The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, April 19, 1895, Image 4

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    Highest of all in Leavening
V
C60SJUTEK.Y PUCE
A HAWAIIAN STATESMAN.
Can of Wnteter Baton, Who I
America on mm Ianportaat If lsalosv
In
A foreign diplomat who i at present
attracting considerable attention Id Wash
lngton I Hon. Francis M. Hatch, mlnia
ter ol foreign affairs of tba republloof Ha
waii, and lila accomplished wife, wbo ar
now visiting this oountry. Mr. Hatch waa
born In Portsmouth, N. H., 88 yean ago
and li a graduate of Bowdolnoollege. Aft'
er loavlng college he itudled law, as many
of hli ancestors and relatives bad done,
and while yet a young man removed to
111. AND MRS. FBAKCIS M. BATCH.
HodoIuIu, where be entered the office of
his uncle, Judge Harris, who was for
many years chief justice of Hawaii under
the royal government.
Af toi the death of his uncle he practiced
law In Honolulu and soon made a reputa
tion as an erudite and eloquent member
of the bar. Long before the downfall of
the queen he became interested in the an
nexation movement, and two years ago,
when Ldliuokalanl signed the infamous
lottery bill and trampled ruthlessly upon
the constitutional rights of the people of
Hawaii, he promptly joined the commit
tee of safety and was one of its most in
fluential members. He was president of
the Annexation club, and after the forma
tion of the provisional government under
President Sanford B. Dole he became vice
president of the republic Last year be ao
oepted the very responsible portfolio of
minister of foreign affairs and is aald to
have displayed marked diplomatio talent
and great ability lu bis official relations
with foreign governments.
Like a great many other brainy men,
Minister Hatch Is not of particularly 1m
posing appearanoe. He is small and dark,
but his features indicate the strong char
acter behind tbem. His reputation as an
orator waa made in Deoember, 1893, when
he delivered a powerful speech in support
of the new government Minister Hatch
is the fortunate possessor of two homes In
Hawaii, one bis town house in Honolulu
and the other a beautiful summer plaoe
upon the beach at Walki-kl.
His wife is a California woman, wbo Is
well equipped with beauty, education and
cultivation for the high place she occupies
In Hawaiian society. She Is the daughter
of Colonel Alexander 6. Hawes of San
Francisco. Colonel Hawes is a native of
Vermont and won his title in the Union
army.
Minister Hatch's visit to the United
States is said to be on diplomatic business,
the precise nature of which is variously re
ported.
Inward and Outward Debt of Argentina.
The total internal and external debt
of Argentina on Dec. 81 last waa $411,-
695,223 gold and (46,061,801 currency,
of which the interest bearing debt
amounted to $307,293,523 gold and $14,
813,601 currency. The external debt
was $215,567,568 gold, which waa in
creased to $322,531,022 on the 1st of
July. The . currency in circulation
amounted to $281,000,000. Eio News.
POOR INDEED!
The prospect of relief from drastic cathartics
for pereous tronbled with constipation ia poor
indeed Trne they act a poo the bowels, but
una iner ao wun violence, sua tneir operation
leuos lo weaaen me inieaunes, ana is prejwn
clal to Uie stomach. Hostetter's Stomach Bit
ters is au effectual laxative, bat it neither gripes
nor enfeebles, rurtnermore. it promotes antes-
tiouand a regular action ol the liver and kid
neys. It Is an efficient barrier against aaa rem
edy for malarial complaints and rheumatism,
and is of great benefit to the weak, nervona and
aired. Aaa medicinal stimulant it cannot be sur
passed. Phyaicana cordially recommend it,
and its professional indorsement is fully borne
out by popular experience. Appetite and sleep
are bold improved by this agreeable iuvigorant
and alterative.
First nhrhter- What! Every seat taken T Ticket
seller Every one; bet don't be discouraged.
There will be room enough alter the first act. I
was at the rehearsal.
What an ordinary man eats
and the way he eats it would
be enough to give dyspepsia
to an ostrich unless the os
trich were wise enough to as
sist his digestion
from time to time
with an efficient
) combination of
vegetable cx-
tracts, bucn a
"preparation is
19 lS vSibr.- Pierce's
f jSr Pleasant Pellets.
. They are the pills
par excellence
for those wno
sometimes eat
the wrong things and too much. They
Rtimul.ite action in all of the digestive
organs. They stop sour stomach, windy
belchings, heartburn, flatulence and cure
constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in
digestion, sick headache and kindred
derangements.
Once used they are always in favor,
Lipman
Wolfe & Co.
PORTLAND
OREGON...
Have just received a full line of
Tailors' Linings, Findings and
Buttons
Purchased under the new tariff,
We are enabled to give the
Very Best Prices...
Send for samples ,
PALESTINE CORN
Is the mot profitable crop to plant oo dry land.
Yields a,500 lbs shelled corn and twelve tons of
fodder. Can be planted till Jnlr and harvested
with ordinary machines. Stud 1 per acre lor
seed desired LO
Sacramento Blver Nureerr Co..
Walnut Orova, California.
1
fV-v
TV TV
1 V Iaa
I'M m r Car
Power Latest U.S. Govt Report
LINCOLN'S WIFE'S SISTER.
Now tha Postmaster of a Town lu Ken.
tueky Danger of Removal.
Washington special to Boston ' Her
ald: Within a few days the president
must nominate some one to be post
master at Etizabethtown, Ky. The
prosentinomubent is Mrs. Bon Hardin
Helm, a sister of the wire or rretuaeut
Abraham Lincoln. Mrs. Helm is
much younger woman than her sister,
and Mr. Lincoln loved her with all the
devotion he oould have bestowed on a
daughter, and his affection for his
brother-in-law, her husband, was that
of a father for a son.
In 1861 Bon Hardin Helm, a grand
son of that Ben Hardin who for years
was a leader in congress and character
ised by John Bandolf, of Roanoke, "a
kitchen knife whetted on a brickbat,
was a young West Pointer, who had
been Graduated from the military acad-
emv with distinguished honors. His
father had been Governor of Kentucky,
was president of the Louisville and
Nashville Railroad, and was destined
to be Governor of Kentucky again.
Young Helm first saw the light of
day but a short distance from the birth
place of Abraham Lincoln, whose wife's
sister was to become his wife. Mr. Lin
coln strove by all the means in his
power to attach Helm to the Union
side. After the inauguration in 1861
he sent for Helm, and laying his hand
affectionately on his shoulder, said:
Much as Kentucky is tome, Id rather
see the whole state go South than that
you should go. I know that you will
never fight against the South, but I'll
make yon paymaster-guneral, or I'll
send you abroad in the diplomatic ser
vice, in any station you choose. I can't
bear that yon and I should become pub
lic enemies."
Helm had fathomed Lincoln's great
character, and loved and respected him
as he deserved, but Helm was every
inch a Southern man, and cast his lot
with his people. In September, 1868,
he was commander of the "Kentucky
Brigade," known as the "orphan brig
ade." of the Confederate army of the
West, because so many of its command
era had fallen on the field. It was to
the West what the "Stonewall" brig
ade was to the East At Chickamauga
it was ordered to make a desperate
charge, and in that charge Helm fell
to rise no more.
Tears passed, and in 1881 Robert
Lincoln, Mrs. Helm's nephew, became
secretary of war, and though his aunt
was a Democrat, he secured her ap
pointment as postmaster at Elizabeth
town. Mr. Cleveland reappointed her
and so did President Harrison.
Her term will expire the 9th instant,
and, notwithstanding the department
is officially advised that the adminis
tration of her office is first-class, an
effort is being made to retire her. Con
gressman Montgomery, whose official
head fell last November in a district
overwhelmingly Democratic, wants the
place for one of his henchmen, and it
is surmised that he is backed by Sena
tor Blackburn, who recently laid down
the doctrine that the right of the con
gressman to appoint postmasters is un
limited and inalienable. The senator
and the congressman are close political
allies, and both are recognized as anti
Cleveland men. If Montgomery should
succeed in having Mrs. Helm removed, i
doubtless the senator will see that her
successor is confirmed. There may be,
some senators left in congress, how
ever, who love the memory of Abraham
Lincoln enongh to stand by the woman
he loved, a Confederate widow though
she be, and senatorial courtesy to the
contrary notwithstanding.
Not His Ova Master.
That M. de Lessens," says a Paris
letter to the New York Tribune, "should
have died so poor as to leave his large
family entirely dependent upon the an
nuities voted to them a year ago by the
Suez Canal Company, has served to
smooth away any remaining bitterness
on the nart of the victims of the Pana
ma canal disaster against the chief or
ganizer and promoter of the unfortun
ate company. Indeed, sorrow for the
death of 'Le Grand Francais,' and sym
pathy for his widow and children are
so deep and universal that the press of
every shade of political opinion is teem
ing with abuse of the president for not
giving some public manifestation of his
participation in the loss sustained by
the nation in the demise ol JJe .besseps.
People forget, however, that the presi
dent of the republic is not his own mas
ter, that he is far more tightly bound
down by red tape, conventionality, pre
cedent and etiquette than any monarch
or royal personage, and that he is not
free to follow the dictates of his feeling
and the impulses of his heart It is to
this, and to this alone, that was attrib
utable the apparent indifference on the
part of President Caraot at the time of
the obsequies of Marshal MacMahon,
when all chiefs of state gave public
manifestation of their sorrow, save
France's executive, who did not even
postpone the entertainment and , festiv
ities at the Jilysee on tne oay oi tne
funeral; and it ia to this, too, that is
due the absence of any token of regret
by President Perier among those which
the demise of De Lessens has called
forth from every crowned head in the
civilized world."
"There are now fifty-five towns and
cities in England which destroy their
garbage and solid refuse by burning,
using an average of about ten furnaces
each for that purpose. The combustion
of the material is used for the genera
tion of steam, by which the streets are
electrically illuminated, thus reducing
their municipal expenses by this means.
It is now the turn of Cadmus to sur
render the fame he has long enjoyed
for bestowing an alphabet on Greece.
Engraved stones unearthed in the Isl
and of Crete prove the existence of a
method of writing long before the in
troduction of the Phoenician alphabet
Archaeologists are evidently bent on
showing that the ancient celebrities are
really quite modern.
ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST.
Mew (lathered From tha Old -World
and tha Nw,
Russian railroads have women's
smoking cars.
Liverpool, England, has lu its list of
city employes an official rat-catcher.
The Newfoundland council has ap
proved a bill to glv the government
guarantee to bank notes.
The Boston Society for the Preven
tion of Cruelty to Animals gives weekly
lectures to coachmon on the proper way
to treat dumb animals.
Dr. Ida E. Richardson, of Philadel
phia, is one of the most successful
woman physicians of the oountry, her
income being estimated at $10,000 a
year."--
H. B. Plant, the well-known Florida
railroad magnate, made the hearts of
the Sisters of the Sacred Heart glad at
Tampa receutly by liberal gifta of
money.
A rural South Carolina paper tells of
an icicle thirty feet loug and a yard
wide that formed on a windmill in
York county during the recent cold
spell.
Mrs. Moxette, of Jackson county,
Michigan, an inmate of the county
almshouse, is 106 years old and glories
in the assertion that she is "as moan a
woman as God ever put breath into."
D. V. Tallent, mail carrier between
Rutherfordton and Columbus, N. C,
walks twenty-seven miles each day,
carrying the mailbag on his shoulders.
His compensation is 600 a year.
The natives of interior Madagascar
defend themselves against the advance
of the French soldiers by removing all
food from the line of march and refus
ing to furnish supplies at any price.
San Antonio, Tex., councils have
passed an ordinance which prohibits
physicians from charging more than f 1
a visit It was passed at the solicita
tion of the leading physicians of the
city.
J. M. Barrie, the novelist, opened
bis literary career by writing leading
articles for a Nottingham paper. Da
vid Christie Murray commenced his
journalistic career on the staff of a
Birmingham paper.
A naval drydock, large enough to
receive any vessel of our fleet, 'is near
ly ready for use at Port Royal, a. C
and two others of equal size will soon
be completed at Brooklyn and on the
Pacific side of Puget Sound.
It is said that whon the United States
government moved to Washington in
the year 1800 the property was all car
ried in seven boxes, while the chief ex
ecutive got lost in the woods in the
neighborhood of Washington.
In two years Austria has obtained
through the Rothschilds two-thirds of
the 135,000,000 in gold it is hoarding
in order to adopt the single standard,
and of the amount secured this year
124,000,000 is in American eagles.
The citizens of Dedham, Mass., cele
brated in memorial hall with great eclat
the other night the 250th anniversary
of the establishment of its free public
school, which school, it is claimed, was
the first one established in the world.
Twenty-seven war vessels were added
to the British navy last year, exclusive
of five torpedo boats, at a cost of about
$12,000,000. The record for 1895 will
go even beyond this. England is en
lartriiiK her navy with even more zeal
than ever before.
Althongh American steel rails are
lower than ever before in the history of
the trade, and terms are easier than in
all probability they ever will be again,
there is still a profit of more than 25 per
cent to the manufacturer at the lowest
prices recently quoted.
James Chandler, of Lyon county,
Ky., is 79 years old, and has forty-seven
grandchildren and thirty-eight great
grandchildren. He lives near the farm
on which his grandfather settled 109
years ago, and haa never been away
from home more than ten days at
time.
A Boston manufacturing company
recently celebrated half a century of
existence by making a distribution of
a fund of $30,000 among its employes
on the basis of $5 for each year of ser
vice. Some of the employes have been
in the service so long that their salaries
reached $150 each.
Massachusetts has been fighting that
dangerous insect, the gypsy moth, with
annual appropriations, and finds that
they grow larger every year. It is
question now whether the bug will not
prove more costly to the state than the
Hoosac tunnel, which represents an
outlay, on the installment plan, of
$20,000,000.
Some time ago the city of Lawrence,
Mass., discovered that its death rate
from typhoid fever was higher than
that from the same disease in any other
town in New England. After an in
vestigation of the cause the water sup
ply of the place was filtered through
sand, and the mortality from the disease
has fallen from 43 to 8 in six months.
Word comes to this country from
Switzerland that Pastor H. P. Holser,
the American representative of the Sev
enth Day Adventists in Central Enrope
and the director of their publishing
house in Basle, is now undergoing a
term of sixty -one days imprisonment in
that city for allowing work to be done
in the office on Sunday.
The mayors of New York and Brook
lyn have approved Governor Morton's
suggestion that a commision of eleven
members be appointed by the governor
and mayors to. frame a charter for
"Greater New York," to be submitted
to the next legislature. The indications
are that the consolidation will be ef
fected within three years.
In the barren country of West Aus
tralia, where men are madly flocking
in search of gold, the temperature is
said to be 120 in the shade and no ade
quate water supply. There is such a
boom in the price of claims that only
rich men can buy them, and numerous
rich men are there enduring all the
hardships with the hopes of growing
richer.
In Manchester, England, the town
council is about to put $1,250,000 into
clearing the slums.. An overcrowded
and unhealthy space of five acres in
the center of the city will be taken, the
buildings torn down and new model
workmen's dwellings erected in their
stead, with large areas for playgrounds,
and trees and flowers planted in the
open spaces.
LIVED THE LIFE OF ALL.
Kitraot From Hubert Ingeeeoir Lao
titra on Shakespeare.
If Shakespeare knew one fact, he
know its kindred and its neighbors.
Looking at a coat of mail, he instantly
imagined the society, tUo conditions
that produced it, and what it in turn
produced. He saw tne oastie, tne moat,
the drawbridge, the lady iu the tower,
mid the knightly lover spurriug across
the plain. He saw the bold baron, the
rude retaiuor. the trampled serf and
nil the glory and grief of feudal life.
He was a man of imagination.
He lived the life of all.
He was a oitisvn of Athens in the days
of Pericles. Ho listened, to the eager
eloquence of the great orators, and sat
among the cliffs, and with the tragic
poet heard the multitudinous laughter
of the sea. Ho hoard Socrates thrust
the spear of question through the shield
and heart or falsehood. Jtte was pros
cut when the great man drank hum
lock, and mot the night of death, tran
quil as a star moots morning. Ho list
ened to the peripatetio philosophers,
and was nnpusalcd by the sophists.
Ho watched Phidias as ho chiseled
shapeless stone to forms of love and
awe.
Ho lived by the mysterious Nile,
amid the vast monstrous. Ho know
the very thought that wrought the form
and f natures of tlio Sphinx. Ho hoard
great Momnon's morning song when
marblo lips were smitten by the sun.
He laid dowu with the embalmed and
waitimr dead, and folt within their
dust the expectation of another life,
mingled with wild and suffocating
doubts the children born of long delay.
He walked the ways of mighty Rome
and saw groat Caesar with his legions
in the field. Ho stood with vast and
motley throngs and watched the tri
nniphs given to victorious mou, fol
lowed by uncrowned kings, the captured
hosts and all the spoils of ruthless war.
Ho heard the shout that shook the Coli
seum's rootless walls, whon from the
reeling gladiators' band the short
sword fell, while his bosom gushed the
stream of wasted life.
Ho lived the life of savage men. He
trod the forest silent depths, and in
the desperate game of life or death he
matched his thoughts against the in
stincts of the beast
Ho knew all crimes and all regrets,
all virtues and their rewards. Ho was
a victim and a victor, pursuer and pur
sued, outcast and king. Ho hoard the
applause and curses of the world, and
on his heart had fullcn all the nights
and noons of failure and success.
Ho knew the unspoken thoughts, the
dumb desires, the wants and ways of
boasts. Ho folt the crouching tiger's
thrill, the terror of the ambushed prey,
and with the eagles he shared the ec
stacy of flight and poise and swoop,
and he had lain with sluggish serpents
on the barren rocks uncoiling Blowly
in the heart of noon.
He sat beneath the bo-tree's contem
plative shade, and, wrapped in Bud-
dah's mighty thought, and dreamed
all dreams that light, the alchemist.
has wrought from dust and dew and
stowed within the slumbrous poppy s
subtle blood.
Ho knelt with awe and dread at ev
ery shrine he offered every sacrifice
and every prayer felt the consolation
and the shuddering fear mocked and
worshiped all the godsenjoyed all
heavens and felt the pangs of every hoik
Ho lived all lives, and through his
blood and brain there crept the shadow
and the chill of every death, and his
sonl, like Mazeppa, was lashed naked
to the wild horse of every fear and love
and hate.
The imagination had a stage in Shake
spoare's brain, w hereon were set all
scenes that lie between the morn of
laughter and the night of tears, and
where his players bodied forth the false
and true, the joys and griefs, the care
less shallows and the tragio deeps of
universal life.
From Shakespeare's brain there pour
ed a Niagara of gems spanned by
fancy's seven-hued arch. He was as
many sided as clouds are many formed.
To him giving was hoarding sowing
was harvest and waste itself the
source of wealth. Within nis mar
velous mind were the fruits of all
thought past the seeds of all to be. As
a drop of dew contains the image of
the earth and sky, so all there is of
life was mirrored forth in Shakespeare's
brain.
Shakespeare was an intellectual
ocean, wnose waves toucnea au tne
shores of thought; within which were
all the tides aud waves of destiny and
will; over which swept all the storms
of fate, ambition and revenge; upon
which fell the gloom and darkness of
despair and death, and all the sunlight
of content and love, and within was
the inverted sky, lit with the eternal
stars. Shakespeare . was an intellec
tual ocean, toward which all rivers
ran, and from which now all the isles
and continents of thought recieve their
dew and rain.
to wet and cold Is very often the
first step to Pneumonia, Consump
tion, Bheumatlsm or other aerloaa
diseases. Often we aay, "Oh, it's
nothing," when really our health
for years or for life la banning In the
scale. A cold la the thin edge of the
wedge of disease. To keep it out ia
important and time la everything.
When your temperature baa been
suddenly reduced by wet or cold
take a leaspoonful of r
PAIN-KILLER
In a half glass or water or milk
(warm if possible). Reaction begins
at once, relief la Immediate and you
will have no cold, cough, sore throat
or stiffness to reckon with. This
sounds easy, and la easy If you have
the Faln-Klller at hand. Get
bottle and get acquainted. It kills
all forrna of pain and la worth lit
weight In gold. Bold everywhere, al
26 cents a bottle. Prepared only by
PERRY DAVIS & SON,
PBOVIDESCE, O. I.
QKNTLB AS NIK,
Gentle Annls was tht girl who went forth
whan tha tprlnft-tlm cams to gsthsr wiH
.i.l.laa alone- the hillside, and
foreot her rubbars. Sht cams back with
ir bai ftillnwad hv tha worst oass of neu
ralk-la she over had. Fortunately she was
told and had long known that tor an kind
of neuralgic affection, St. Jacobs Oil Is the
moat remarkable remedy aver used. All
.i i ...... ...... .,,klw,l t,t mini, at.
Uie year ruuiiu mnj um .""J""" --
tacks should not fail to have H In the
house, f or all aonei ana pains wiwuu a
all times beset ua, there is nothing to equal
t. v. . : .. - .M hMIIV It
it, nerve wmyvmj - n"-
on by auddeii changes of temparatura, but
me ureas ivmvu, j)riin . .. , .....
aurvi ouiv,
Lira Bavins on tha lee.
An English gentleman ha in von led
life saving apparatus for use on a lake on
Ida own place which la so simple that ouo
like It could easily be put on every sheet
of water frequented by skiiton. Two broad
plauka, about 8 foot long, ara placed on
sled runners, and those ara joined to-gt-ther
by a rope fully 80 foot In length. A
life preserver Is fuatoncd to tha center of
the rope, and In enso of accident two peo
ple by throwing themselves on the planks,
could easily iteer them to the bole, one on
either ildo, when the life preserver could
be grnipod by the one whose Ufa I In dan
ger. SYMPATHETIC PAINS.
The different organs of the body are very
tympathetio. Ons It very apt to feel ths
pain of another, and It it not always aay
to locate the trouble exactly, A weak back
not infrequently occasions a pain In ths
tide, and one limb often aohet out of sym
pathy for another.
ALtcocK't Poaoue Flastsm are juat tha
remedy in eucn cases, ineyare Booming
in their effect, and draw out ths pain to
that the back or tide or limbs ara nipple
instead of still", and free to perform their
function.
They have been tried by thousands and
millions of people In every land, and with
one uniform result, entire satisfaction.
BaAHDasTH't Pilui will relieve rheuma
tism. M las Blanc (contemptuousl))-That's a ntoe-
lnnklita wMly-h lliil vu hava tA hav a suit nf
rlotneatogvtihatt jobn Ware (reflectively)
Mo, on the cooirsy, I had to sell one.
Stati or Ohio, City or Toledo,)
lucas uoowrr.
Frank J. Chekby makes oath that he It
the senior partner ol the firm of F. J.
I'hkkiy & C o.. doing business in tha City
of Toledo, County and State aforesaid and
that said Arm will pay the turn of ONK
HUNDRED DOLLARS foreaoh and every
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
tha use of Hall's Catabsh Cos..
FRANK J. CHENEY.
8 wore to before ma and suhacritwd In my
Iireeence, the 0th day of December, A. 15.
m. -
A. W. OI.EASOS,
Notarv Public
Hall's Catarrh Curs la taken internally
and acts directly on tha blood and niuooua
turfaoee of tha system. Bend for testi
monials, iree.
r . j. i uk,; i,i ia., loieoo, u.
Sold by Druggists, 75o.
We have not been without Plso't Curs
for Consumption for '20 yean. Li.zia Fsa
aai., Camp tit., Harriaburg, Pa., May 4,
11SM. .
OIVU EiVJOYQ
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken: it ia pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acta
fentlv yet promptly on the Kidneys,
iver and Bowels, cleanses the ays.
tern effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. 8vrun of Fin ia the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
J. J 1 .1. . .. s
uuceu, pieasing to tne vasxa 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 the most
popular remedy known.
Byron of Fitrs ia for sale In KOo
and 1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. lh not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO.
IAN FHAH0IK0. CAL,
UUI8VIUE. It. f IV 1MK. .r.
RAMBLER
BICYCLES...
Ladles' and Gents'
All Sizes... All Wel&hta
840, 860, 860, 880, 8100
Second-hand Wheels for aale and exchange
Bend for cataiogne, FKEE. Live aat's wanted
FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CO.
837 Washington St., PORTLAND, OK.
DR. GUMS
IMPROVED
UVER PIUS
A MILD PHYSIC.
ikivn pitx vmt a nnR.
A isMiwnmt ofthaa bowoU mam (far la nana rr toe
boavJtb. TbM pUlf sopjftf wbt tba tfttoxa noil lo
rnftke It iwruUr. The out UmAMhm. brilrta tint
Eysfl, Mid elear tha Oompkikm batter than euamatioa.
They nnfthflr jrripa nor ftckaii, To oonvtDca waa, w
will roaUs Mmple frA. or a fall box fnt ?6e. Holt, rrj-
UOttANHU MiUJ. VU sVbiUOalpbia. f
y Beat Cough bymp. aataa GuuO TJm 1 1
1S In ttfija, HtM by dniifglrita. f j
TKat Tired Feeling
It a rsrlaln Indication of Impure snd Im
poverished blooU. If your blood could
alwayt bs rh li and purs, lull f tba
red rorpusitet upon wli'ch lit vitality
dopeinlt, jm-U would never bs weak, or
NVvou-l Huili, plmplea, S'rofuls, H
rheu'it, w. uld never trouble you. Hut
our mod of llvltifr. thut In all winter
In poorly venlllatad homo and ihope,
d t'li'tfs tb blood and tliar It lot or
apiwtli, and weakliest, ltood't Sara,
purlllit It Mi tlandard remedy for this
Dominion. It purlllet, vlUlln r
nrl' hi ths b'ond, overcome that
tired fet'lliiK, builds up the nerve si d
gl vet perfect health. Hoadthli!
ilur daughter, Blanoh, when foil- yr
of a, had s humor break out on her
I amis and fno, which our phytlolsn
proimimi'ed ecuenia. If lh cold air
reached bar fnce or hand they would
well up, look almost purple, and
handed blister would terra and break,
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
KKWAHU.
110 Reward fo7 Information s to th
- ...J. I tw.it l naa ,laatl tT AnMl
White, who left Hanta Crut, Cel., In IHtfl.
Addre. Win, l'lerrepont While, Palace
lloiel, Bau Franolsoo, Cel.
Mimic STOKK-Wlley B. Allan Co., th
oldeal, the lartaat, ill rirst HI., Portland.
Chlokvrliisj, llsnlroan, Fischer Pianos, Kate
Ononis. Uf prloea, ea'T terms.
10-CKNT MUHIV-Ueud lot eatalofliae.
Tav OsBMBa, for breakfast.
A SURE CURE FOR PILES
llablx PUaakaaaa b, SMtatnra Ilka awsplrMfcw. oM
InUoM Hltii " wana. 1 u (una mod aUws, lrt'
Iaa'iWwUaajP)Mrl'ltateuMM
D. BO-eAN-ttO-a FlLI RKMIDV,
blaa a cureou, aa pesie mm, sou
r-l.nua tha NataaJ
Paaaaaea. Allay Pala
and InfmmmsiUoB,
Beatorea the Senteeof
Taate ana Bmeu.
Heal the Korea.
Aoalv Italal Into sah BflatrlL
tri Saoa." Warm at, M.I
NEW
WAY
Portland, Wall Walla,
Spokane, via O. B. N.
Hallway nd Ureal
Northern Hallway lo
Molilalia polnla. Hi,
Paul, Minneapolis,
Omaha, HL IjMila. Chi
eaao and Kast. Aditreas
IP? A C?C?
nearest aavnt. V. V.
If rortlaml.Ur.iH.C.
Uonavaa, iea. Act.
Hl
NSBlaV aSW vans, (ien. t. .Healtl
Wash,
.; C.O.DIxon.Uen. Al.,posnr,wsn. na
dust; rock-ballast track
Hue scenery: palace
sleeplns and (llnini ears; battel library ear
family loansi sleepers; new tqaipment.
CHICKEN MISISQMYS
If von use the Patalai
aleaarf"
while I
ITS
Catalogs) Laf
lacasalsrs a Sraaatfs.
Make money
other are wasting
time bv old Droceaaca.
Cats loglalls ail about
It, and describes every
article needed far tbe,
poultry
I lie I-isVIe-
mechanically th rwal
wheal. Prettirat model.
we are Pacific toast
A aeats. Blrrcle caia-
logue,mailed free .fives
fall dewrlntlon, prices, etc., AOairr waimtD.
PETALUMA DKUBATOB C0.,Ittalsa.Cal.
Bkanch Hoosa, ti 8 Mala 8t., Loa Aneelee.
SAVX SHO LIATBU
Afk fbr lake's Dlnmontl or ovkJ So'm mm) Kr
volvlnc Uli, Iniitaituiia mrt wtirthlrM, Vur Mil
bt IfaulliiaT htMi ditiUttni. kurks Hul on.. tmot
irwi. furtltuKl. Oregon. A kudu wa.iUd. Tn-
tory for
If roo wiiDl work.or cuiorttuiii v m UxU. wrtia
to llw Order ttt KiriiaBl AriiunMit. Houuu ml and
, lionotiot Bulldtiic Hu Mtmavimvo. t tvl.
wiasiows
roil OHILOBIal TIBTMIMO -
I MALARIA l
H Thrwe (iotrn only. Try !t
wwwttwiwtWw;wi
Insist on
tHMUua.
sss ifl2- hit
mMf HAAAER SOPA
as
j in packages
m .
' uts no more than inferior package soda
r never spoils the flour, keeps soft, and is ml.
versalljf acknowledged purest in tbe world.
lUdeonly by (BTOCH k CO., kew Tort.
r aVU 7 fTarmaTtrrwaaTa,
r Writs faw ins aad Baauue Boe mi vahaU BU.h-racal
BwWalMatwWaWlkBj
i.tab. (80s. CORBITT & MACLEAY CO. me. 1803.
einool- YlvemSol tZ'm rlL7.!S 'a Wca, thlna Mat Oil, etc. rrom 1 Ir.
Nol nturaaahaat h? nd.V"n, f"' ,". inimical, 0f all kinds, tlnplate, selooted
lr?sh WMskv HeaVrii SS5 tanf p B,"""P' " Brimstone, Baaa Ale, Guinness' Porter, Helen anS
lrtsn Whisky, Brandy and VYlnea, for sale In quantities to suit the trad. PORTLAN D, OR.
WHER DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.M
CHEAT 8AVIN0 RESULTS FROM THE USE OP
A POLIO
SPRAYING
COMPOUNDS
pia haul m a walvry fluid, and the burn
Iiik and Itohlng would drlv her nearly
Wild. Unltaa w mwd her Utile
hands th would tear pitches of iklu
from her lao and hands. W tried
many doctors and mtny rained lea, and
at lust gv lh en up at hopeless.
But our daughter Cora trlrd Hood's
Harinparllla, to cure s scrofulous lump
near th hit b-enat, which causa I her
much palivsud afr taking 4 bo ties It
dlappird. Hlaiiohe, who It now
levin, had tpnt wiven yart of sillier
lug, o t concluded lo glv her Hood's
' Onranparllla. Hh took 0 botllnt, and bor
far It smooth and soft a s baby', th
color of ro wtl. Her hands ar
olt and white, wher four months
ago they were blu snd red. and
calloused nearly Ilk leather. I can
not express my gratitude by pen or
mouth, H terma s miracle, ami our
friends are surprised." Mas Ann
I Ci.kk, it K. ih UU, Imluth, Minn.
Ws wawM net hv fwn!e'
IUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS CF DOLLARS
iHMf ttJvaMltlllti ft WhM" ftlWl nstt' rlMlp. hut
Ulwf Ntjt tWM Mftit in IL UaU-niUMa tit t rta.il h( )!
rtrM) (rait twMwl part. til fin thin tWltl rwrttl, l, with
UivbImm! indtlrutblt tmwm whn f t tliim ittaiaU, !
Mat) BlMMitllUSII, If It Wf Hist Dfft " frli-l''il'ef
M WW WMI4 Pf H ( l-af lniw1 tWlHNl MHWKt -I'H
Iff IhaM UttaslKftiltla)., MB. II MiafcttlM w(llBw
8Ft.forSl5
lltat t ft g"4 ff 41 f.anf MfvW w.icKMiM
wi tran nm nis am, wk oiiu mit nt
TOW A rtMlft, CilNfkl ntiffl. ft UK lltK Htl'tt 9
ITa vlAl.ftWKRH pKmHIl fit IliUftiMKM, IV
ion wavu c.i i tMiM.t rmti ton ir. v i.n
III Mr Brtnaf, nv hHawtllf tt'Sl Mlhtt thin sl.lart
f(wwlaBsatV WUflftl. M rflH ij al Ufa tlM. 14
mtmmm m 4 ptaptrMig t fBtattMtf. bihI l U
rlln luv-Mmi ft" MINK M t (, NlKtt
IHKItn t ri WH HlkaN -Ml TH I
trmwaiii whkkiji on v tit or ua,M4mk
I hkk n mint wit riMf akoik ins nikfH,4iiM,
iU RtMiRS tMt 4HB, TMKHKItiHKt klT HI -
PkWttlU tNk. Hm ttv wt.wai mm 00 mtr snh m
pstistfW trtmimtUa etuaj san.aaaW tmmprtt r faVaM aaeWa- y
faWm4. min'tnt, rwi, aAewtaW mmt ttmmttii - fit tk awtl-
fJntmm ay tht fmt Met-
WaW Ma Msmm a)v ayaraatM 'if Ik mi it tlrHt4'l.
fem aimiM mtiittf sJim a mmtpUtoi. Wi t
Nr., W ttlraTa Ik ih tMl ilriuktl imnmt 4 m
Um Naj Mffsw-t k anal Uaoiat'rf) iiBifif
rVrMr It'fcs. M mm 4m4m Whmt mU
HMmI aW, Hiaw; aai if itjaaai tamaBaati f w mtt imfm NM, 1
tmwrwti m mlimt faW sh lr.MMaa m4 bit
tktrUm l fc.waa,aj
Mlf
bMwmI HWalaaJ j
I M hatM MM,
Ik?
IhlM lhal M 4f . mt
inimm and 4iMei II la
tlatvlw l 4', ) BMWl
kaf UM lf Bill '4
laatp tnM -ttt
lilHIIftWNS mllw4 rMHita
MlvW f SraVtlW (WiMf arMk
Wrf saarf mm i 4n-
a tau Msaafat'aliaB.aiaM awaa
-, fmt mx. with fsW alaat.
4 ! WHathavr. Th
M lllw.(lVitwM.ntrl
tt ' sa.f aaa, ttn aflaaa
H vaasl tmm,itmtim w
si HfHwwrA
srwy. pA.4 rafiBi A
awff. rteaX I) lf pr.
WMIWB ftJ mm IB'BBO f '
mniij, rU artd
fnb 4m in lh mf a
ABIMI f XH riTTIkSJ
fklUN HI-R AT 4
,'fHntaj h mtrnm wi'is.
'tirIt all What wa)
nrHkJtii.-nfl oi.
,F IN IKnifBLt II .
IMHCI Uir nt. 1LL
rtik ntvv or a AtijiTrki, trm m rrmon rra
ItTftM, MOUTH M KUM IU Ml, f Ik III
Kit An. wr whiu orrkHTui MikrrMuii Of Nriix
W. L. Douglas
B?S CIIaTEP ISTHCBCST.
ULa 1 1 V d PIT ro A KINO.
9. CORDOVAN,
4.n.FlwCAlal0UCAS0a
3.VP0UCE,9SOLCt.
2.l7JBOyS'SCHWlSH0l
LADIES
BMocKTaM.Maa.
Over Oa MllUeai PaopU w the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes ar aqually Mtltfactory
Sy five tb beat valaw tor the snaaey.
y equal cantos awa la style and fit.
Ir wearlat aMlltiea ar aaswrjissss.
The Dricaa are aaiforaa,-staaiped an aoa.
Proas i 1o tj save4 ever ether makes.
Jl your dsaiar cannot supply youMcaa.
FRAZER caxl
KIT IN I HI W0R10. VallaanwaaB
ItawearlrwanallUaa ar nnaurtauaad.afliHall
onttaatln two boiea of any other brand. Pre
rom Animai uus. timv this uicNuijisf.
PUB HALS Btf OHKUON AND
WASHINGTON MICKOHAIITS
aud Dealers (eoerally.
k. T. N. TJ. No. 693 8. F. N, U. No. 670
hW mm NM Ma JS(U;1 -JTW 4
wm'mmml.mm Vg? UJ
Mwiiws4f TLJTx mmtim tmmmmt
"-at
. a.-W aesamwaw mm anew jtaanav
1 ff
1 -v
v. . Vw7
DO YOU KEL BADT DOKH VOUR BACK
ithtT llott vervtp teem a bnrtlen? Yon nej
MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
DEW ARE
Of imitation
tracts marks
ad labels.
I
i
" - jbj
In Convenient Form
(To be diluted with water for aaa)
Endoied by tbi Oretfoa md Witblojtoo
Stats Boards or Horticulture
Write for J,1"""11 nl Mmi
oavio h. Buinwwai:
MftMsMftMMS