. i .
ra.uir J. i'hkm Ynmeeaoaih that he Is the
se lor twrtuerol the linn ot K. J. t hsnsv to.,
doing buslneiw In the city ol Toledo, oom.ty and
But af'irvMild, anil that 'aid Arm will pay the
sum of ONB HUNl'KKD HOI.LAKH for each aiid
every case ol Cataiikh that raiiuot be oured by
the use ol iiAu. a i,ati i
rKA.IV Wir.t-.IM.
Rwnrn to be fere me and subscribed Inuiy pief-
enceth sstbdayol Uewmlwr, A. B. Iijj.
Hull's ftatairh Cure is taken Internal y, and
act directly ou the blood and mucous surfaces
ol the system. rwurtfortesUmoiilnla.lt
tf Bold by DrugKUU'l W ooul-
Young mai', make a note ol this: Grass wtd-
oasarv uo. toe. .
Have Yea AathmaT
r n RciusruAHH. St. Paul. Minn., will
mail a trial package of Hehitinian's Asthma
Cure res to any sutlercr. (iives instant re
lief in worst cases, and cures where others
fail. Nam this paper aim sena auurve.,
The Pleasures nt llelng a Itarbar,
Burbering has been a very genteol art,
and it might be fine yet The fee U so
small there is no excuse for doing ft
credit business, and there Is no bore of
bookkeeping. The chluk drops in fast,
and "Next!" Is a merry cry.
And what a luxury it is to have man
fumble your face and head. The bar
ber's nimble, strong fingers rouses your
somnolent wits. It Is delicious to bt
kneaded, cntulied, brushed, bathed, cur
ried, spruced np. National Barber.
' Tat Slay' Mate.
Little Girl 1 want another slate just
like my last one. It was made by Pat
Mv. He's onlv 10 years old, too. He
made mv sluto last year.
Dealer 1 never heard of any such
iinnufacturer. Won't one of this sort
dor
"Why, yes; that's the very kind. See,
. , . .r-. W , IQQQ n
COPVRKHT MM
On the road
to health the consumptive who
reasons and thinks. Consumption
is developed tb.ronp:h the blood.
It's a scrofulous affection of tho
lnncrs a blood-taint. Find a per
fect remedy for scrofula, in all its
forms something that pur fie the
blood, as well as claims to. That,
if it's taken in time, will cure Con
sumption.
Dr. Pierce has found it It's his
Golden Medical Discovery." As
a strength -restorer, blood -cleanser,
and flesh-builder, nothing like it is
known to medical science. For
everv form of Scrofula, Bronchial.
Throat, and Lung affections, Weak
Lungs, Severe Coughs, and kindred
ailments, it's the only remedy so
sure that it can be guaranteed. If
it doesn't benefit or cure, in every
case, you have your money oaoit.
" Yon et well or you trot 500;
That's what is promised, in good
faith, bv the nroDrietors of Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy, to sufferers
from Catarrh. The worst cases, no
matter of how long standing, are
permanently cured by this itemeay.
'w-afl rtt 1
This GREAT COUGH CURE, this success
hil CONSUMPTION CURE is told by dree
(fists on a positive guarantee, a test that no ot he
Cure can stand successfully. If yon have i
COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, I
m 11 mire vrm nromntlv. It VOUr cnua nss tm
CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use i'
quickly and relief is sure. If yon fear CON
SUMPTION, don't wait until your case it hops
ess. hut take this (Jure at once sua receive lm
mediate heln. Larra bottles, (oc. and ftf.OO
Trsvelerr convenient pocket site 25c. Ail
your druggist for SHILOH'S CURE. Ifyow
lungs are tore or back lame, us ShUoh't For
out natters. I'nce, 25c.
The Best
fatcrprocl
Coat
In the
WORLD t
Tlie riftH HIIAND SLICKER Is warranted water-
proof, and will kef p yon dry In tiio hsrdmtslorm. The
new POMMKb Bl.K KKU la a perfect rluiiifcuat
imvanifliaenllrM(lle. lMwareor Imitations. 1
llmyseoat If the " fun Hrsod" U noton It. yUuntrav-
ilrt cstsloirtie itw, A, I. TOWKK. nosbin, Mim.
sarTTrcm
V!AIJk!J
ITK
f rr
Lata hop th. r''hVnra'bl
I ram as an " ,i while we
heat and lurronnuiiis ,,,,, " ... tin.
trv In Hits vale of tears, why should we v un
Urt7y induf. il ! torture '. ''?i-l'M " '
Sm-tlo 1J ol llcsltter ' ?i'V:' h U-It
win rui us ci hi "' - L . g-:.it l .Im
l i.hy.lt'1 s ar. very much at ',.,',r
hur ten the term l our existence. H '"i"
bl ".,iie.;,..iistlpstlon.lm..t always aH.m
nanv thta iHiiniilalnt, and are symnloiimtlo of tt.
These aw al l" Vtl iKulehe) t by the BilU'rs, wlil.'li
li!.rj , .,.1 ,i.,L.,lv malaria, rheumatism,
m "Vonsi ess and debility, allies tb ;Hr"'
oi" la urlpiw" it has shown t" ""'lrv
....'...H.V..l..,M.i,i.i..tiitilaliittlmt has carried
off many ol out hrignwst auu pes..
rviimnhuaetmlit not have pick ds Snot time
ol year for a tea trl.
used with aclvitiilage to aiiMvmw Y"J
VUUMnn. nrw.w w -
it niM
Sore Throat, Hoarseness aim oramiuw
outions. Hum otn.V ""
u .i.v.i.nriKtli hetchetwhre he ran
,ot at It raillly when he wains it aga n.
RUrTltHM ANOPILlEa CCKMD.
We nesttlvely our rupture, piles and Blit
Ul dlMase without palu ot aetemio n nnni
ff?WBS'raU
boaey, WIS ataretire, ou iuw-w.
Right, TohrWha was th hrn ol the bal"
ttetif New iirieaiiST inns mess w,,,
Tit QMnia for breakfast,
Dm Bnamelln Stove rollshl no dust, no small.
KOTHINa LIKE IT.
40 YRARS Of PAIN CUttKD.
THK CASK.
K, Albany St.,
Ithaca, N.Y.,
Dec. 19, 1881.
For over oyears
I have been a
victim of rheu
matism. I w a a
persuaded to try St. Jacobs Oil. I
have used two bottles, and a man
more free from rheumatism never
walked our streets. My limbs that
were once stilTnnd lame are now as
light and limber as in my youth.
JOS. EUSELI..
AFTER riVK YEARS.
Ithaca, N. Y., July 5, 1887.
Suffered many years Injury to
hip resulting In rheumatism, muscu
lar weakness and contracted cords.
Two bottles of St. Jacobs Oil re
lieved mo so that I now walk about
and attend to dully duties at 61.
I heartily endorse It.
105. EDSELI-
rail
HUMANE, STRONG, CHBW."
TVinbls ths straiiKtti ol any other Iwwoi will
g.w., . ,1 - T 'MJ . iTTii f iIMMTl " '-
Is Stock; a rVrfort Kami Fence, ynt MauosotniieiHiuRii tournament a mi. 7",
Tm ami Klowar linanla, Klfalhla Wtra Mat, to. tW Always mention this pafsr.
iT " J.. r. .. I. il. R. 1. n. Sanaa, din. Waitarn tllss Sat.. SOS Stat St..
ii..pi,itiv tnremar ana itwiirnoiiisis! aim,
U4 Mtm
Davlfl m. CMfMW, lf..rnnni vr.
fioiiy.
RUPTURE
CoaaaaiHimiKiica Hot.ietTan,
A BETTER MAN.
'Confound roa f
da yoa ana by
arar my toaal
a mo thai wheelbarrow om
'Keep 'am oatoline way thee,
"Fellow. I aat f itaAluntont Butterly Tabba
be celebrated young anlkoc wboa portrait af
ears la the current laaas of Us great Writ,
'"'if Magttn4."
Well, I so, C. Cloetro Lcafb. and say Mood li
ettei tnan yours, oecauas i nae oat uw
dalle
,s la your pocket and purify year blood by as
S syrup or wna urape."
sft PitaAltaaioat Battarly TattM for tha I
t drug etera
DID YOU HEAR?
That we sell
MY 0RAK. sdoae
med, fine, too lot.
ELECTRIC LUSTRE STARCH
per package only
UHBRIOBT , '- " .
best scouring Soap, (acta
PILOT BREAD, per lb.
BEST FLOOR
per ilarrcll ;
CREAM CHEESB,
any amount from loc ID, to
$5.40
5c
5c
$4.35
I2c
ADOSsss roa latkst rates iist
SMITHS' CASH STORE,
, 414-41I-41S Front Street, S. F. '
THS LAROSST OCALKSa.
LADIES.
MAQIC CON KM are sold on guarantor. If tliny
fall o benefit or cure, return rotu-s, tint use I, In
vood O der, and n nuey will be r. funil d. A
Minvily that CURKH can bn (iUAUANTKKI).
Illn pan cure thomsnlves at hums without low
of lime and the expense s trifle. I'artlmilajs
(sealed) Ires. '1 11 K MaUIU ('ONE CO.,
134 Third street, Portland, Or,
r$lWmm ffljn v..f i .
1. P. N. V. No. 464-8. F, N. U. No. 641
A "7
Both th method nod results when
Syrup of Figs il taken j It is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and ictt
gently yot promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses ths sys
tem efTeotually, dispels colds, head
iohes and fevers and cures habitufj
oonstrpatlon permanently. For sals
in 6O0 and $1 bottles by all druggists.
CALIFORNIA FIQ SYRUP CO.
u mmnioo, ou.
lOVMILU, tt. May tOKK. K
Hercules Gas Engine
(OAS UK UAltlH.insw
Made for Power or Pumping Purposes.
Til Clwaiwst Hi.Mshl On. Kulut
an lb Market.
Our OF INOIHS AND)
Push.
for Simplicity It lUaU the World.
It olla IUlf from a ltrnrvlr,
No Carburetor to gri out ofnrdaf
Vo Ilattarla or KUclrle Hparbe
It runs with a Chmira-r OrMi- nf tlaaulliis lliao any
vtlwr f-.ii.lai.
sawn ma cATAUxiri To
PALMER & REY, ManufacturiM
4H taiMffii Unit, In Frwwa, til.
VISIBLE, ORNAMENTAL.
not strewn, as or t out ol sfispa. Hsrajlatt
IS
.-. cw. -.--..
CMctflo.
ar-.pn. vw.. pp-j.w "'
PERMANENTLY
CURED
OR NO PAT.
Wo detention from business. We refer yon lo em ono patients, and el
notional banks. InveotluaieMur tnetlKal. Written ruuronlce to aliwjliitely
""e ill kl nils of K U PT UK 8 of both wlthmtt th. ? '
8VBINOK,nomallerof bow long atauilmv. KXAMllATIO rKnlf
THE 0. E. MILLER COMPANY, ..AOTSS."ta'
SM.nroaCiacft.AB. Tait! Ki.r.vaTo
mm
Dynamite
I POWDER CO.,
II CAllFORNIa ST., AN MaNCISCO.
If you want POWDER for Mining,
Railroad Work, fitump Blasting or Tree
Planting, send for Price List.
Will out Dry or Green
Bones, Meat, Grist le and all,
Uraeu Out BONKS will
double tha nnmlwr ol kits
will Bias tit em more fer
tilewill carry tho bent
aafely through tha molting
period and put them la
oonillUon to lay when ens
rommand thehlgheatprl
and will doveloiH) yc
me nisheat nrioa
and will dovelo your
chirks faster than any
ot aer looa.
Feed Green Hones snil
nss ( rsenessai to kill
tha lira, and yoa will mala
fifty ptr cent mora prout.
Send lor Catalogue and
prices.
PETALDH IICOBATOH CfllH, rTTalDli, CAL
PRUNE TREES.
Italian, Petit and Bllreri wholesale or retail)
2 to 10 lie! hlKh. l'rloe ecimllng to else.
Agent's rommlmlon siren purchaser. Write lor
BricMtoTHOM. J DAVIS, Manager, Portland, Or)
uraery, South Mt. Tabor, Or. Moageutoout,
MORPHINE
HABIT I
Books Has.
SURE CURE
olSalaeactsCfc.SSCtayt.Saaaileo,
YOUNQ MEN I
The 8poolflo A Ne. I.
Cures, without fall, all nanea of 4o
hie. and OlMs, uo matter of liuw long
aumtllng. Preeenta stricture, It being an In.
ternal remedy, Cures when everyUiDia else
lias fulled, Hold hy all Urtigglate.
Maliufaetorerst Tbe A.Helioenliel. Medicine
rrlee.Sa.SO. Co., Bau Joee.Cal.
NERVE WASTE.
The third edition of lir.fiewynr'a popular "Nkhvs
" (Hvo., clo h.ll.im, i-ontalii. 47 chapter of
practical Informal ion ami advice concerning new
ouanesH and the various forms of nervous Impair
ment. Tint chapters upon Nervous JlnligfMllun,
KetirodtictlveNeiiiaslheiilA.liraliiand .erve i otxls
and Nervines and Nrve Tonics are enpeitially vsl
liable. Maniple pages and preaa notices aent free
for lwo-(H-nt stamp.
Tim Banerotl Comptny, Publlthtrt, San rrano'lM.
Dig 1 IsthaaeknnwiensM
leadlns remsdr for all kof
unnatural dischargee aaf
prlvatodlseaaeeof .
eertalaeure for tbe deb w
tatlng waakaeas
eo women. . ,
I praeorlbeltana roeisei.
in reeommeaawa "
all eunerera.
una
rsuc
f",0.,OtlrrirMii
y oraigssMoa
JB r0V Asaayer and Analytical Chemist,
s B. rlvR H WaaMugtonBCrorUaud.Or.
f t -tires InV 1
jriTolllAVR.l
f flhiiHiM. art w a
I I esMsSaiMel
II IMOIIW
1 Tu.rv.eeDMililftll fM
t0lII,0.-'
VS:fcttJ
I f aMUConWrrupaaMs Uood. Use r
C I In lima Hold by dnuwlsia T
r MSf.ss . wg.aaigy(!-w-y-o)aysl-
t.. m mink ii listaianaiii