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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1894)
.zvwvKwmx'mmwMmwm Ioeoroe'ji. PULLMAN. Be on your Guard. 1 If some grocers urge another baking powder upon you in place of the Royal," it is because of the greater profit upon it This of itself is evidence of the supc- v" riority of the "Royal." To give greater profit the other must be a lower cost . powder, and to cost less it must be made with cheaper and inferior materials, and thus, though selling for the same, give " less value to the consumer. . . To insure the finest cake, the most wholesome food, be sure that no substi tute for Royal Baking Powder is accepted by you. Nothing can be substituted for the Royal Baking Powder arid give as good results. MOW THB PALACE CAB MAGNATE GOT HIS START IN LIFE'S JOURNEY. worn la the Country! Ilia First Wage Amounted to but 140 ft Tear Cabinet Maker, Bolldlns Monrud Baiaer, Plka IVak Gold Seeker, Millionaire. George M. Pullman, whose difference I With hi employee brought about the IXb boycott aud ttrlkuo, U 63 yours old. He was burn Id Brocton, Chautauqua I county, N. Y., and like most country boy attended school more or Iom ri'ttulnr- ly till he was about 14 years old. Then ho went to work In a couutry general itoro at a salary of $10 a year. Ho staid there three years, and it is of record that ho earned his money. Ho hod already begun to show that he eosscsscd the geulus of accumulation, fur I when he left the country store he hud I capital of $50, which had been saved out of bis nienuer weans. With this he went to Albion, N. Y., where his brother had a cabinet shop. Vat this brother the boy went to wore, though, not exactly as an I employee, fur his little savins were in vested in a partnership Interest In the I shop, ; Ueorgo learned tho trade quickly. I and the two did very well, so well ludevd that when a few years later an opportu nlty for a man of Ingenuity aud entoriniao to make money came up the younger of the two wo equal to the oinergency. fits chance was furnished by tho widening of the trie canal. This made It nooessary to THE CHILDHOOD OF THE HEART. Ob, the rosy days of childhood How blissfully they sped When rml a rliarm had vanished And nut a wonder fledl The year sraa full of promise them The tongue waa full of praise; But I think the cap Is sweeter aow Than In the childish days. Oh, the laturhlnjt world of childhood. Of Ignorance and easel The Ughlest touch could quicken, - And Lite least pleasure please. Vet the upward paths are dearer. With all the thorns they bear. Than a garden of a hundred flowers When iicaorauce is there! Oh, the beating heart of childhood That little heart of snow That douttt has never entered Nor sorrow has brought kjwt Trust me. not all the raptors Its eatrer life ran spaa Can shadow forth the perfect love That warms the breast of man. Dora R. Goodale in Harpers Weekly. The Old Astronomy. One of the Hesiodic poems, "The Works and Oars," composed, perhaps, a century and a half later than the Homeric, gives pre cept upon precept to farmer and mariner, and teaches them how to observe the seek so rift, at a period when almanacs were as yet Unknown: "When the Pleiades, daughters of Atlas, rise, begin your harvest; when they set. your plowing. When after the winter sol atice Zeus has fulfilled sixty days of win ter (then it is that Arctiinis, having left the sacred stream of Ocean, rises in the twilight brightly beaming), prune your rinea, When Sir! us parches head and knees, and the body is dried up by reaxoa "of heat, then sit in the shade and drink. When Orion and Sirius have reached mid heaven, and rosy fingered dawn beholds A returns, then gather and carry home your grape cluster. When, flying the im pctuous might of Orion, the Pleiades sink into the mity deep, then rage blasts of wind, haul ashore j our ship and cover her around with stones. " The mention of the solstice here And else where In the poem implies careful astro noinical observation. Arcturua, "the bear keeper." is a bright star in the consul la tion Bootes. Gentleman's Magazine. H pell bound. The eighty-Eve teachers in the public schools, of Lockport had a spelling con test the ether day, to the great delight of their pupils, because some of the teach ers did not altogether cover themselves with glory. Of the eighty-five only five spelled "Rensselaer" correctly, and 74 per cent, of the whole number misspelled "acknowledgment.'' All of the follow ing words were wrongly spelled by more than half of the teachers, and several of them by more than fifty: "Supersede, "resuscitative," "excellence," "benefit ed," "business," "medal," "mainte nance, "milliner, "pretentious," "gas eous" and "concede." The name "Gene see" is said to have caught a good many victims. Boston Journal. Pmcrassir Literature. W. K. Josss, 291 Alder unt,rurufuo,vr. THE MASTER PASSION. Alleged to Be the Mania For Getting Free Passes For the Flay. "I was once present, " said Charles Dickens, "at a social discussion which originated by chance. The subject was. 'What was the most absorbing and long est lived passion in the human breast? What waa the passion so powerful that it would almost induce the generous to be mean, the careless to be cautious, the tuneless to be deeply designing and the iove to emulate the serpent?' A daily editor of vast experience and great acnteness, who was one of the company, considerably surprised us by saving. with the greatest confidence, that the passion in question was the passion of getting orders for the play. There had recently been a terrible shipwreck, and very few of the surviving sailors had scaped in an open boat One of these on making land came straight to London and straight to the newspaper office with his story of how he had seen the ship go down before his eyes. That young man had witness ed the most terrible contention between the powers of fire and water for the de struction of that ship and of every one on board. He had rowed away among the floating dying and the sinking dead. He had floated by day, and he had fro- sen by night, with no shelter- and no food, and as he told his dismal tale he , rolled his haggard eyes about the room. "Wnen he had finished and the tale had been noted down from his lips, he was cheered and refreshed and soothed and asked if anything could be done for him. Even within him that master passion was so strong that he immedi ately replied that he should like an or der for the play. My friend, the editor, certainly tnongnt tnat was rather a strong case, but he said that during his many years or experience he had wit nessed an incurable amount of self pros tration and abasement having no other object and that almost invariably on the part of people who could well afford to pay." Exchange. Portland Academy SIXTH YEAR Will open September 24. Prepares' for college. Give advanced English course. Mow prepared to receive boarder ss well s day scholars, For catalogue address fOKTL.ND ACADEMY. 191 Eleventh si reel, Portland, Or. 711 term eommeneee September t, 1894. Com mercial t oate,Uhorthsnd course and two yeais' fcnglUn course, bend for catalogue. FOR LADIES! ' SJIOO Ilf COLD will be paid by the Koch Chemical t!o. for any case of female weakness last win not yield to OK. 1. 8. Ks:H'S AMI- Baron; baii ativke ruttDGa, box. for sale by all draggling. Price f 1.00 per Only a Step from Weak Lungs to Con sumption, from Depleted Blood to Anaemia, from Dis eased Blood to Scrofula,from Loss of Flesh to Illness. Scott's ' till II" 'MWBBailllllSfflsaaa ' ' . Emulsion Hardy Climbing-Rose. In the prairie rose we have a class of hardy native climbing roses often found growing wild in Michigan and the west ern states, which we may plant with confidence. Two of the more commonly known roses of this class, which are fa vorites everywhere on account of their hardiness, free blooming, and the fact of their flowers appearing just after the other varieties are nearly over, are Queen of the Prairie and Baltimore Belle, vari eties raised in the year 1843 by a rose grower named Feast, in Baltimore, from seeds of the wild prairie rose crossed with some European variety. These two, the former red and the latter white. when grown near each other on the same porch or with intertwining branches, heighten each other s beauty by con trast Both are of rapid growth and may be employed to advantage for cov ering any unsightly objects as walls, old trees, old buildings, etc. Among the most desirable roses of the prairie class we have Annie Maria, vigorous, pale pink, very lew thorns; Baltimore Belle, pale bluish, changing to white; Gem of the Prairie, free, believed to be from Queen of the Prairies crossed with Mme. Laffay, rosy red, occasionally blotched with white, large, flat flowers, slightly fragrant; Queen of the Prairies, vigor ous, rosy red, frequently with a white stripe, medium or large size, double, fa ilure large, five leaflets, quite serrated; Triumphant, vigorous, rosy pink, me dium size, double or full, distinct, seven leaflets arecommoa Cleveland Leader. OEOROR M. PtU.MA.H. move many building back from the edge of the artificial waterway in order that the necessary additional excavations could be made. When young Pullman had finished mov ing Duiimngs along tho canaL be had a capital of 5,000 or $8,000. A Chicago lady, who was visiting In Albion told him that the street level of the big western city was about to be raised, and that there bad been a good deal of trouble experi enced In lifting the heavy buildings. This was late In the fifties, and Pullman bo took himself at once to Chicago. ma success there was great, but In I860, tho work of elevation having been practically accomplished, he sighed for new fields. When the civil war broke out. business prospects looked bad, and hear ing that gold had been discovered at Pike's peak he 'wont thither, where he remained till some time in 1804. Then he returned to Chicago and set about build ing his first sleeping car. Ho was seized with the notion that some time he would do this one night, which he passed lu one of the old Woodruff sleeping cars, just be fore be left Albion. The bunk In which he lay was so uncomfortable that he did not sleep at all, but his active mind de vised a plan for a sleeping car which he now set about putting into concrete form, This car was built In a shed bcloniiinn to the tJMcoRo and Alton Kailwny com pany. Pullman personally supervised Its construction, and before it was finished had expended 118,000 upon it. It was wider and higher than other cars, and railroad managers laughed at hi expecta tions mat ic could bo successfully run, There was no way, they said, by which it could be passed over their roads but by moving back the platforms of the stations and raising the bridges. The car had not been finished long when President Lincoln was assassinated, and It was proposed that it ne nsea in the funeral train from Chi cago to Springfield. The managers of the Alton rood, who had more faith in the new car than had most other railroad managers, made the necessary changes In their bridges and platforms, and it was run over the Una It was afterward put on regularly and found to be a drawing card. Orders for more cars came in quite as rapidly as Pullman wanted to build them, and In 1867 the business had grown so that it was found necessary to organize a toe it company. 1 be growth of the Pullman comnanv has been constant and rapid ever since. Its capitalization, some of It water, Is now 130,000,000. It was not until 1876 that the 8,600 acres of land on which the town of Pullman was built a year or two later purchased. When everything was ready, the erection of the town proceeded rapidly, immense factories, beautiful dwellings, churches and other public buildings rising as If summoned by the wand of an eastern magician from the flat, half bog prairie. Inside of 13 months after the ground was broken there were not only handsome and substantial build ings, but broad, well paved streets, per fect sewer system, waterworks and sag pipes, and In this city those employed by the Pullman company were expected to reside. No one could buy a home, however. and alt must observe the Pullman rules. These things no doubt contributed to the dissatisfaction, which became serious when LUCK IN ODD NUMBERS. Inpersttrtrm of Modem Gambler VCbich Are "as Old a the Ullls." . If. there la one active principle that autcrt into gambling, it 1 superstition, and for almost every man that hunts the elusive dollar over tho desolate waste of the green baise cloth, or on the race track, or in any of the other ninltttudi nous ways or places that one may lay liege to alluriug fortune there is sep arate fancy. Jack McDonald, one of the best known bookmaker of America, believes that he is most successful in those years which are indicated by odd numbers, aud if you are doubtful of the truth of it he will offer you figures to prove it "Curluy B, " as Bookmaker Woolf is best known, has a steadfast belief in "3," and after he has selected a hone to bet upon he will place au extra heavy wager ou him if he discovers that he is numbored "8" ou tho programme. Several superstitious butting men at the Morris park races a few years ago uoticed the coincidence that the thir teenth day of the meeting full upon June 13, and they straightway sought out a horse uuuibeml " J3" on the onrd. They found one and bet upon him, and to moke the coincidence most strange bo won. That this belief in luck as applied to certain numbers is as old as our philoso phy is shown by the fact that centuries before the Christian era tho Pythogorens and Platouists, who represented all movements and phenomena of nature by numbers, invented tho science of arith nomancy, consisting of the use of magic al squares and applying occult powers to numbers. Ou the combinations of cer tain numbers depended systoms of divi nation, and particular virtues were as cribed to numbers accordingly as thoy were odd or even. "There's luck in odd numbers" is a saying as old as the hills As ancient writer as Virgil says the gods themselves esteemed the numbers odd, for In the eighth eclogue he wrote: Aroand bis waxen Imam Brst I wind Three woolen fillets of three colors Joined! Thrice round bis tbrloe devoted head. Which round the sacred altar thrice is led Unequal numbers please the sods. The Chinese have similar ideas. With them heaven is odd and earth even, and the numbers 1, 3, 6, 7, 9 belong to heav en, while the even digits are of the earth earthy. bo it is little cause for wonder that our modern gamblers stick to their be lief that fortune abounds in odd num bers only. New York Herald. Bow ftl Are Coddled. - ' , " Cooklag classes for gentlemml The final btuw to that honorable and old fashioned Institution of matrimony. Modem de velopment are in league against wedlock. Patent button tmv been fashioned that preclude the necessity of a needle. Depot of repairs ore established from which Issue skilled hand maiden to go into the bach elor's home and reduce the rent in hose and the fracture In linen at minimum cost The trained nurse ho monopolised the most lender of wifely devotion. In deed the wife t summarily dismissed from the husband's sickroom If danger I Im minent, i And ths trained nurse I a most engag Ing, low voiced, gentU Institution in plo turesqu cap and apron. Her bands or lilt velvet lo the touch, but strong aud womlrou deft. She know how to coax and bow to commaud without Irritation or fuHslm-Ks. Olwdlence is dellolotu when In accord with ber overeigu will, i 11 or dress never rustles. She never cries over a poor fellow when he la too ghastly sick to endure It She doesn't get her precious feelings Injured when his head thump so he Is obliged to call on hi Maker with un due unction aud familiarity. Apartment house and chilis galore are luxuriously ap pointed for t he bachelor's comfort. Uentl women and fresh young maidens symiMtthUe with hi ideal and ambition, and vex him not with tale of the cook' delinquencies or bills for milltuery. The chaHng dish ho been evolved to give seat to hi lonely estate. And now the cooking class. Receptions, high tea and lunch' eon successfully given without hostess. Beefsteaks always rare and to one's liking Quail broiled to a turn and terrapin dl vincly seasoned. "All this, and heaven. too," as the old tang Island deacon said when he saw Lyman lleecher'a parlor, with Its rag carpet -and six ornately decorated choir. JSew York Sun. A Bird Murk Uk a fish. The "birds of a feather" that "flock to gether" do not belong to the penguin foav lly, as they are nt I rely destitute of feathers, having for a covering a kind of stiff down. Another penguin peculiarity I that It wltu not on, but under water, never keep ing more than Its head out, and when fish Ing coming to the surface at such brief aud rare Interval that an ordinary observer would almost certainly mistake It for a Bah. Snorts A Held Lord Salisbury and Lord Mayer's Iraea. Lord Salisbury, as prime minister of Kng land, ha seen seven consecutlv lord mar or' days, and in doing so bos beaten the record of more than sixty year. Since Lord Liverpool died no prim minister ha oelebrated so many succewtlv (ribs of No vember at the Guildhall. It Is true Lord Salisbury's tenure of office boa not been continuous. The six months' administra tion of Mr. Gladstone In 16 Interposed. but it did not last till lord mayor's day of the year In which he came Into onto. THB LAND OF PHOHIS 1 fLAtTS-tlll. von are thlnklnit Shout buying s plaster, rtmembsr that you will plsoe it upon your body and cannot set plsster that will be too food wr you. lttcocx' Posor Plastss Is ths tail plaster msds. Your driiggtst wsv have tout other plaster on hi shelves which b i. tn est rlrl nf. or else Mint worm leu Imitation purchased at a low price for ths purpose of iubstltutlon. Do not so oept his " Just good " plea, Insist upon having ths genuloe, Alu-ovs'i Posoiis PUhtss has no equal. .. . IIsandssth's Pills osn slwsys oereiisti upon. Msthllds-Doyou hsv reindeer In (.'mult llndfrhlU(uulckly)-Ys.lovi eui luetiistluis now. . Ps. C. R. tliioia cure catarrh, throat nd Inn diseases, ete. Medlrln or mall or tlrM. Third u Harrison, r-orusua, urvf u. Dm laa-wlliM Steve PoUshl no dost, MSsteU, Tit Gbbsiba for break fast In Hot 7cathor Something is needed to keep Op the snp. tits, snlrt digestion and slvesod, health, ful sleep, for these purpose Hood's Bar. upsrilla Is iMMnUlarly adapted. As a blood Hood the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, prevents this step from being taken and restores Health. Physicians, the world over, en dorse it, Cca'f hi deceived fc Subsfftotes! - Prpind bf Soolt S Bcwas, Jt, T. 4JIArasMs la the Poor Quarters of Paris. On the right bank of the Seine the citadel of labor and poverty seems fnll of life and energy. Charonne, Menilmpntant, Belle ville, La Villette, La Chapel le, Clignan court, Montmartre, Les Epinettes, Batig- nolles each district formerly an lndenend- ent village with its central street have become amalgamated into one vast center of population, traversed by endless streets and broad avenues Rue des Pyrenees, Bue ue enmee, nue uraener, Kue (Jurtal, Rue Marcadet, Rue de Belleville, Rue Ober kampf, Chaussee Clignancourt, Avenue de la Republiqae, Boulevard de laChapelle, Boulevard de Belleville, etc In these Quar ters ore concentrated two-thirds of the pen i .. . : . ti : r On these heights, that form, as It were, a crown above rich Paris, some of the houses contain as many as 200 inmates, and the streets are so crowded that you cannot see the pavement except at night. Here are the reservoirs of poverty and of energy that burst and flood Pari in day of revolution. Here are the inexhaustible reserves of cheap labor that make the wealth of manu facturing Paris. What swarms of people! What a fer mentation of various activity! What a perpetual straining and struggling! And yet, with all that, there is no obvious sad CASTLE BEST. wages were reduced early this year. Mr. Pullman's Idea in building the city was not at all philanthropic. It was to build on a business principle. Mr. Pullman does not himself live In Pullman. He has a handsome residence at the corner of Prairie avenue and Eight eenth street, Chicago, which is said to have cost $500,000. He has a scarcely less magnificent summer home on one of the Thousand Inland. This also cost a large sum of money. It is called Castle Rest, and when It was built was dedicated to his mother. His wife was Harriet ganger before marriage, her father being J. Y. Sanger of Ottawa, Ills. They have tw daughter and two suns. Karruwlus; the lledsteada. Narrow bouses and small rooms In fiats are necessitating many modifications of life in New York. One result of present condi tions is the narrowing of the bedstead. Time was when s double bed must be at least flve feet wide. In New York today, i Reformed Geometry. Almost 100 years ago two men set ont from Virginia to visit the Scioto valley, of the beauty and fertility of which they hud heard alluring reports. On the third night they roachod Clarks burg, where they put up with a man who appeared to be honest, bat old fash ioned and illiterate. "Can you tell us how far it is to Ma rietta and what sort of a road we shull find?" asked one of the travelers. "Yes," answered the host; "that is exactly what I can do, for I was appoint ed one of tho viowers to lay out the road and hove just returned from the performance of that duty. " "That is fortunate. What do you call the distance?" "Well, the distance on a straight line, which we first ran, was 75 miles, but on our way back we discovered and mark ed another line which was much near er." The two travelers had each spent some years in the study of surveying and were more or less amused at the idea of a line shorter than a straight line be tween two given points. However, the next morning thoy took the route which their informant hod pronounced the shorter, andtrnOenongb they found his statement correct, for the crooked rood went round the hills, while the straight orio went over them, and tho distance round was less than the distance over. Youth 's Companion, Gifts at BaptUm. Gifts to infants on their baptism ore of ancient origin. Formerly the spon sors generally oiTered gilt spoons to tho child. These spoons were called apostle spoons, because the figures of the 12 apostles were carved at the top of the handles. Rich sponsors gave the com plete set of 12, while for those who were not so opulent four was considered the proper number, and poor sponsors would content themselves with offering one. In the latter case the handle of the spoon generally exhibited the figure of any saint in honor of whom the child receiv ed its name. It is in allusion to this custom that, when Cranmer professes himself to be unworthy of being spon sor to the young princess, Shakespeare mates tne mag reply: Tme, come, my lord, yon'a spare your BJ1UUIIS." The mug or spoon and fork offering at. . i oi tne present aay appears as a very debased survival of a really beautiful christening offering. Westminster Re view. ; Is th mighty West, the lend that "tickled with s hoe Isniths harvest;" the Kl Dorado of the miner; the (oal ol the atrlcullnral emlsrant. While It teems with all tbe elements of wealth and prosperity, some ol the tslresl and moat fruitful portions ol It hear harvest of mslarla reaped In lu fullness br those nnnniteeted br a medicinal ssieitnsra. No on seeking or dwell. in in a material loeauiy is ear nom in seonnie wiioost HoaieiMr'e Monism iiuteia. Emigrants, bear thla In mind. Commercial travelers mjoarntn In malarious regions should carry a bottle ol the Blum In the traditional arliKsck. Against the efferta ol exposure, men tal or bodily overwork, damp and unwholesome ioou or wsier, it is sn infallible defense. Joo stlpsilon, rhenmstiiim, biliousness, dyspepsia, nervousness and lime id strength are all reme died by this gaiilll restorative. Powell The coat of the elgara and whbky eoiisnmid in thla eenntry tn on year would build a nary. Mlllurtl- Yts, bat It lieterwlll. HOW'S THIS I W offer One ilnndred Doltsra' reward for any ease of O.Isrrh that cannot be cured by Hall Catarrh Cure. t. i. CHENKY CO., Toledo, O. We. th undersigned, hsv known P. 1. Che ney for the last fifteeu years, and bailee him perfirtly honorable In all builneu transactions and ".nsndslly shle loca rr ont ana obligation made by their Arm. WKsr A TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. WALIMNO, KINNaST A M A KVIN, Wholesale Druggist, Toledo, O. Hall' Catarrh cure la taken internally, anting directly upo the blood and roucmn aurtaees el the system. Teitimonlals sent free. Prlc 7 eenta per bottle. Sold by all druf glste. ' The war In th Orient will not afreet the arte a, -..II ... I ... ., . r vi gviu iva lu tn uuucu owtos oeneUB. JDOITBLT BLKST. OXI9 KNJOYO Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs It Uken j It is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts rsnUj yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses ths ivs. sass. II B.I a . . tcm eiiectutdiy, dispels colds, head aches and fevers aud cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs ia the only remedy or its kind ever pro- aucea. pieasine to ue tasto ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it tbe most popular remedy known. Byrup of Fiirs is for sale in 50o and 1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not bare it on band will pro cure it promptly for any one woo wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO. $A HAmiltQO. C4(. toumm.nt. uv rout, r. Iff 8 i r-oa-1 c a' Tr'wVf mJ"n J 't l An agrmriHi LaiaUr and MKHVKTON lli Bol?i,Jl'ru1,H BOt by malL SSo.., and 11. 00 per rjewksga. lunss fm. LIEU Th Northrop A Rturgla Company mak Tbe ".nest flsvoring ased In rske, And housewives who their ettrseta try Will never any other buy. Bealdea mod value they receive, Befiir the g oeer'a door they leave, A oonpon which enab'ea, FKKK, The holder to arqnlre. you aee, A touvenlr of those queer days When Portland viewed with dreed am A mighty flood of water flow When now th ladlea shopping go. For over a quarter of a century, Doctor Flei-oe Ooklen Medical Discovery has bean effecting cure of Bronchial, Throat and Lung affection. Weak Lungs, Bleeding from Luntrs, Bronchitis, Asthma, all Ungnr ing Coughs, Consumption, or Lung Scrofula sod kindred maladies, are cured by it. REDUCED TO A SKELETON. ' Mr. MlEA Mux, of ftirdu, Jhf, Stont Cs "" writes i .una ..tfSaSsH, 1?L ""Sivenu. ?aW,3 r . ""r inBiwa.iBa body reduced to a ke- Ft I J 1 s. 1 ""'"m' i sT br my fsmllv Dbrstrrtaa Aond friend; all said 1 4fmuat die. My lungs mo. siy people com menced to give me your Medical Diannvari' and I soon began to mend. . It was not long before I became well enough to take charge of my household duties again. I on to Dr. my recovery 'idea Pierce's Oolc Business, 'Say, old man, I want to talk busi- Dens to you a few minutes. " "Certainly; go ahead. " "Could yon lend me $25 without in- sonvenience?" "Yes, I think I could." "Thanks. I'll return it shortly. " "What security will you give?" "Why er I didn't think any nec essary." "Oh, probably I misunderstood von. i tnougnt you said you wanted to talk business. " Indianapolis SentineL Mas. Mills. Medical Discovery.' OR. LIEB1G & CO., SpedaJ Oorisi It Qmic. Prtnte lis! Mlif DlaiM. pr. Meblg's Invlgnrsuw lbs greatest remedy far Seminal Wseknsea, Uiss of Manhood sad rr(ele llli.ssss. overcome frsmatareoess end prepares all far marrlsae Itrs's 4uiim, pleasures and respon sibilities; t trial e-ails gives er sent free tu aay ens osaerlblng symptoms; sail or address aw Deary Ml , prival sausac tat Maaua at,, rranetsce. TM , . t . . ' iiuusanu say inai r.iy uream llslm entirely cored them o( wiabkii and Hay Fever Arrtv Hilm iwro TH Nostmi. Price 40 etuis. Druggists. GOOD OPENING For DRY OOOD8 AND CLOTHINO HOUfll at V v aoarea a. a. (uxuuu, u. slr purlflwltbaauo .eas Srs4 psiilla purlflwlthaauo . iiiual, and II I rhivlly by it nwe to mak Klnnd I It. ft ha won urh ayaVeVVasVaVs. re for eoroiuia, salt rheum and net Hood's, Cures lam as a our eUisr alinllar diseases. Hood's PHI) sure hcs.lsch and ludlgostlon. A YOU 2S TRAVEL? IF SO, YOU WILL FIND THE BIG FOUR ROUTE THI BIST LINE VtSTIBULI TRAINS. ELEGANT DINING OARS. QUICK TIME. Atk for Ttckt vis Big Pour Route. I. o. hccsrmici, ' e. e, msitw, Pas. Trass Manager. Oca. fas. A Tkt, Alt, CINCINNATI, V. L. Douclag HOE S3 SI e tni assT. . NoeeusAaiNSk 3. CORDOVAN, ft.VPrr.JS0U gajajlt.VrvKINlCfn,- txnu riNtrs iAa. SW MasSkMja.UltB V iWlvDUaLAS, BROCKTON. MAli Tee eaa save asMsr kg we rise Us V. L. Desela ei.OO Mm, SJee, we era she sens aaaefseearses his gradaaskas la IM weal. a4 gaaraaw skew sains kr Maesgnsa Ike (sua as prie e ska kuWesa. ws) aeetssa rea agalaaa klgk prlesa a S Ik asMitlsessaV pmsita. Oar akoaa eaaal awass work la atria, ea iu as we.1a eaaitiie. Wssareu.es ssld nwjslw MleaNr sasro saea aag etaee aiaaa, Ta a-o sin HERCULES " -woTiD.ros- SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH ECONOMY -ANO- ECOND-MASO yieuiagav W deal neluslvelr In Sgmao-Hagn MAcatg av. and hair a large asrtmnl of Kualnes. HnllMrs. Piimn. mttA 1 m . T. ' . . : , . " - r- -. .. i .i nwniiivrr. nriie " ! i s;ior,roriisnu,ur IROR WORKS. S. F Mlalag Maehlaerr, Brvaa Mills. John Voaeeatratnrs, Baalaea. Hollars. s-asap aaa ueneral Maehlaerr. atlmaUs glvaa aa all elaaaes of Irea worn, addrea B. II. MOUBB. If. K., Hotel Portland, rortlaad, Or, II0TZVE PCWXHI HERCULES GAS tod GASOLINE E2SrC3-I3Sr!Hlfl- PAL4H t IT, hi rruciico, CaL ml PirUiiii Or. BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY. ' ' FOUNDED 1870. lMtln,lnllil,.MkiulJ-. ...... . .... . . o.. .u "ri; ' " roong men, miner military dlaelplln. Senteenth (17) yesr ander present management will open Heptanher 1 Thor ouah preosrsilon for eollege and se eniirio sohools. tJomnwrelal Course Af-A. LiKMK . I'KKpakatohv iNn vuiuiLv niri.. uiu.Z lo1' course, ALA. For Catalogue and Full Particulars. J. W. HILL, M. P., Principal. P. 0. Drawer 17, Portland. Or. Japan and Foreigners. In the last century there was a Jaoa- I ncse law providing that no shin or na tive should leave Japan under pain of forfeiture or death; that anyone return ing from a foreign country should be killed; that no one should purchase any thing from a foreigner, and that any person cringing a letter from abroad ihonld die, together with all his family. Chicago Tribune. -i BUT TOUR CLQTHIKG IT fBI PRICES. Men's Suits at $8.50. 10.00, $12,50, $15,00, $20,00. Men's Overcoats, $10.00, $12.50, $15.00, $18.00. Young Men's Suits, $3.00, $4.60, $5.00, $8.00, $10 00. Koys' Knee-Pants Suits, $1.25, $175, $2.50, $3.50, $4.00, $500. Oregon Wool Socks, 3 pairs for 50 cents. White Laundried Shirts, 50 cents. If you can't see ub, write for goods. Legal Kituwleilg-e for Women. Mrs. Mary Hall, attorney-at-Iaw, con ducts a class in civil government at Woodside. The class is proving a (Trent success. One important branch, that of FAMOUS," CLOTHING MANUFACTURERS si t earner, Barrlus an ,, (, POKTLAND, . . OBBOUM I t , ..... tnA (llttflrPTlt nrmwrtv sncl mana!,. I.w. much given to wittrclsm7and levitv- tW nd the 'onnK of the bed are that 7ntS pnpU wiU be convors- bth JlSZ frSZl Por- In narrowing ant with the law. of her own atate, at KiwiuiiKburen usn not itei wuucruiiig niukiers so important to lengthened it, o that that ill used class of ber interests. The girls and women of flnd tremselv'uT. worTd tail. Tr men" e rs,t have 1 almost nnpardonably ofsreetSarenolonaerabler ..1 ign0rat them' resnU,n' to in bed by choosing a diagonal directioa new torn sua. IT 18 IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT." TRAINED 8ERVANTS USE surroundinKH, and thev have onlv tn walk a few yards in any direction to find those broad shady avenue and those -flu urban parks which the tradition of Haussmann have extended even to the poorest quarter of the city. Theodore Chiid in Harper'. SAPOLIO cases, in disastrous consequence to them selves. Hartford Times. 1 W ,YPU WSKL BAD? DOES YOUR BACK SUPERIOR WORKMANSmP In Every Detail. E, These nr1naa sr Mknewlar1trl by aipert Ineer to U arorlhy of hlfhest mmmaadatlea ir slnpitelty, hi h-grad material and auperior workmanship. They derel.,p th full actual bora power, and ran without an Kleetri Spark lw5v.,JI?rtal "-. for nmplni ovnSu lor Irrlaatlnf porposs noatter anflue eaa be found on iuarecilio -.i2'A'l?,nir ) fo mtoa thay have met With h laheal approval, '"rjwrwltlaat po' tbali eanamy Is na- -MANDfACTUBID BT F1LMER I REY TYPE FOUNDRY, Ce. Vroat and Alder St PORTLAND, - ORECON Bead for esialogu. Ptxtland BushesB College, : A.S. PIMTLANSs OeKeMMli , fm I. a Wane, Use. Ops all the year, Bludsnia sd mfttsd at any lima. Inatrnallon In . -...I.H.M,, kuwi wis comii'srciai "" ahonhsnd, typewrltlni, std. Coi.i.sa Jouisal sad specimens of penmanship sent r, You Will surely find that in every particular there is no superior among all baking pow- H. l, N. U, No. 660-8. P. V, Tj, No. 637 Thr r1npsj nnl. heT everystep seem a bnrdsnT Yon need 11 1 O'-rH11 MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. I 5i i .. uaOuit list I I J Sobs