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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1892)
27 The " Royal " the Strongest and Purest Baking Powder. Whether any other baking powder is equal to "Royal," let the official reports decide. When the different powders were purchased on the open market and examined by Prof. Chandler, of the New-York Board of Health, the result showed that Royal Baking I Powder' contained twenty-seven per cent greater strength than any other brand. - When compared in money value, this difference would be as follows : If one pound of Royal Baking Powder sells for 50 cents, 1 v V One pound of no other powder is worth over 36 cents. - If another baking powder is forced upon you by the grocer in place of the Royal, see that you are charged the correspondingly lower price. ,v f Took a Servant' Plnea. . Charles Richards and Misa Maggie Owen, both welt known in society cir cles in Indianapolis, were married re cently after an exceedingly novel court ship of several months. Richards began his attention to the young lady six months ago. bat her family conceived a strong dislike to him and forbade him the house; Miss Maggie determined to leave home, and sought and succeeded in getting a situation as a domes tia in a family in a different part of the city. , They soon learned her secret, but kept faith with her, and for four months JRichards and the young lady kept their courtship, the Owen family trying in vain to find the place of their daughter's hiding. In the mean time Richards bought a home, furnished it thoroughly. and took his bride to it; where number ! of friends, including the parents of the bride, were gathered to offer congratu lations. Cor. Chicago Herald.- Last of aa Honored Family. Miss Elisabeth Cazneau Palfrey died in Milton, Mass., the home of her nephew, Robert B. Palfrey, on Christ mas morning. Miss Palfrey was a de scendant of Peter Palfrey, one of the original five men to whom the preserva tion of Massachusetts bay colony is 'due. Her grandfather, William Palfrey, was paymaster general of the Revolutionary forces,- aid-de-camp oa. Washington's personal household - staff and the first United States consul general to France. Miss Palfrey was also of Huguenot de scent, her mother being a granddaughter of Paix Cazneau and Marguerette Ger main Cazneau, who fled to this country wim ututrr xiugueuuuiiu to. i. oiw was the last of her generation, having sur vived her brothers and sisters and cous ins,. of whom the late Dr. Cazneau Pal frey, of Cambridge, Mass., was the youngest. Miss Palfrey was 87 years old. Boston Journal. It Waa Hot. . A man waa sitting on the third seat in a street car recently when a short, fat man climbed abard and at once began fanning himself with his bat. . "Well, this is a hot day, aint ttr said be, adilreming his neigh bor. , "Beg pardon f said the first man. "I say, it's a pretty hot day !" repeated the short, fat man, raising bis voice. The other pnt his hand to his ear and an swered: "1 didn't quite catch that; please re peat it." ; The little man's ears grew red as he shouted:-"It's a hot day, I tell your and people in the back seats began to titter. "I'm a little deaf," responded the ttrst man. "If you will raise your voice" "Confound it, sir!" howled the little man, perspiring like a sponge. "I say it's hot! hot I I tell you! hot day 1 D'yoo bear thatr The other shook bis head, and the little man, castinz a look of wrath on him, alighted. Then the first man looked around and chuckled gleefully. 8t. Louis Republic. Massachusetts has given a last rest ing place to two presidents. New Hamp shire to one, New York. to. three, Penn sylvania to one, Ohio to two, Illinois to one, Kentucky to one, Tennessee to three, and Virginia the "mother of presidents" to five. - You would not suspect it from the taste; there is cod liver oil in Scott's Emulsion. It looks like cream; it is like cream. Cream is bits of .butter covered with some-! . thing else you do not taste the butter. Scott's Emulsion is drops of cod-liver oil cov ered with glycerine. Cream is an easier food . than butter,, because it is in bi ts. Scott's Emulsion is cod liver oil made easy ; the drops are invisibly fine ; they do not resist digestion. Will you read a book on it ? Free. Sztrrr & Bownk, Olenitis, its South sth Avenue, N.-w York. YourdniKgltt keeps Scon's Kmuiwee of cod-liver ' cHlall druggu everywhere do. St. 47 They all Testily sf the sild asaewsss Se.fi V Spscifie. ' The eM-ttm simple I remedy trom the Georgia ' awamee and fields has I zone forth to the antipodes, ' ..Awi.hiwp- the skeptical and 1 confounding the theories at ' Uuse who denend solely on the I ehTslcuui's skUL There Is no blood ' taint wbloh ltdoes not Immediately aradlaat. Poison outwardly absorbed or the 1 J i I ftOJ it wm s a al r- " 1 1 esult ot rile diseases from within all yield to this notes trat simple remedy. It Is aa unequaled onlctmtldsap the old and feeble, cores all diseases rising from impure blood or weakened vitality. (Send tut a treatise. Eiamlno the proof. Books oa Blood and asmaeasee'' stalled tree. jrtteytM BtU It. BWIYT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer A Atlanta, Oa, Difference A FALSE PROPHECY. Would be prophets tell us Wo shall Dot reknow Tbem that walked our fellows In lue way belowl Smoking, smoldering Topheta, Steaming, hopeless plalntal , Dreary, mole eyed proplietal Poor, skin pledging aaiutai Knowing not the Father, What their prophecies? Grapes of such none gather Only thorns and 1 lest George Macdonald in CosmopoUtaav Puritan Small Boys. In a book in which Jonathan Trumbull recorded the minor cases he tried as justice of the peace is this entry: . "His Majesties Titbiiignian entered com plaint against Jona and Susan Smith, that on the Lord's day,' during divine service, they did smile." They were found guilty, and each was fined bve shillings and costs. But it was the "small boy" whose behavior in the meet' ing house provoked the Puritan elders to groan in chorus, "Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child." The boy behaved badly because Im was seated with other boys, instead of with his father and mother in a family pew.' They were herded together on the pulpiF and gallery stairs, and tith Ingmen and constables were appointed 'to .watch over them, "and see that they behave themselves comelie, and use such raps and blows as meet." ' In one parish it was ordered in to meeting "that there be some sticks set np.in various places in the meeting house, and fit persona by them and to use them." A Persian Mod of Punishment. An extraordinary punishment is now in vogue in Persia. It was introduced by the present shah with a view to put ting a stop to the petty pilfering that had had unbridled sway for hundreds of years. It consists in taking the culprit through the following "course of sprouts" and is said to be very effectual, especially when it has been applied to one guilty of the third offense: The first time a man is canght in the act of stealing he is "bastinadoed (beat en on the soles of the feet with an iron rod) and made to sign a paper declaring that that will be his last offense. If he forgets this when the soles of his feet quit burning and tries it again, the sec ond offense calls for the amputation of his right hand. If lie is still obdurate, and goes at it left handed, the third and of course last resort is decapitation. St. Louis Republic. Arranging Pansle. J You must pluck pansies every day if you would have them bloom continually. There is not so great a field for their ar rangement in the bouse as with many other .flowers. 1 bave a low, shallow, flaring basket of amber glass in which 1 lay them. A pretty way to arrange them is this: Along the edge of a shelf, bracket, man tel or whatever it may be, put in a row of small vases straight up and down. little yellow match jars shaped like a mug without a handle (which you can find in any store where Japanese, goods are sold), and into these put your pan lies with faces upright looking over the edge, only three or four in each. There is room for all sorts of delicious com' I binations and contrasts of colors in this arrangement. Mrs. Celia Thaxter. Many Languages In German Colonies. - The Germans are trying to count- the languages that are spoken in their colo nial possessions. In east Africa they have found fifty languages, in southwest Africa, twelve; in C'ameroons, twenty; in- Toga, five or six. These figures do not include a large number of dialects which are almost equivalent in some cases to another language. The tier'; mans bave no lilea yet now many lan guages are spoken in their South sea possessions, but they have thus far counted fifty. Their missionaries and agents are hard at work reducing the languages which are most used to writ ing and making dictionaries of them. New York Bun. Bought l?p Offending Organs. A story is related of the composer Verdi that lias to do with organs. One time a friend while visiting him waa shown through' the composer's home. When the door was operfed into one room it was found to be filled with bar rel organs pf all sizes and patterns. "What on earth are you doing with all theseV asked the astonished friend. "Those are a few that bave annoyed me with 'La Miserere,' " answered the great artist, "and they will never do so again." New York World. , A Natural inference. Teacher When was Rome built, say, Fritzchen? ,. , ' Fritzchen -Borne was built in the night Teacher How do you make that out, yonsilly boy? .:. Fritzchen Because you always said, sir, that Rome was not built in day. Saphirs Witzblatt TWO CABER8. So MWB on thought about the life beyond Ha did sot drain the waters of bis ponds and when death laid his children -neat a the sod He -called ,1, "to inyswrious will of Ood, Be would' not writ for worldly gain, not oe Hte wealth, he said, waa stored In dud a To Be Be kept kit mortal body poorly dressed, and talked about the gariueuu of the bloansd; And when to his last sleep he laid him down His only mourner heaved his widow's gown. One waa not sure there was life to come, 8o made a heaven of his earthly home. He strove for wealth, and with an open hand He comforted the needy In hie lend. He Wore new garments often, and the old Helped many a brother to keep out the cold. He said this life waa such a little spaa Man ought to make the most of It for man; And when he died the fortune that be left Gare succor to the needy and bereft. -Ella Wheeler Wilcox in Norfolk Journal of Commerce. ..... . A FEMALE CRUSOE. On the 86th day of October, A D. 1871, the trading schooner Litt le King sailed out of the port of Singapore, bound for the Kluderoon Islands, to the north, and ouly one of her crew was ever again met with. For Ike years before the schooner bad be longed to and been commanded by Cnpt. Kara Williams, an American from San Francisco. He traded between Singapore and Sumatra, Java, Borneo and the small er islands of the Java sea, and in May, 1871. died at Singapore of fever. Its bad then been married for three years to an English woman, whose maiden name was Danforth. who had been a domestic in an KiurUsh family in Singapore. She had ac companied him in all his voyages, and had secured much experience and information. As she could not readily dispose of the schooner, she determined to continue in the business, acting as her own super cargo. Mrs. Williams secured an englishman named Parker as captain, another named Hope as mate, and with three Malays be fore the mast and a Chinese cook, and with about ti.POO in specie in the cabin, she sailed away on her first voyage, and it was four years later before she was again beard of. The purpose of this narrative is to chronicle ber adventures in the interim, as 1 had it from her own lips. While it was a bit queer to start on a voyage with a woman virtually in com mand of the craft, Mrs. Williams bad nothing to fear from her crew. Tbeofli ours were good navigators and the men willing, and all were anxious for a profita ble voyage. She bad no complaints to make until the islands had been reached. The group lies between the Malay Penin sula and the island of Borneo, about 100 miles off the coast of the former, and from 850 to 800 miles from Borneo. There are nineteen islands in the group, covering a length of 120 miles by about 40 broad. There are only seven or eight which are in habited, and at the time of which I write the people were a lawless set, and a share of them out and out pirates. The products were dried nsb, sea shells. eocoanuts, dye stuffs, various herbs and roots for medicinal purposes and several sorts of spices. The schooner bad been there once before and made a protttauie trip of It. She had clothing,- powder, shoes, axes and a great variety of notions. and where none of these wat wanted she,' paid cash. On this trio the schooner worked to the northward and made her stop at the island of Quewang, being the third one from the northernmost island or the group. ne met with a cordial reception, and at once began bartering for and receiving cargo. She was anchored in a sheltered bay, with in 500 feet of the beach, and bad been there fire days before anything occurred to arouse Mrs. Williams' suspicions that all not right. She then observed that the entire crew were driuking deeply of a na tive Iiqnor which the natives were supply ing in a liberal manner, and that some of the fellows were becoming Impudently fa miliar. When the captain was spoken to he laughed at ber idea of trouble and promised better things: but the drinking continued. On the afternoon of the seventh day several women came off In the canoes. Une or tbem, who could speak English pretty fair ly, was presented with some ornaments by Mrs. Williams, and in return she hinted to ber that it was the intention of the natives to capture and loot the schooner that night. They bad discovered tbat there was a large sum of money on 4xard, and they had found the crew an easy one to handle. The native woman tiaiin t time nor opportunity to say much, but no sooner had the crowd of natives left the schooner at dusk, as was their custom, than Mrs. Williams set out to sound the alarm. Imagine her feelings when she dis covered that every single man on board. from captain to cook, was so mucp under the influence of liquor as to be unable to comprehend ber words. She doused tbem with sea water and pounded thein with be laying pins, but all to no purpose. The en tire lot were stupidly drunk, just as the natives bad planned for. - ' It wss a perilous situation for the wom an to be placed in. If the natives captured the schooner they would murder every one of the crew as a natural sequence, and the first step toward capturing her bad al ready been taken. The step she took showed sound judgment. The schooner's yawl was down, having been in almost hourly use. The native village was about forty rods back from the beach, and as the schooner swung to the eon tide she pre sented ber broadside to the village. When the yawl was pulled around to the port side she was out of sight. Mrs. Williams' first act was to step the mast, ber next to supply the craft with provisions and water. There were an unusual number of lights burning in the village, showing that some thing was on foot, but she had no fear of an attack until a later hour. The natives would wait until certain that all the peo ple were helpless. Mrs. Williams bad determined to slip away from the doomed craft in the yawl. although she had no experience in the management of a small boat. After water and provisions she brought up all her money, whin was in boxes she couia handle. Not a penny of It was left uehino. There were a rifle, revolver and double barreled shotgun belonging to her bus band. These she took, together with powder, shot and fixed ammunition. Then she gathered up all her bedding and cloth ing, took three or four spare blankets, two tints of clothes belonging to the officers, and when these were in the boat she took pots, pans, dishes and cutlery, bundled up a lot of carpenter's tools, secured two axes, I a lot of small rope, several pieces of canvas, and, in brief, loaded the yawl with what ever was portable and handy, including I the clock, compass, quadrant, sextant and lamp and four (fallens of oil. he worked for ..wool ot two Hours getting tnese . things into the boat, and the last articles ' taken aboard were meat, flour, beans, tea and other provisions from Jhe lazarette. I It was about 10 o'clock when Mrs. Will iams took her seat in the yawl and cast off from the schooner, and the tide at once drifted her out of the bay to tbe north. The only thing of consequence she had forgotten was a chart of the Java sea. which she could have put ber hand on at a minute's notice, and it was the want of this , which made her a Crusoe for several years. ' As the yawl went to sea after its own faiih , ion, Mrs. Williams lost the points of the oinpaMS at -once. .umeea, una sue Kept them in mind, it would have been of no benefit just then, as she bad not studied the chart, and could not have told which vy to steel to reach another group or th tuain land. She beard nothing wnatever from the natives, but several veers later It was ascertained that they did not board the schooner until mklnlghu The men, all of whom were still drunk and asleep, were stripped aud tossed overboard to drown, and then the absence of the woman and her money was discovered. , Five or six natl .e crafts were at oure sent In pur suit, while the people who remained looted the schooner of everything of value to them, and then towed her our. to deep wa ter and I scuttled hertohitls the evlilr-nce of their crime. After drifting three or four miles out to sea the yawl got a light brvete, and after a few trials the woman learned how to man age tbe Rail and lay a course. She had no Idea which way she was heading, but run off before the breese, aud kept going nil uight aud unt il mid afternoon the next dny. She imiHt have iMouied the Inland of Up turn,! iu tbe early morning, but so far to the westward that she could not see it. The wind hauling at mid foreunon altered ber count by several points, n ml the north eriimoat iluil of the groin", named I'o lllo, was thus brought lu line. The island Is seven miles long by three in width at its widest part, and well wooded and watered. The woman In tided on the east side at the mouth of a creek which forms a spug little harbor, blie wits con vinced that this was one of the Islands of the Klnderoou group, but she did not know that It waa the most northerly one. Bv consulting the eoinimw she got the cardinal points, but not having atudied the chart she could not say in what direc tion anv other land lay. She hail seeu the sails of two tinders that morning, but ss they were native crafts she bad every wish to avoid them. The bouts which were sent in pursuit of ber must have taken an other course, as she saw nothing of them. When Mrs. Williams landed on the island . she had no idea of stopping there for more than a day or two, or until she could decide on some plan. She had scarce ly gone ashore wheu a gale eame up which lasted about thirty hours, during which the yawl was so damaed that Hhe must undergo repairs. She unloaded lier gooiU on the shore, covered them from the weather and then set nut to explore the Island, pretty well satisfied that it wan in habited, and hoping, if it was, that her money might secure itjl-ttauce. Ueforv night she was satisfied that she was all alone, and she made a shelter out of t lie blankets, and slept the night awny iw neaefullv as if iu ber cabiu on the school) er. Next day she exchanged her apparel for a man's suit and began the erection i a hut. In a grove about .M00 feet from the beach she erected a shelter, Ulxau reel, which withstood tbe storms of almost four years. While the sides rouisted of canvas and poles, the roof was thatched with n long grass which she round on iiieisianu In abundance. It took the woman nlmut a week to con struct her hut and move her storej into It. and this had scarcely been done when ber bout, owing to carelessness on her part. wan carried olt by the sen, mid sue now reulised that she was a prisoner until Hti'-U liueos the crew of some trailing vowel mUht lund and discover her. After lici bouse wiw com pleted she made a more thorough exploration of her Island home There were parrots at d other birds, snakw of a harmless variety, Borneo nit, aud a drove of i'lwmt 300 Java pigs, which rc about the size of the American eccnry but are wild instead of fierce. The woman bad clotiiing to hist her Ave or six years, but t lie provisions she hail brought from the schooner would not sup til v her needs more tl.au a f-w mouths 'While hoping and expecting to betaken off almost any day she wisely prcpareu tut a long stay. She had fishhooks and lim in her outfit, and with (lsb from the sen, meat from the woods and bananas and wild fruits from the groves she bad a vn riety and a plenty. Six mout lis after she landed a native craft put in alxiut a mile from her hut, but creeping through the woods ehe saw thut nil were Malays, and so savage in apiiearance that she did not dare make herself known. Seven months later a second craft sent men ashore to 111! two water casks, but she was also afraid of these. She lived very quietly from that time until nearly two years after ber laud ing, having remarkably good health all the time, but naturally lonely ana cast down at times. One afternoon, as she was In the forsst about half a mile from home, having tiei shotgun with her, a Borneo sailorsuddenly confronted her. He was entirely alone, and whether be had been marooned or cast away she never teamed. As she was dressed in a man's suit he naturally took ber for a man, but bis first movement was a hostile one. He advanced upon the worn an with a club in bis band and uttering shouts of menace, and to save her own life she was compelled to shoot hi ni Now and then, all through ber stuy, trading vessels were sighted in the oiling, and sometimes a craft known to be mannedHiy Englishmen, but signals made to the latter by means of smoke were never heeded. Her main hope was that the loss of the schooner would in some way reach her friends at Singapore, and tbat a search ing ourtr might tie sent out to ber rescue. Oneday.wnen sue nou oeenontne isianu four years lacking about fifty days, the British survey snip euiuo, tuen engugeu in resurveying the group, dropped anchor off the mouth of the creek and sent a parly ashore to explore the interior. I hud the honor not only to bead this party, but to be the first man to see and to speak to Mrs. Williams. We found her In excellent health, although tanned and roughened by exposure to the weather. When she bad donned her own proper apparel and bad time to tidy up no one could And fault with ber appearance. After a few days we sailed for Singapore, Where Mrs. Williams was safely landed, and a few weeks later a man-of-war ww dispatched to the island where the scboonef had been seized. Natives were found who gare-all the particulars, and the result was that eight men were brought aboard, tried, convicted and swung up at the yardarra, while three more were shot while trying to escape from the Islaud. New Vork Sun. Quickly Silenced. First Old Lady Conductor, raise this win dow; I shall smother to death! Second Ditto Conductor, lower this win dow, or I'll freeze to death I First 0. L fagainl Conductor, will yon Irate Passenger (interrupting) Conductor, hoist that window and freeze one of those old women to death; then lower It and smother the other one I Silence iu the car. Washington Capital. A Rare Scold. ''Augustus,''1 said Mrs. Ilenpeck severely, "I see a woman down in New Jersey bos been convicted of being a common scold. 1 should Ilka to see any brute ot a man try that on me!" ... "But you' are no common scold, Maria," responded Mr. Henpeck, with a sigh. And Mrs Ilenpeck U still wondering what he meant. Life. One Way Open. Wife (weeping) I haven't had a new dress for a year, and (boo-boo) you're a mean old thing, so there I Husband But, my dear, don't blame me. This is tbe dull season In business. Wife-Well, why don't you fail,tlienf Cloak and Suit Review. The American notel System, . Proprietor (average . hotel) Very sorry, sir, but you will have to leave this house at once. Guest Goodness msl What have t done! Proprietor (solemnly) You said something to a waiter which has displeased the cook. New York Weekly. Mrs, Pottsr-Pelmsr. With such a blessed trinity of gifts as beauty, atfabiUty and Intelligence, Mrs, Potter-Palmer, president of the World'l Fair women manugers, will reflect credit on her sex and cause men to wonder why uoh as she are not oftener consulted In national affairs. Government is the science of housekeeping on a large scale. That is thereasou why men so frequently fail iu details to which they seem supe rior, yet it is upon details that life and uccts depend Take government building", for exam ple. Were clever women consulted I think onr Htt'hitecture would la liner, and I know that interior would be better planned. So long as masculine intellect refuses to ' corral feminine acumen, closets will remain u burning question, mid their absence continue to bo a thorn in the flesh. I have in mind a costly building lately erected with scarcely a closot in it, which owes tho introduction of stationary wardrobes to woman's criticism. It is to be hoped that Mrs. Potter- Pulmer can find among her own sex au architect ablo to dosigu the woman's pavilion at tho fair. If sho sueoeeda, let it not lie said by experts that man would have done better. May beauty wait on utility and coiivenlotice on both, Kate Field's Washington. ' . MKDIOAL TKaTIMONV. W, Thornt n l'arkor, M. P., Recorder Association of Aoting Assistant Burgeons of the U. 8. Army, writes: " Salsk, Mass., March 8.1, IBM. " When at Stuttgart, Oermany, during the winter of lRl-2, I waa suffering from s severe attack of bronchitis, which scemeo to tlir-'en pneumonia. I met, at the Ho tl Marquardt, Commander lleardslce, of the United Stii'es Navy. In speaking of mv sickness, he remarked: ' Doctor, you can ure that chest trouble of yours by u ing an Au u it'' 1'okoi'h I'labtss.' ' I hat innv be true," Ijmsweied. ' but where can I Ml the idiittrr 'Anvwhere 111 the Civil Ued world, and surely here In btuttgart. Whenever I have a cold, t always use one and tind relief.' 1 sent to ihe drug store lor the plaster, und it did all that my I'r end hud promised. Kver since then 1 have used it whenever sutlering from s oolil, and I have many times prescribed ii for patients. 1 The Allcock's Flartir is the best to be hail, and has saved many from severs illness, and undoubtedly, if used promptly, will savo inanv valuable lives. Whenever one lias a .eve'e cold they should put on au AtuiM-a's Pi.astss aa soon as imaslble. II should be seed across the chest, the upptr margin Just below the neck; some hot ooel tea, or iiuiK, win mil in tne treat ment. "This Is note n.ttenl remedy In the ob jectionable sense ot that term, but a stand ard prepara'ion of value. The Uovvrnment supplies lor me u.n. Army mm imiinn Husp tul rliores contain Allcock's Hi.as tkrh, and the medical profession through out the world a'e well awu-e of llieir relia hilitv Mint nvotillpnna. I ahall alwuva rec ommend it, not only to break up colds, but aa ii elm in nl aviinr Hauls ill llie Client mm iii the hack. It'is a preparation woitby of generul commence." k man that like-, auythlug that Is good (or blm Fsscnrltsity. For throat diseases and coughs use "frown's Jlrmiehuit Trochet." nice, ! cts. SM only in biuret. A hlid In the hatd la worn 1 10-1 f h't an eaal . RCPTUKK AND I'll. Eg CURED. Wannaltlvelv nnra runture. of lea and all reo- dtl diseases without palu or detenUon from busl ,m. M,. num. tin oav. Also all PrivU dl- ea ea. Address lot pamphlet Drs. Portertteld 4 bosey,S3g Ballet street, nan iranouoo, . lar-year parlies have out s hort llmalo'hs, M Ute bay wl lit- tne suu shines. ' "Tour Work In Life." A series of thirteen articles by successful men in aa many pursuits is oue of the many strong groups of artlclra which are announced In Tlia Yol'TH'a CourAMloM lor lass. "The MraveM Itord i iv.r Haw" is the toolc of another series hy United States i.enerala. The pro pectus fur the ooinlos Vfltrof iSIOSr'NIIIII u moi-l Tntu auu a-" erous than ever. Those who subscribe at onoe will receive llie paper free to Jan. 1. IMU, and fur a hill year from, that date. Only 11.71 a year. Address HM YoCTH'St-OUFANIU-c, H4HIIOU, diaw, A fruit lar-The one von set when you slip upon s oh nana skin. With Klv's Cream Halm a child can be treated without pain and with perrect sale tv. Trv the remedy: it cures catsrrh. My son has been alti .cted with nasal ca tarrh since qui'e young. I wss induced to try Kly's (.'ream Hatm. and before he had ' . , ..... ... . l.l . L. -! Uten one Dome inabUtnaKreeaoie cstsrnisi smell had ad left him. He appears ss well as any one. It is the best catarrh remedy In the market. J. C. Olmstead, Areola. III. One of mv children bad a very bad dis charge from her nose. Two physicians prescrnwu, uu wituuuv ikuchm Ely's Cream Malm, and, much to our sur prise, there wss a marked improvement. We continued using the Balm, and in a short time the discharge was cured.;-;, a. CtLW t?rnlnir. N. Y. Annlv Huhn into each nostril. It is quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at once. K 1 IW, w ueiiw "CO "J Klt Bsothkbs, 68 Warren Street, New York. CATARRH CAN'T Bl CURED with inc.Kl. A PPI.KJA HONS, as they ean't reach tbe seat o( the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, anil in oroer to cure ii you hare to lake interna! remt'dle . Hall's Ca tarrh Cur in taken Int rnally, and acta directly thi klnful a;ut miir-JlllS Nil flOBB. Hall'sCf tsrrh Cure ts no quack niedlcti . ltwus pre scribed by oue of tho best physicians In this coun'ry lor yesrs, sn l Is a reitular iirescrl Hon. It Is composed of the peat tonics known, oodv DIHeil WIVU Hie lies UIW1 pinimsin. whb rectly on the nuieous surf u es. The p rfect combination of the two Inure HcnU is what ro- 'uces-n n wonue l u reamts iu cunuc iiaiarru, Bend for testlmonlala free. F. J. CHKNKY A CO., Props., Toledo, 0. Bold by druggists; price, 76 outs. , s id) truly cu Uf. onhe ujorStce orpean oooooooooo It Is for the eure of dyspepsia ami Its O attendants, siok-lieadaoba, tioostlpa-Q turn and piles, that w ?TutrsTinyPillsg KS-ISS..T, WIIIMIU SB''") oooooooooo V LI l-.. 1 I lW A atJCHALD or Ttll lurAM YEA. PUB th lart tblry years ot mors ftm h"J": tury, aud i toT.neuV will MP"M0.,r.n0 K7unbiiudeK.pulrt.yo. H' sob Bitters. Th opeuln of th yt MSB i win ha aiitiialiied by th aiipearaue ot s 'M"h,A linn HIlu HCllim ui inn wui w-wtumw. '"': will he lucidly set Lrth. Kveiyoody sbou u it"?. t..b. found m tntluiuk h "inor aud other resdliil uislter rich In STtenst ...IfHllol profit. The Btltel Com- iiaiiy ot riiieourn, re., u,i.u .. m y euip oy more man msiy ua- -clmnl. a, work, and mere than levon months li ihe year are ooisuiiieu in . iri'i,... be ootaineu miuioui. ww m an "!,"eiv , . , : eountrv dealers, and l printed In hnitllsh, tl. r iiisii, reiioh. Velh, Niitweslan, Swedish, Hoi- .. . ,. , v.... u h ... u,.,i nun riiiar ...ii ......l.i.i .uAulhiuit. . She (usaslvelll 10, dulling, i iu yuuis. , An Only Daughter t urail of Con ampllon. .... .. j. ..... . u ...U ...i Imiim f.ViM. wneu wain w"" 'V,,'.,7W " , J, r timiitius, u i urines ii.i"s Jsnie. wss Xrliiinitln he soctdenlsll) Wane a onsnarawu ui ,-. V i cared hl.oniy child, sn.l now slves his recipe ree oil receipt ol two stamps to pay eipeusea tlemu isu miivB man, wv"i ....- . stomal h. aud will break a fresh nolil iu 'wenly. four hours. Address Oraitdock A Co., hXU Ka.e St., Flillauclphia, l'a., naming this paper. The tsay in..u slmi at nothing, slid generally ults II. Tn Osama for breakfast. Da tuantalto Stove FoUsh I no dast, no small OIVIS l$lVJOY Both the method and resulta what Syrup of Figs is taken; it b pleasant inu retresning to tne taste, ana tusu nuy yet promptly on the Kidneyi Iver and Bowels, cleanses the sye tern effectually, dispels colds, head tebes and fevers and cures habitus jonsti nation pormanently. For sab in 60o and tl bottles hy all druggist CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP Cfl iouitnut.gr. ummu.tr- SHILOirS CURE: Cure Conanmptlea, Cooaha, Croup, Sore ThroaA. Sold by all llruaiiti its a Guarantee. For a Lame Side, Back er CtTtrt Shlloh's Porous Plaster will give grsst saiifscika. j caata. 8HILOH'8 . VITALIIEII., Mrs. T. 8. HswklravOwtUmoeTon..syl ewruard." Kor l)vsiensla. U ver or KWnei trouble It exeela. Price 76 ot. ILOH'SlCATARRH Tj.,,,i .i.rrh Trv this Remedy. It will relieve and Cur you. Price Inntor for IUsuful treatment lafurnisheii SST 8hllh's Kemedle are sold by us oa ruiurante to give satisf action. August Flower" TJirrnt rlnrtoni tryntfrl tne for Heart r)iiii nnrl nne fiir Rheumatism. but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything mat I took into the Stornrch distressed tne. I mtilrl tint s1cn. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a netgnDor i got one 01 your dooks. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. This Trad Mark Is en Iks best WATERPROOF COAT SIEW In the World! A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASS, MOTIVE P0 WEB 1 urnnin ro gas and nLnUULLO GASOLINE siTsra-irsa. PALIIR k RET, Sal Francisco. Cal. M MM, Or. ANY WEAK MAN Who In futTerins, elthf In bli nina or fcxly, frxttu tli Injurious, or wtknlii flscUo( hi own lguorwi- (uIUm, nlniM aud eifWNM nn be quickly mad penun aenUycunMl, Pipmfn (II). no CM E k f.A 1. us vwwa w wis rortiina.vri ThM old Doctor! br famd 30 yrMMn' xirlno) In eurinn Irit. Hlood, Mn wntid ru1 Marin Dlsriuta. Wrlin bwlav. Rllabl Rmdl tint prlvattly to any addrttt. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY r oiimmlsilon, to handle the If aw Patent t'lism ea1 Jo Kra Ing Peouli. gnts maklnk afto IM' wufs. Monnie JUraser Manufacturing Co., Xsti Lacrosse, Wis. 1QTUM1 PIIQCrl nr BWKIIIRH ASTHMA CuM.lMS BROS. MED1CINK CO., rlt. Louis, Mo. Old Oold sn4 Sllrer Botifht; s soar oM Ool end Hllrer hf rasll to the old snil rsllatile bimss of i Oalenian, 11 Tlilrd stnst, San rraaoiiso; I IU ssad I letara mall the oash, aesoriUnt to assart tt toe enott Is aot satlsf astorr will return sold. s CfTUal A "n. urn ssrHrt,sir AO I ffirVI A-niBt)iiT.rbiniuiiiiiiioi,, Sfl'lrc.i, we wilt ml trial UvnCUwTTLa awrBisw THI tl. TAIT HM. M. M.,laCHtIU,.l,r KbB J. P. K, 0. mo. 471-8. . N. U. Ho. 646 ?5t50el V. 0V Afr. Amanda Pauley For manv vesrs ail attimvit rji)inniiinliiit of Trinity Kpl'i'iiiisl elinwli, Ncwlmritli, N. V shvs.s says'tThisnk 1'U IIihhI Sar sansrllla. Mli-stilU'ri'il lor jfrs f rum fraenist ., I ,,,, Im,. IimKiI anrt tars, making lirr ili-af iH'ar'v year, ami sfTrut- II1K llrSIKl. IV tnu suririse nn iiwim Hood's Oarsaparilla lta.MM,nl,l a mire and she esn now hear Sll'l see ss well as ever. Kor full fisrtlmiliir uf her rase sttua in c. i. itonu i, iii . In wiuUllloii, )iniHrlliin ami aiieriiii. VALtNTrNI't ELECTRIC BELT UiH IwlrHIM. Ts mmwiilsed b the me.l. ur fvasliiu ss tli only iiniiiinini-seiise Iwlt insdv fur th fur of tkniilual neakmss, rains l-i the Hark, Ues ol Memory, iirsn-r a, m-rvuns Pnislra km orau ilisess srllii Imn voiiili. fill linllsrrottnli. filer, s In one or two ilay It I'HiliS'lmn, cmillMlliill, i sraiysis, nmmy ur l.lverTtlillhles. trlne(l. He il inr el niilar. Hunt C. O, l. or on wlit ol price. Address JMssOOU MHOS , WrMRllst. Oakland )ell'orU I SOVEREIGN REMEDY. OB. PAVKKK'S HtlHK COl'OH ClIKS, On dnae will sUip a cough II neror falls. Try It. I'rli-e, cuts s but 1. For sale Uj all arumitata, hseldo twt Aseu S, SiO. OAMLSt NDIK CO.. Dtsgalsts. 14 K earn r Street, San Pranalaeo, Cal. Hercules Gas Engine Mact lor Powrar Of PumplnB Purpoeo. Th Ctieatwat ItellaM Oa Kiiflu on the Market, Out or CnqiNt ahs Pusns Kor Slmplleltjr 14 BeaU Ihs World. 14 oil Itawlf from a Keeerrolr, Ko Carburetor to (et out of order. Ma Itatterlee or KlMtrla Spark. It mns with a Cheaper Orsite of tlssullii llian any , vtliwr Knsme bkmo ros rTuxn's to ALMER & RCY, MAMUFACTOStsa, 405 Uiam ttrsst, Su Fructut, Cat. ' ASD . POWTLAND, OBIQim. Mmm sons emus Will cut Ur or Oreew Bones, Heat, Urlstle and all Ureea Cut B()NK will double th nnmla-r ol a will make tiicm mure lr tile will csrrr the ben ssfi-ljr tlirniujli the ranlUuf jierlml and nut them In condition Inlay when emit command the hlKheatprie lid will dorglone voni chirk faster Uiau sns Otnsr foul. Peed Green Tfone snd tme treosemeisi to kill th lire, slid yon will mas fifty per cxtU more profit. Send for Catsuofu and price. - FETALH11 rJCUBiTOI COUT, FniUJli, ML Guns for Everybody. Just received full Hue o. Parkar, Smith, Remington Ithl a , Le(vr, U. M.CCto. The mo.t com let stock In th Northwest. Send . ceiiulusumoslor lli-pane UlustraUd catalogue. H. T. HUDSON, SS First Street. POK1XANU, OR. ROGERS HEART TOflIC Never Fails to Give Relief CURES ONLY HEART DISEASE EEDInOTUI I CO, QUIRM t CO., Propi, a. t. aesare ' ees ssss, . r. (Trial bottle by Kspreea prepaid on receipt of price, li.ooJi VODHQ MEN I Tha Spaolflo A No. I. Cores, without fall, all eases of Semen-. keen and tUlestt, no mstler of imw Ion uiulliis. rrevsnts strlciiire, it twins an lu Icninl n meily. Cures whon cTsrytluns els ...nt Unlil Hv nil flrnmlMta. MaiiufaeniremXlteA.SiiliiMiiiliel.Meilloln rrlew. SS-OO. ,, . niy CI Is the acknnwledc leadlnc ramerly for all tcs nnnataral dlanharsee aas priTatedlssaassof men. a certain core for the datlit tatlnf weaknea paeallal to women. Iwrsasiysr . presort be It ana reel ss.-s TM((lMlfisESi(1Mf)ll. in reeommeadl( It tt an sunerera. told by BrwaaieJav I'Miuat i ImI tmt.nivml. 1 sv Xcnr 'S-Vl g WT06IlAYfl. si f jTilBsrsitMS set ts m I f sssm Sulslais. I I traataaaSPars1 1 A Stat Oouiih syrup. Tastes Oood. Ds t