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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1894)
03 he (Orctjcw gUat H A V 173 PAVIS, PubliMher -NOT IN HARMON'Y. Biiitci States ani County Official Pare TRIDAT, MARCH HO, 1894. GRAND KKPCBt.lCAN RALLY. Grand republican rally lit theopera-liouRe nil vvcino-tiav. April . rroiiiiiicnipca m from abroad luive been secured, and trrwxl programme ia asMired. "ihis is tin t)xiiiii itun oi the campaign and every o.iy aooatu tie in attmiuanct). " The primary nt Reuben, Wednesday Yewtfietl in the election of ueo. U. Ja .'qmali. Jamea Kennedy, J, M... Archt had H. C. Bl own, aa delegates to the convention, H. C. Brown numv "nated for justice of Hie peace, and Jas, Kennedy, for constable. In Sherman precinct V. D. Conncll nd Nelson Finckney were elected delegates to the convention. Skt Sunday ia April fool day, be "wise. There will be just such a day about the 5th ot Jane, the only difference will be " populists fooled" day. Tbs recent landslide which covered up several hundred yards of railroad track up at Holbrook was a pretty large-sized affair of its kind , but it isn't a circumstance to the one that is going to hil the poppies about the fifth of next June. Tat peoples party has alretidy fallen into .-the hands of politicians and time set vera. After months of agitation in favor of free -coinage of silver, neither is mentioned in the platform adopted at Oregon City. The people will not trust power to a party that thus, almost at the out-set ot its career, ig nores the most important principles on which it was founded. Time serving and political expediency never were successful It is authentically stated that as soon as the work of nominating the populist state ticket was over, the executive committee met and assessed each member of each populist club in the state twenty-five rents per week for campaign purposes. ' If all pay the assessment, the yield will be suffic ient to give the members of the executive committee a fair living until after the elec tion. Just where the profit will come in -will never in this world be seen, except by the members of the executive committee. It is just the same In Nebraska as it is in any other state or county where populists have been elected to offices of trust. The pop treasurer of Custer county, Nebraska, is reported short in his accounts all the way from $7,000 to $15,000. The gang of reformers with which the county b infested have borrowed the county money from the eimple old man , and now they are unable to pay it back, and lie and his bondsmen are left to hold the sack. Among his pa trons we notice the tiaiue of O. M. Kera. the pop congressman from that district, is down for the sum of f 1,700. Now that the pops have held their con vention and announced the personnel of (their ticket, we are impelled to wonder what ' has become of Prof: M. V: Korki thatham- foi-sopper nightmare who made politics hideous and caused dogs to run under the house two years ago. On account of his conspicuous absence it has been suggested that probably he lias gone to live among the Turks, whose habits, in some resiects, are said to be congenial with his own. W tthout this incarnation of a dipsomaniac's vision, how can there be a populist campaign? it is a little wonder Mint the populists, af ter privately maligning each oilier, should foil to liarmonute their divanrdnnt elements by trying to pre.ent candidates acceptable to all their a lherenU. If there was any basic principle upon which to found a third party, or if there was any unity of purpose save the one stilish one of expecting a re munerative office, there ini:lit have been concerted, aotlon. hut hardly had tiny censed howling the sltortvomingsot the two old parties and begun to foi mutate some thing definite, before they exposed theii utter and absolute Incompetency to com prehend the situation, and therefore pre pare for its emergencies. Called upon to formulate and declare their principle! in county convntioo, the icmnant left is suf licient evidence of on Ignominious failure, and while the candidates themselves may be men we consider as kindly neighbors i pleasant friends, their chief quaiitieutions for the several offices for which they have b?en named are decidedly scant, and the approval of the rank and Hie of their party is equally as want. Starting off two years ago with the theory that "There must In something wrong .somewhere," they bav tenaciously adhered to it until they have not only convinced themselves of the truth fulness of their position, but everyone who has observed their general course, and the light is dimly gleaming upou them that if the beam was removed from their own eve they could the more clearly see the inoti m their republican brothers' eye. Know nig now mine it wouia ue to aepenrt upon a fair and truthful statement of facts, their editorial writings are laden with perver sions and falsifications too numerable to refute in particular, and when challenged to open discussion find some urotest to re- fraim and avoid exposure. No opportunity is neglected to engender jealously and strifi between labor and capital. No occasion overlooked to advocate various phases of socialism and even anarchism, and finally tiring of their own puerile inutteriagx against the legal-tender act. their candidate for congress in the first district, Charle: Miller, comes out and sounds the kev-note of the campaign by using the following language: "we aim to show the necessit, of national paper money, made by law. without a redeemer that will not take wings and leave us when we most need it." Tbe colonists found that with all the force of law and penalty, as soon as it was found that they were unable to redeem their paper money, notwithstanding their evident in-, tenlion and honesty of purpose topay.their paper money became worthies! and ceased to circulate, and if onr populist friends were very careful students of history they might, without much credit for sagacitv. easily see that their money would be like the Irishman who said "It would be better he went away before he ever came at all." But bitterly censured as 4txf republicans have been for paying in better money than was contracted for, they will find that the po'icy of honesty will prove the best either ationally or individually, and there is onh one thing needed to insure a complete Jri- uiupn at the polls next June and that is this: To bear in mind that the people of Columbia county owe nothing to any can didate, and if he gets it he should find no fault; second, that- there are not officers enough to supply all aspirants, and the elegates are supposed to select men with reference to capability and honesty first, geographical location being a nwon.Wry matter, and finally whoever is elected and proves recreant to the trust imposed upon him, it would be better if a millstone were hanged about his nei-k, and he cast'iiito TIok. Johx T. Afpeksos will, in all prob ability , be the strong man for the governor ship at the state republican convention, .next month. Mr. Apperson possesses all the qualities which are necessary to enable ! one to efficiently and honestly administer in such a capacity, and should the conven tion see fit to bestow such .honors upon Mr. Apperson it will have acted with extreme prudence, and placed in nomination the .name of a man which cannot be upbraided or centured in any respect, and a man who will draw heavily from the ranks of the op posing elements. RAILROAD RATK WARS. There Is but one kind of war which the American people are displeased to see on and that is n railroad rate war. Such wars are, iu a rule, incidents of a business de- nression. and at the very time when the scant business which the country afford should bo carefully gnarded.so as to secure the best results and be mathematically ap portioned among the various transport tion lines interested there seems to be ni unseemly scramble as to who shall secure he most of the booty, and what should be cgilimato business rivalry degenerates Into :i.ne. because unbridled, competition These remarks are elicited by the repoi that the two east-bound freight and pu- senger pools, which the Trunk Line am 'entral Tratllo associations hRd spent oich time in organising, had been split wide open, and wer now admitted to b failures. The same report further said that . the very day when the presidents of U two associations signed the agreements-, o very so a thereafter, some of the official went out to devise means to getting uround (Heir contracts This is not auri'rbiiip b ,-ause it has been know n from timeimmci orial, almost,, that railroad contracts ha tot enough vitality to last until the ink w. dry on them, and that railroad officials, i .eir insane competition for business, won) lory in eccentricities of conduct, whic '"V would blush to acknowledge as gci: tlenien. THE DEMOCRATIC PRKDICAMENT. THE COPPER WAS GAY. the sea. THE OREOOX P0PPIK8. Tub Dallas Transcript, a straightoat re publican' paper, speaking of the populist candidate for governor, gays: "Nathan Pierce, the populist candidate for governor, is a great big, good-natured gentleman.who appears as innocent as a new-bora b ihe and as unsuspecting as a Iamb. But any man who will lend his aid, as he did In the 'presidential election of 1802, to a damnable scheme to allow a party to which he pre tends to be a bitter enemy to capture the government, should be defeated on general principles. Republicans, of populistic Ideas, iiould remember this, and stay with their arty.' The peoples party does not lack for prao ical politicians as witness the nominees and proceedings of the state couvention at Oregon. City. It has met tbe fate of all new parties. Disappointed office-seekers from -the old parties, in whose ranks they could gain no recognition, have flocked to its standard. While the greater part of its ad herents are honest and well-meaning in itheir intentions, there is a considerable ele ment that is therefor preferment and sel ifisb motives Among them are many wbo have been democrats, republicans, irreen fbavkero, independents, prohibitionists, wo men suffragists, and any other ism or ists that might have been a popular fad. It is ,a heterogeneous crowd. Americans today have as brilliant an il lustration of exact populist doctrine as could possibly be drawn, in the actions of Capt. Coxey and his army of 300,000 men who are marching to Washington City. It H a riotous, unlawful mob, composed prin cipally of low, foreign immigration. Tbe movement is somewhat in advance of the expectations of the average populist, but the same sentiment is prevalent in each, however. The rank and file of the whole thing bears out, in unmistakable promi nence, the motive and intent, which is to .. .compel the goverment of the Cnited States to hand nut, in equal aaaounts to each, the proportionate sums which they may de mand, and if their requests should not be complied with, then there is likely to he an attempt made to compel such distribution. What could savor more strongly to the pre cepts of disloyalty and treason? Where would such an uprising be permitted save in the United States? Nowhere; and the leooner there is some action taken to stop stills movement tliii better it will bo for the tcutiutry at. large and ihe wotM in general. The populist party is not new in Oreson. It-has existed in one form or another.under ifferent names, from an early day, and if e may be permitted to judge from the per sonnel of the county tickets recently nom inated in several of the counties, from the delegates selected to the state convention, and from tbe delegates to tbe county con ventions, we have only to couten . against the same advocates of crank theories who have been with us a long time, savs the Saieni Statesman. Last year they were known aa the peoples party, which was an offspring of tbe farmers' alliance They were known to us previous to that time as the union party, greenbackers, prohibition ists, the . labor party, anti-monopolists, workingmen's party, etc. They have been voting for minority candidates from away su ivb! jieauway nas oeen made by them, and they are practically making none now, except as they are securing converts from among, the rank and file of the several kinds of democratic party. Occasionally yon hear of a republican being led estrav. but'lt is noticed that these conversions of republicans are always being made in the next precinct or next county. And when that precinct or county is visited the revo lution is located in a ill the next one. And Buugues. i rue, we an have among our acquaintacces one or two old-time republi cans who have fallen under the seductive wiles and ways of the poppies, but it i a dollar to doughnuts that these same con verts to the populist crank theories were staunch republican candidates for office not longer ago than two years, or four at most, before the republican nominating; conventions, in IfStt, in Marion countv me popuuscs poiiea out 52J votea for con gressman out of a to:al of 5,401 ballots cast about ten per cen t. And the vote of the populists (then peoples party) in the en monms later lor supreme juage was nut out of a total vote of 7a,4-only six per cent. But. undaunted by defeat, the disgruntled clement the third party, known under whatever name conies handy incapable of gaining pros elytes, continues to agitate and throw away its suffrages on an outside ticket Fusion between democrats and nonulista this year is out of the question. A few democrats cried for it at first, but it is a dif ficult matter nowadays to find a democrat who would vole for a prohibitionist and of these there an not a few on the pop tickets. And fusion is impossible for the pops won't fuse a good reason , you must admit, - When the democrats made their pledge to reduce the tariff and to cripple the p ;cy of protection, the country was in prosperous condition, and it looked as ii they might redeem such a pledge with ti precipitating a serious misfortune. It di iot seem possible that any change in tin tariff system would make any great differ nee. That feeling really led to the ele t:on of Cleveland. A large number of thos- who voted for him thought that the pro- ,sed experiment might be safely tried, and that in any case there would be no panic and no calamity. But they wer mistaken in that view, as they soon ascer tained when the effects of the democrats Victory began to be lelt, ; They know no I at the prosperity which they supposed vould continue in any event was depend ent upon the conditions that bad beeu es tablished and maintained by the repm icans. Things began to assume an on, moils aspect directly after the beginnin of the new administration; and they gre teadily worse until all forms of intlu-tr. iiid ail kinds of business were terribly de pressed. The sky looks a little briehti ha ii it did six months ago, but the cloud a e still there, and the fact is manifest that tariff re'orm is not calculated to dispeisc them. If another election were to be he'o oday, the majority in favor of a reston- tion of republican rule would be over whelming. It is impossible, however, for the demo crats now to turn back. They are bonn- .o go ahead with their scheme of anli-pii,- eciive legislation. It means defeat t . them, but to stop where they are would be to invite the same result. They are com mitted to a course from which they t-u iot escape, whatever the consequences ma. be. If tiiey C m'.d evade the rtnqnihitiiy tney would gladly do so, hut that i nut he question. They are delaying the pu "'! t the Wil-rfiii bTirwtrh -Tbe-riOpT Tti--it may be tii kered into a more aeceptabl hape, or that circumstances may chang jo it.-, advantage; but there is no rea-on t e.'kve that they will gain anything in tha vay. i lie fact that they arc pledged o t lolicy of Inutility to protected industries it wJl understood, and it has caused gene !,l -itarm and apprehension. They cannot amend the pending measure in such a de cree as to make it satisfactory even to thii iwn party. Its purpose is destructive, it principle is antagonistic to the interests of til classes. The people are asaiiist it fi easons which are conclusive It is in ever espect the worst tariff bill that has t v. H-eti formulated. Tbe men whoconcccP " ore free-traders, and the party by whi" it is to be inflicted upon the country ia a f.-ee-trade organization. There is no way to prevent its passage, but it should be res Ititely fought at every step, and it will surely be repuifia'rd at the pulls. But It Couldu't Fool the Daughter of tha Chief r I'ollrv. Ho was a St. Paul policeman. Ho stood ou the corner knocking flios from the buck of his neck and look ing wine. A sweet little luisa, ap parently of 28 summers and with nn sppeanince uninistaktlily southern,' nppronched hint mid timidly iu quired: "Cnn yon direct nie to the Metro polihvn Opera House I" The "copper" sized her up, then thrust hit) big chin into the air again and indifferently replied: "Waul, yis." He said no more, and she waited patiently for a moment. The wise boy was unmoved and stood like a dummy in its niche. "Well." she finally iuquireda little impatiently. The copper gazed at her from over his chin and looked as though he had never seen her before. "I askod you," Bhe snid with ex asperation, "if you could direct me to the Metropolitan Opera House." "I kin," tie replied stiffly. "Well, why don't you do it then!" "Why, ma'am," in astonishineut, "ye didn't ax me." She looked at him pityingly for an instant, then sho grew angry. ".Look here, Mr. Clgarsign, or what ever you are," she said, "if. you are hired to play jokes on the publio you ought to get a permit. I asked you a civil question, and you answered me with an alleged joke that is so old that it has white whiskers a joke that Billy Emerson got off in the Boston Museum a hundred years ago. If this is your Becond tune on earth, you ought to hanir out a sign, for people might think you are an innocent little thing and steal you some warm afternoon. I want to tell you that my father is chief of police, and if you don t show me ex actly where that theater is, and that within two minutes, I'll tell father the whole business and- might induce hi in to start you on the hunt for a job." . bue paused a moment, ana the "copper's" attitude underwent an im mediate and surprising change. He attempted to apologize, but she wouldn't have it. At a 2:40 gait he started in the direction of the the ater, the young girl smiling as she toddled along at his heels. The the ater reached, she smiled and said: "There, you old relic of a forgot ten past, I got even with you for your smartness. I never saw the chief of police," and she hummed a bar of "Do fiot Forget Me" as she disap peared within the playhouse. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Arariy.lltll Hide. E, It. Swetnain, of Fairfax station, Vir ginia, says: "A parly t ame forty miles tu my store lor Chamberlain's Omijth Uciuedv and bought a thmen bottles. The remedy Is a great favorite in this vicinity, and has performed some wonderful citrus hero," It is intended especially I'm' coughs, colds, croup, and wh"opjng cough, and is a favor- no wneiover Known, for tuie by luiwtu KOSS, Trout lishing sport of lite day. is now tlio leading ttheumatiatii (illicitly Cured. Three days Is a very short tun lu which to cure a bad castt or rlieuiniiiiMn; hut It can he done, if the proper treatment s adopted, as will be seen hv the t'ollow'iiv from James Lambert, of New Hrunswiek, HI.: " I was ba.ily ftflllcted with rheuma tism In the hips and legs, when I bought i bottle of I'liamberlain a I'm a Halm. It cured me in thr-e day. 1 am all rljihl to day : and would Insist on everyone who Is alllicted with that terrible disease to use utiumneriam a rum Ii dm ami get well at once," Fhty cent bottles for sale by Kd ivin Koss. The river is sumdily falling. Titer Wniil tho Ileal. "The people of this vklnltv Insist on having Chamberlain's Cough Itemedy and do not want any other," savs John V. Hiahop, of I'ortland Mills. Indiana. That is ri;;iu. iiicy Know U to be superior to any other tor colds, mid as a nreveiihv and cure for croup, and why should they not insist unon having it, Fifty cent bottles for sale by iidwln Hoss. This weather is eiioiiuh tu give one the spring fover. A Belle of 177. Captain Q. W, Bullene.TJnited States inspector of boilers, has a pocket piece which he prizes highly. It is a cop per token or souvenir just the size of a silver dollar, issued by authority of the I irst congress and bearing the date "Itro." On one side is the familiar relief of the Goddess of liberty, beneath her the date, and over her head a ktoud of 13 stars with spreading rays be neath them. Around these is the in scription containing the first of the self evident truths of the Declaration of Independence, viz, "These united colonies are and of right ought to be free aud independent states." The inverse side is so worn that all the lettering cannot be read. Around the margin aro tho words, "By authority of the congress of the United States." Inside of this is a wreath forming a full circle, in the lower part of which appear tho words, "American inde pendence." Above these words the surface is worn, and only the letters ion" can be made out. Seattle Post Intelligencer, t ONE DAY CURE HATTEES w4GO r irV 'Vv OW.FL MF'G CS-POFVTLANO.O For Salt by Edwin liosa, St, Helens, Or THE B-A-NTQUEjT Jvmln Htiwot, Bt. Helena. Oi'KOii, FINE WINES, LIQUORS, AND CIGARS. rlt 0!lurt "&ttniiiv ." &V Prtttiht. A Oood miliar.! and l'ool Tablets pr.iyM.yl '" " ' ','(,". TI!aWv ' W',W Wl,h to nd it phiasiinl hour should lemviuher "Tub UAM4U ill. Onlu tin iuvst auh 1 ! awh. Card Tables are nt the disposal ol patrons who wish to Indulge in a sorlnl gniueof rsrtls, and w Sn sisurS iLa tl.nt they will bo well treated ut "TMH UANl'KX. ' VT, A. MF. Kit liUi. JVopi'lutor LEADING - RESORT - IN - THE - CITY FOREST .- GROVE POULTRY .- YARDS! ESTABLISHED IN 1877. EGGS for hatching from Wyandotte, Plymouth Rock, Light Drtthnias, Btowa and White LtahortiB, America's boat brevut. yrt: (Oitf ttit,it, $13,00. tout ttin, $5,00 No Finer breeding Ilinla on the Pucillo Coaat. My Fowl have been in the l..ad for the l'usl Btivenleen Yar, Tho only full-Hedged poultry yard in ihii itaUt. Jl ittv hole (jroclirrrl. for Sale at gtt.OO gatlt. imh- Soiid Stamp for catalogue. Address: J. M. Garrison, .... Forest Grove, Oregon THE OREGON MIST The oldest established and only reliable paper In Columbia County. Publishes the news from every section of the toiiuty, and is the official paer, puhll-hin all the county court proceedings In their correct form. 1'rt r, 11.4 a year. When It comes lo Job Printing, w will sav that weean m cute it aa neatly as any ulllce on the Cnlniuhia river, barr ing none. We hare recently received new material, con sisting of new type, and resveclfuily solicit your patronage. SPECIAL NOTICES. The Connt? Treasarer SPU at leiut on etc) )- TheunilrrMinietl trill 1m In thin r.t.i Friday with his Patent saw t-unnul,, ,u. imno, ami ui prrpnreu iO KUIII and nie saws iieave your saws at Hie blacki-nilfh shop, u. r. i owl'K. FPOR' SAL R At private snU, for cash, to th hifhr bidder, the foliow'ng-dcscriiwd real prop my, tii : "The north went oue-miarter of uie miuiiineni one-iiarier ot section Ho. 6, tnwnhip No, 4 north, ranee No I, went of me Willamette meridian, contuining 44 . to acres, uius win te received 10 Mav ah, IHSH. Address all couimiinlmtions to J. 11, NORTON, 1'acilio tlrove, Monterey County, California. WIND AND I'Ol'ULISTS. The following resolutions were adoptee by the national populist league in conven tion assembled: Whereas ; Wind is as ancient as human hUtory ; and Whrkeas; Grovor Cleveland has formed a gigantic conspiracy with the corrnpt money power of the east to destroy the parity between wind and cash; and ' Whekeas; the shylocks of the east by tbe most gigantic crime of the ages have demeditimized wind; and whekeas, ine paying 01 our debts in cash would constitute the betrayal Of wind ; and ; Whereas; It Is one Of the natural rights of men to borrow cash and pay back in wind ; and Whereas ; Tbe hat Is a useful instrument for helping the organs of speech ; and Whekeas; We can make more noise than any other combination 011 earth. Therefore, iu view of all these facts, we declare ' ', , . ,- . First, National depositories for the free and unlimited storage of wind shall be everywhere established. Second, Against such deposits, free and unlimited wind certificate shall be issued at par and delivered to tho people 011 demand. Third, Such certificate" shall be legal tender all over the world, except for debt due to members of the American wind league. Fourth. We denounce the cash bues of the east, and the ever-fattening uionev mi crobes of the old world. Fifth , We demand a cheap and speedv transportation to hades of all our adversaries. ' . 1 - . J : The Mist is only fl.BO par year. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair. OlFRSf Slow Advance Toward tha North, The difficulties that make the quest of the pole so arduous have been dis covered by slow degrees. It is mar velous how soon nearly the full lim its 01 nortnwaru attainment were reached. In 15'J6 Barents discovered Spitsbergen in about 78 degrees north ; in 1770 Hudson reached 80 de grees; in 1827 Parry, by sledging on the ice when his ship became fast. succeeded in touching 62 degrees 45 minutes. Kince tnen all the enor mous resources of modern science- steam, electricity, preserved foods and tne experience of centuries- have only enabled 40 miles of addi tional poleward advance to be mode. McClure s Magazine. Fads of tha Pari Tonne Men. The superfine young men in Paris. "according to the imaginative corre spondent, not content with mere boot lasts, have plaster casts made of their legs from the waists down. with the object of keeping both their trousers, their knee breeches and even their underwear in proper shape. One youth, with more money than Drams, nas an entire room of bis residence devoted to the reception of some 60 pairs of plaster of pans counterparts of his legs, and noth ing is more peculiar tban the spec tacle presented by this army of fullv clothed limbs standing about with out any trunk and head. Two Weighty Beawna. "Halloa, old chap, looking for fresh lodgings? Why sot" "Oh, for two reasons! First, be cause, my late landlord's daughter played the piano all daylong: and, secondly, because be turned me out for pot paying my rent. " Exobatiiirfl. NOTICE. United States Land Oflire, Oregon t'liy, Oregon, ,,.. L . . February 1 1, mot. Complaint havtng been entered at this oltlce on the 6tU day of September. Is, l, Chrkllan K. Lurmn ag.iln.it Charles Johuwin, for al,an. donlug Ills honieKtead sntry No. W.VA dated Anir- IlKt 14. InUl. unon LliH n.irth A .t h ....... , ?. Y ?,' f11 township 8, 1101th range, 6 west, hi Columbia county. Oregon, with a view lo the cancellation of wild entry; the said parties ar ...., -.,.,,,.,,,.... Iu 1M,eur m mm onice, In 25S,'?,n");l0reOB'0"",:'',", ,u" Al'ril. testimony concerning said at)cgl abandon Blent. Kua'T.A.MlLLKR. ItnrlMitr. , fTa Pintir, llecelver. THE OREGON MIST THE ST, CHARLES HOTEL Corner Front and Moi-riaon ltr(. Thia in the moat popular bold in Portland, and hn hrtrn for many year. If you want to moot a friend you will atm-ly Unci him at the Bt, Charles. It also enjoys tlio putroiiaye ol the Uia incn men of the ttuto, and lias cm t icons atUtiduuta employed. Fnvorltn ITotal of tha City of 1'urtlnntt. o. w. K:JsroA7J,TEc. I'poprioto Farmers' and Merchants' ALBANY. ORtGON. POPHAM'S THE ONLV QUARANTEEO 0UR6 FOB RHEUMATI8M. NEVER FAILSIf e reier vou to David Van !yke, Castls Rrx-k Wahh.Kton; L. Besmls. Catlln, WailneKm R. Foster, Frojort Washlnatoti; Riinuiel Low of the peace of Clit.lanl'e: ' Jno. Cnuwar. en imw oryniu 1 mill, i:iulnnlo. tlreBoii: c. dreds of othen If reiiietel. ' We refer 10 tho-c because they are clo by, and are well known WK DON'T CROiS THB AT LA.NTIC FOU RKFERE.VCKS $1.00 per Bottle. Sii Bottles for $5.( SOLD AT THE LABORATORIES OF THE CXAT8KAN1J5, ! ! ORROON. aslao1 aa niwaa pld w wkly from startT PsnnaaaBtnMlUaa. spartenoe annMrj, araatatowlMnnam SMumlMloB to looal Uim aits, fmm of bartf.nllabla XntasmterrlioiT Farallur . UlwnU. PM-. tor Va orchard. Wft want yon wow, whil lmfortAt. Oood ebMiM lor ar&oaement. One ud full ir- tltfllmfrM, BROWN BUOH CO., Qur- rrmn, Part!nL Or. (Tbl JMraMi JAPAKEBB "CD I L-E CURB amng owaer: uly rure reaiu ot Tartar Fowder.-No Aramouia; No Alum, Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard age. and many have laid foandxtlona Hut wilt arely brlmt ilu.m rl,.l,. . .. . i.: .. ..-''! Box aud Pill: a Foftlve Cure for Enternal, In- I I'" " couutrjr owe their iiicceu In lit in A new and eoniDfete treatment, coimfurinir of SupKitarfi, Olntmenu lu Capfulea, alu la ternal, Blind and Bleedlnir, Itchlug. Clironle, itevent or Hereditary Pile, and many other $3,000.00 A YEAR FOR THE INDUSTRIOUS. Ifvoo want work ll.at I. Pla,nt.nd prontabla, lend a vour addreMn hntni w. . ,." 5 and women how to earn from 4(1.00 per davtb experleu,ai.d f.irnl.U theemnlovment it which . ,,IH, HIUuuiii. noun learn or that renulrea muh ilm ay. Iilthy,and honorable, nnrl can bedon. dur. dtaeaaaa and female weakuenM: It ia alwa mat benefit to tha axneral hMlth. Th I diacovery of a metlcaTeure reuderlng an opora- lyna lion with tne knife unueecuarv honmlter. Tbui Keusety ba never been known to fall. 1 r.er box. a fortft; aeiit by mall. Why mffer from th la terrible diaeoae wlieu a written guarantee I. given with o lioxe. to refund the money If not fuired. Bciifl tt&uip for free ttamole. Uoaraiitee ImiiM bv Woouiao, Ci.xe if J"., Wtinle!a aud Jlaiaa Driuutuna, Sol Agula, 1'srUauO, Or. othlnir difficult to The work la ,'J .. ' mn-uir, unn can eeaont dur. ?.? d"",ne " evening", right In yoar own loc.l. " j or ootii Dexei and all I roandxtlona that wilt ffmne of the ainarlaat the atart given tliem while lu our ago. Yoa, reader, may do aa well: trv If V, ,. i'fNocpltarneoeMa. WVfltyonout b'.vivc iree lu Mil. INSURANCE COMPANY. OF AUTHORIZED CAPITAL.... 1500 000 SECURED CAl'ITAL. ...... 247.500 ill' uArllAL 7400 raa,w rnuptiiiTv a nrKciJM.Tr. For particular apply at the ofllce ol Dlllard & Colt., or Till Mmt oftle. ST. HELENS, : f . . . . . OREOOSf. THE JOSEPH KELLOGG & COMPANY'S RIVER STEAMER iJJBJUtfai'" " STR JOSE3PH JrCEH-jTJjOaO- -FOR PORTLAND- p "VJF18? Mo"''J. Wtdneiday. and FritJayE at 0 o'clt Portlaml Tucaday, Thursday and Saturday at t) o'clock a. m. 'clock a. ni, Laavea Astoria Marble Works, J, H. IM1IOFF, PRO'F. MAHUFACTtIKKR OF Marble and Granite WORK All Kinds of Cemetery Worn. FOOT OF OI.NEY BTEKET, A.stoia Jit O recon THE PORTLAND AND CLATSKANIE ROUTE. 1 Mil by wrltliir for It to-day-aot to-iaorrow. Help your. lelaya are coatiy. E C. ALLEN & CO.. Box 420, AUGUSTA, MAINE. I niiJirJ - .... - tv . bi iy-a" 'ia inrifsi-.. i Ml I IT i i f SARAH DIXON, G. M, Sharer. Master.