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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1895)
i;MBSlSS3e4B&r THE NEW WOMAN. O OYAL Baking Powder is absolutely pure and healthful, composed of the best ingredients, and of the highest strength. It is impossible to make a purer or stronger baking powder. San Francisco Board of Health. ACUTE DYSPEPSIA SYMPATHETIC HEART DISEASE OFTEN ATTENDS IT. MIRTH AND MERRIMENT. Mrs. V. Curler, of Clarence, Iowa. Telle n Interesting Story of Hr Kx I , . perlenee WitK Pink Pllta. From the Republican, Cedar Rapid., Iowa. Mrs. V. Curley who has resided in Clarence, Iowa, for the past twenty' two years, tells an interesting story of what she consi (teres resone front prema ture death. Her narrative is as fol lows: "For ten years prior to 1894, I was a constant sufferer from aonte stomach trouble. I had all the manifold symp toms of acute dyspepsia, and at times other troubles were present in compli cation -I did ndt know what it was to enjoy a meal. No matter how careful I might be as to the quality, quantity and preparation of my food, distress always followed eating. I was des pondent and bine. Almost to the point of insanity at times, and would have been glad to die.! Often and often I could not sleep. Sympathetic heart trouble set in and time and again I was obliged to call a doctor in the night to relieve suaaen anacKS 01 snnocation which wonld come on without a ments warning. My troubles increased as time wore on and I spent large sums in doctor bills, being compelled to have medical attendants almost constantly. During 1893 and 1893, it was impossible for me to retain food, and water brahses plagued me. I was reduced to a skele ton. A consultation of physicians was unable to determine just what did ail me. The doctors gave as us their opinion that the probable trouble was ulceration of the ooats of the stomach and held out no hope of recovery. One doctor said, 'All I can do to relieve your suffering is by the use of opium., About this time a friend of mine, Mrs. Symantha Smith, of Glidden, Iowa, told me about the case of Mrs. Thurston, of Oxford Junction, Iowa. This lady said she had been afflicted much the same as I had. She con-1 suited local physicians without relief, iHtolr and went to Davenport for treatment Giving up all hope of recovery, she was persuaded by a friend to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The result was almost magical. I was led to try them from her ex perienoe, and before many months I felt better than I had for a dozen years. I am now almost free from trouble, and if through Dome error of diet I feel badly, this splendid remedy sets me right again. I have regained my strength and am once more in my usual flesh. I sleep well and can eat without distress. I have no doubt that I owe my recovery to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I only wish that I had beard of them years ago thereby saving myself ten years of suffering and much money. Dr. Williams Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine Com pany, scnenectaay, jn. x., lor 500 per box, or six boxes for f 2.50. NOT A TENDERFOOT. An Impromptu Dance at Which Xkupree Was Muter. ' One day a lot of rustlers and all around thieves and cutthroats rode into a mining town in Arizona and proceed ed to have fun. They rode up and down the main street firing right and left until they scared everybody indoors. Then they went into the principal saloon of the place for liquor. Jim Dnpree happened to be in the saloon at the time and, as usual, had no gun with him. Those fellows caught sight of him, and as he was the freshest-looking duck they had seen for many a day, they started in to have fun with him. The leader of the gang was a ruffian called Long' Haired Pete. As soon as he saw Dupree he pulled his gun and sent a bullet through the floor right between Jim's feet. ' "Give us a dance and be lively about it," shouted Pete, while hig gang gathered around to see the fun. Jim got up without a word and start ed in to dancing a regular old Kentucky breakdown. Those fellows thought he was scared almost to death. He danced around in a circle, and as he came in front of the leader of the gang his foot suddenly shot up and caught Long Haired Pete squarly under the chin. The ruffian measured his length on the floor. Quick as a flash Jim leaped forward and snatched the two pistols carried by the leader of the gang. Then, with a smile as innocent as that of a boy he covered the gang and told them all to dance. They hesitated for a moment Then Jim sent a bullet through the toe of Pete's boot, and another through the hat of Lon Spivey, a member of the gang. They danced then, and at the first sign of a let-up Jim would shoot a button off some man's coat or clip off a lock of long hair with a bullet. Without taking his eyes off the gang, Jim told the barkeeper to send out and get all the boys to come in and see the fun. They all came quickly enough, and Jim kept that gang of outlaws there dancing until some of them dropped to the floor exhausted. Then he made every man of them hand over his gun to the barkeeper, after which he ordered drinks for the crowd. When the fun was over he told Missionary (out West) Did you ever forgive au enemy? Bad man Wuust Missionary I am glad to hear that What moved your iuner soul to prefer peace to strife? Bad man I didn't have no gun. Mrs. Perkins I advertised for a Frenoh nurse. Applicant Oi've been in Paree, mum. Mrs. P. Not very long, I imagine? Applicant No, mum, Oi only sthayed long enough to git the axoint "There, my love," said the young husband, as he placed a bundle on the table, "I've bought you a pair of sleeves.' -"Oh, you darling 1" ex claimed the delighted wife. "I'm so happy I Anything will do for a dress. " The New Woman I should like to look at some neckties. New assistant The necktie department is farther back. This is the toilet department I can show you some mustache iuvig orators though. Agitated young bridegroom (immedi ately after the ceremony) Serena, shall shall 1 shall we shall we kiss? Self-possessed bride (it being her third experience) It is my usual cus tom, William. A young woman married a man who told her he was an "architect's assist' ant bhe became disconsolate upon discovering next day that he assisted the architect by carrying bricks up ladder in a hod. Old Baohe That s a handsome pair of slippers you're, wearing, Harry. tiarry iney ought to be; I'm sure they cost enough. My wife made them, and then coaxed me out of the price of a sealskin. Young lady 1 should like to give my intended a little surprise before our marriage. What would you recom mend. Lady friend Don't wear your false teeth just for once. He Do you think blondes have more admirers than brunettes? She I don't know. Why not ask some of the girls who have had experiences in both ca pacities? How is your wife?" "Um her head has been troubling her a good deal Sick headhaoer Not ex actly. She- keeps wanting a new hat every month." "I was not aware that you knew him," said Tom Snack to an Irish friend the other day. "Knew him," he exclaimed. "I knew him when his father was a boy. Extract from the catalogue of a lend ing library: ' In the novels and stor ies marked with an asterisk, the happy couples get marired at the finish. Miss Pruyn Where did you get the design of your servants' livery? Sash Oh, my ancestors used ltl Miss P. Indeed 1 by whom were they em ployed? Ethel I wonder if he loves me as he says? He has known me only a week. Clarissa He may, if that's all the time he has known you. W. D. Howelle Bays She Hat Been Her Before and I Ko New Creature. The New Woman who comes smok ing, comes talking, and she talks to all lengths and breadths in notion. But if this is true, has she come talking in any greater number than before? There were always women who liked tho ex citement of thin ice, iu their choice of topics, especially if the water was not very deep underneath, and this sort are still sliding about in conversation. Per haps there is really a greater frankness in the matters spoken of in mixed com panies than there was a generation ago; but within the same period women have greatly abridged the freedom of their innocent relations with men iu our own country. , The chaperon has oome, and haa cyme to stay, in all her superfluity, as it would have beea accounted by mothers of daughters when they were only daughters themselves. In this respect the American woman of 1808 is vastly less than the woman of 1845, for what was really a novelty among young people, and of our own invention, has been exchanged, in good society at least, for a remnant of the old conditions which Europe has been slowly out growing, and which we had flung aside with pur political allegiance to Eng land. It was one of the few social growths indigenous to our soil, it was graceful and sweet and pretty, and it was rooted in our purer life; but for the last quarter of a century we have been rapidly recolouizing ourselves, and in nothing more than our wish to ex tinguish the ohartning liberty that once existed among young people here. I suppose there is a sort of newness in women's wish to know rather more of all sorts of things than they used; they have a great many oontrivauoes 1 for the improvement of their minds: they take up different varities of work sociological and economical; they in terest themselves in the condition of the poor; they have opinions favorable to the unhappy; they wish to take large views, and to act helpfully and gener ously; and I should be very glad to be lieve that men were equally renewing themselves in the same ways. But we do not hear much of the New Man, and we are left to believe that he has not only not arrived, but has not start' ed. No one really knows whether he has arrived or not, however, except the New Woman, and she is still so uncer tain nerseir, in lire, that we nave no means of authenticating him from her knowledge. In fiction, such fiction as I began with in this rambling inquiry, he is not a pleasant companion. He is rude to the new girl, brutally rude, and he is not very kind to the old girl, He says and does things that only the lady novelist has hitherto conceived of men's doings, and his behavior in no tion makes ub willing to get on without him in life for a long time yet What is certain is that 11 the New Man ever does oome, the New Woman will be too good for him, just as the old woman is too good for the old man now and always has been. Harper's Weekly. OUR IRON ORES. PROTECTION FROM MOTHS. Woolen Clothing Should Be Thoroughly Mended Before Putting Away. This is the time to put away the heavy furs, for the moth millers are already beginning to fly. People rush about buying all sorts of expensive moth-preventives, when they are not of the least use. If furs and clothing are put away with the moth egg in them, all the odors in the world, good, bad, or indifferent, would not keep them from hatching. The time when the Quantity, Quality and Variety A bund ant-Capltal Wanted to Itlllie It. We have made frequent mention of our iron ores, and the business which would follow the Investment of a sum of money sufficient to manufacture those ores into the common trade, the Post- Intelligeuoer says: "It has been a matter of surprise to many who are familiar with the re' sources of this country why the number of iron furnaces projected on this coast failed to materialise, and it is equally a matter of regret to thoso who project ed the enterprises that they failed to accomplish results, through no fault of their own. The making of iron and steel by modern process requires the investment of a large amount of oapi tal an amount extending into the millions and it also requires great skill in manufacture and management In one or two instances the capital re- quisite has been secured and every hope held out of its immediate availability, but through unforeseen reverses and financial troubles the money was not forthcoming and the preliminary work was compelled to suspend. Capital, always timid, is slow to enter untried fields, and once driven away, it is hard to secure its return. "The services of exports have bocu secured on many occasions, and at great expense, to examine the mines of iron, coal, ooke and lime, to report carefully on tho quality, quantity and avail ability. The reports have been invari ably good, and as such oould be passed upon favorably in the greatest irou cen ters in America and Europe. The cost of manufacturing pig iron and its con version into steel was also ascertained; this was found to be within the limits of Pittsburg furnaces; the market for the metal, either pig iron or steel bil lets, was found both at home and abroad. In one instance the product of a large plant would have beeu scarcely sufficient to supply orders extending over a long period. Large home orders oould have been secured amounting to hundreds of thousands. "With the return of prosperity it is hoped that renewed effort will result in securing what the country so much needs capital and that the men who have striven so long and faithfully to invest it in iron furnaces, converters and rolling mills will meet with the suo cess their enterprise deserves. It means a great deal to Seattle, to Puget Sound, to Washington; it moans the taking of millions of wealth from tho mountains; it means the employment of thousands of skilled and unskilled workmen; it means the building up of great industries on solid and lasting loundatious; it means the building up 01 a great manuiacturing city and a grand state." HER STRANGE PRISON. Wbere a Cincinnati Man Found Bit Wire After a Burglary. 4 , :. v The ooiutruction of city flats Is tuoh that it Moms ns if flat thieve ought to be able to obtain almost unlimited plun der witli Impunity. But they are for ever getting caught, and most of them are tho lowont grades of snonlc tliloves. Auythlmt like originality lu their methods is rare, so the experience of the bond of a modest west side flat It re markable." lie arrived borne from bust Doss about 6 'clock and at ouoe observed Indications that something unusual had beau going on. It was evident that thief had been around, and that he had gone awny without taking much, if anything, with him unlets it was the resident's wife, for she was nowhere to be found. Tho husband presumed that she had gone to notify the police, 10 ho sat down and waited, but after an hour or two he be came auxious aud Inquired of the neigh bors. Thoy had hoard or soon nothing either of thief or wife. Then thero was trou ble. The husband hurried to the near est polios station. His wife hadn't been there, aud a general alarm was tont out for patrolmen to watch for her, while two detectives returned to the house and helped push inquiries. The kitchen and dining room looked as if the wife had been interrupted in ber work, but thero was no other sign other. The detectives looked very wise, askod many questions that seoniad im pudent to tho distracted husband, made some notes and went away. The husband was iu a bad stato of mind, but not so upset that bo didn't presently realizo that he neodod food. Bather than go to a restaurant bo went to his refrigerator to see what thero might be to eat Ho opened the door, and there, ourlud up in the ioeolmiuber, was his wife. She wasn't hurt Shs hadn't even fainted. She was simply asleep, somewhat stupefied with tho olosn air and cramp ed in every joint but otherwise in good condition aud glad to get out She ex plained that she caught a thief at work, and that he clapped bor into the refrig erator before the could scream. Onoe in she could do nothing. There was no inner handle to the door. She cried aloud, and finding no response just waited to be discovered, dreading all the while that her wedding spoons had been taken. They were not, though. They had been placed, with other valu ables, in the center of the dining room table for carrying off, and the incident ended happily. Cincinnati Enquirer. AN EXPENSIVE CURL STAY IN THE COUNTRY. An Overnlua of OirU In Man? of the Large Cltiea of the I'nlon. The constant influx of girls from the country into our large cities brings with it portentous dangers and evils. Dream ing of an easy time, good wages, a bet ter wardrobe and more congenial com panions; dazzled with the vision of city amusements, and hoping perhaps to find a marriageable partner and settle down into a comfortable city home, thousands leave the farm or village and The Origin of a Story Attributed to Twen ty Uandaonte Women. Lady Harriot D'Orsay was really, ac cording to Mr. Sola, in hlsreminisoenoes published recently, the heroine of a story which has been told in at least 30 forms of 20 difforent ladies of fashion. She wot presiding at a stall at a vente de charite, or bazaar, held in aid of the fund of soma asylum or another, when there came up the Duke of Or loans, son and heir of King Louis Phi lippe. The duke, after some polite small talk, began to extol the beauty of ber bair, and indeed her Henrietta Maria coiffure had never looked glossier or soft er than it did this day. "Ob," said his royal highness, "if I could only possess one of those enchant ing ringlets!" "How much would monseigneur give LIU a A IlKVB. Ths ohlf tun-tloa 0! the kidneys Is to tepaf ate from ihe blood, In ltpwlbrnnhtliem, of - Mill linpurltl.end watery W'" whJ2i n..vu ,1,. . Hmi am tnrouah the bladder. The retfiilloli of tliete HI eoiieaqiiaiiet of liiaellylly ol the kliluevs la pnnluiiilre 'it aright a d , droii.y,iileb'le, albuminuria and oihr ml diet with lil tendency, lloiilelter'e 'in li 11. 1 1-.. . i.ui.ik uiiiitiniiwl illnrello ami blond d.tmront, litiiwlt ihe kldneya when Inantlve to rnurwiheir ailtlng fum t on, and train Iron; the Vlei nurreiit linuilllee which luteal II and 11. tltulr MMiMb.tii.e mi urealll Of Wit Icily, fietanh ol III bladder, giavul and releu. tlouiifihe mine ate euo iiihuii arre-ieu or averted by IhU benlgu promoter ami r. ora live ol nrvanln amino. Malaria, rlieiimatlam, ooiinlliwiluii, bllloitanaaa ami iiy.rwii.la alun yield 10 the union, will I. Uo awtlly two tlolal to lilt wuat ami uervtiu.. Tills la old Kinnlrow but liniua. pretty fod take-off," remarked aa llit ballet vamt out lu Hit IIOW'I Til It T WaoiittrOna Hundred Dollars Reward for any cnae of Catarrh that oaunut be oursd by Mall'a t'alarrh Ourel t, J. CII1CNKV A CO.. Front,. Toledo, Ohio. We. the tinderahrned. have known K. J Cheney for the pant IS yean, and believe him barl'eotly honorable In all bualneat iranaaotlont and financially able to carry out any obligation! made by thi-lr linn, WinT A Tat' a 1, Wholesale PrtigKMa. Toledo, 0. Wai.imnu, Kimman A MaaviM, Wholeaale Dnmxltla, Toledo, 0, Hall's Catarrh Our it taken Internally aotttiK dlreoily upon Ihe blood and mucout eirfWe of the aynteni. I'rloe, 70o. per bot tle. Hold ny all Drugglsta. Teatlnionlalt fr . MtmiO aTOHK-WIIvy H, Allen Co., Ihe oUlml, the larae-t, ill Flrel HI., Portland. I'hira riojr, iiaMinau, Planner r-ianoa, aatey -Send for catalogue!, Onnom. l-ow prl, ex.y leroia. Ouard yonrwlf for summer malaria, tired f.ollUK, by Untiig 111 w Orrgou lllood furlller. ft Tsr Gkhmsa for break faat. 4m& ASK YOUR DRUOQIST FOR . . .v , . IT I THE BEST i FOR Dyspe ptic,Delicate Jnf Irm and AGED PERSONS w JOHN CABLB SONS. New York. . uivn Plt.l. war A lanremant ofttw bmrnta msb Vo.llb, Vim ptfta.euDpIl' what ' WJ Tltat rtfflHhde atrlteta aftaa laMftML. 1 1) OtlVilMti MM. DR. GUNN'S MFHOVEO ; UVER PIUS A MILD PHYSIO. A now. Iw Tliki to erwutaa Ilia oa, NEW WAV EAST Portland, Walla Walla, Spokane, Via O. K. A N Hallway nd Ureal Northern Hallway to pol 11 ta, raui, Mins.in, t'Biaiia. ri. 14,11m. i;ni raao and Kaat, A 'Id ma nearoai aiu. u, (j, IKniaran, Ueti, Au Portland. Or. 1 H O Ma- vena, lien. Ail. J4allla Waan.l U.M.lUaoll.Uon. Aal..Huokntir.VVaah. Na doati roek-hatlMl Irarki one vnnryi palaoa leaping aud d I ulna cam buffet library care bunlly loHrlataleepeni new equipment. , . AXLE CREASE IN ADVANCED YEARS Uood'a Hanaparllla It of tan of great value In giving the etrenirtB m muob neetred. Mr. W. u. wynian 01 oarainga, ai., ui a large buncn, canea a tumor, on nia right breaat. tit took flood t Baraana rilla which gave him new lift and vigor and Ihe pain and all trace of tumor hare wholly dlesnpeartd. Hetayt: "Five bot tles did the work. It it literally true, eggs are laid and the fatal damage done He (sympathetioally) Tfou have a ia nfraally before housekeepers think of bad cold. She (huskily) I have. I am so hoarse that if you attempted to kiss me I couldn't even scream I This much is to be said in favor of the tattoed man. While a great many men have designs upon others his are all upon himself. bibyi When Ssteve proposed to me he acted like a fish out of water. Triple Why shouldn't he? He knew he was caught Wife Here comes the tramp 1 gave some of my buscuits to the other day. Husband Impossible! That must be his ghost. Wife Tommy doesn't seem to be afraid of policemen. Husband Why should he? His nurse was a very pretty girL . New Way of I) running the Hair. The banged girl is transformed. All the girls are wearing those cun ning little side combs which hold in place the unruly tangles of their fluffy front locks. Above the combs the hair lies sleek and smooth as a demure Madonna's; below their restraint the fuzzy ends stick out as if in rebellion at their tutelage. And the girl will look at you with big, wise eyes and say with that little Mark Twain drawl they all affect nowadays: "It takes so long for it to grow out again." Even so. The Madonna can become the banged girl in an hour, but to be come a Madonna again is a task of months. Yon become whole-haired again "while you wait. " so to speak. Wherefore I should counsel deliberation and much weighing of the pros and cons before becoming a banged girl again. Meanwhile, though, there are the combs. The little side combs are meant to be but temporary, and it may not be in the best of taste to decorate them, but have seen them blazing with gems. A better place for these is the big back comb, which may be shell, with gold panels, or all gold, or may produce the effect of a tiara of diamonds. Phila delphia Times. An Actor'e Mletake. An amusing story was told some years ago of E. A. Sothern, a famous wit and actor. Upon a certain even ing he was invited to two entertain ments, one for children, and the other reception for grown people. Fond of children, Sothern decided to go to the party given for the little ones, and thinking it would be a great joke to ! go into the parlor on all fours and roar ing like a bear, he did so much to the Pete to take his gang and get out of the amusement of the guests and his own Territory as fast as possible and never tubsequent unhappiness.for once in the oome back. That gang rode out of'"1"0190' the T00m he looked up and town tho sickest-looking lot of tough vr that he nad made a mistake in the men I ever saw, and that was the last house, and had played for the grown ever seen of them in that part of the pooplo and not for the children. Har country. St Louis Globe-Demoorat j !' Young People. putting them away at all. When the warm spring days come the heavy fur coat or jacket is hung up in the closet lest it may be needed again, and per haps it is worn once or twice and then hung up again, and in the hurry of spring work forgotten until somebody sees moth millers flying about frequent ly. Xnen the lurs are taken out, per' naps brushed a little, and put away smothered in camphor or in something else that is useless as it is expensive. In the fall, when the clothes and furs come out, there is weeping and wailing, for the hair flies from the furs, and holes, always in the very worst places to mend, are found in the clothes. Then there is any amount of wonder ing, and "I can't imagine how it hap pened, for I put them away so carefully and used such a lot of moth stuff. The proper way is to lay the heavy clothing in a chest as soon as the use is not daily, and then it can be taken out and worn when the oold days oome and extra wraps are needed. When the oold weather has fairly gone, then every separate article should be taken out and hung on the clothes-line on a clear day if there is a wind, so much the better, as the dust will blow away from you as you beat it out. After beating with light switch of some kind it should be both tough and elastic brush the clothes carefully. Never put olothes away with soiled spots upon them; scour them all out first It is a very good plan to have them all thoroughly mended, for the children's clothes are always needed in a hurry in the fall, and if put away in order it is a great gain in every way. When all the clothes are thoroughly beaten and brushed and cleansed, fold every article separately, and with care as to folding. Do not leave them on the line to air, for that is the very time that the moth miller takes to lay her eggs. They are very plentiful out-doors just as soon as the weather becomes mild and are wait' ing for a chance to get into the house, and no article of woolen is safe if left out half an hour. Then see that your chests are absolutely tight, that there are no cracks, in them anywhere. If there are paste newspaper over the cracks, wherever they are, and that there is not even the most infini tesimal crevice for the moth miller to enter, for if there is one she will find it Wrap up each article separately, either in old sheets or in old towels or in papers. Bee that all are scrupulously and absolutely clean. Pack them in with care, so that they will not be crushed or wrinkled, and spread a sheet over the top, and tuck it in close ly all over the things. Close your chest, and if you are sure that you will not need to open it during the warm season, paste paper over the edge of the cover. But if it closes tightly there will be no danger from the moths. Harper's Bazaar. 1 flock to the metropolis. Here many of for one, " anked Lady Harriet gravely. . U ..... ...... . H .. . . M 11 cm . I . " - uicui uuuuwii Buuauuu lur uiuureut 1 --5 .ouu rrancs? from that which they imagined in ad vance of their actual experience of city life. The wages they get are meager; their lodgings are far from comfort' able; they have no home life; they face new temptations and trials, and their life becomes one of hardship and trou ble. In the store, factory, shop or of fice they are beset with danger and an noyance, while all about them are pit' falls spread for unwary feet Some of them, with unusual aptitudes for stenography, typewriting and kindred occupation or with fine executive gifts, maice their way to the top and secure first-class posts; but a great multitude struggle and almost starve on $S or $0 a week. This 1-vtter class are not able to save any money; a week's illness brings them into debt, and a month without employment renders them ob jects of charity. How much better would it be for most of them to stay at home, help in the household or accept such work as might be available on the farm or in the village. Our large cit ies now contain thousands of girls in a sorry plight, either without employ' ment or struggling for bread girls who might have remained in comfort at home, or who oould have found work of some sort in a country town to Hup port them, with less cost of strength, nerve power ana vital iorce to say nothing of the dangers which now be set them in the city. What a kindness it would be to thousands who are heed' lessly planning to rush cityward "to find something to do," could a per snaive word reach them and say: Better stay at home." Philadelphia Times. "Five thousand francs!" repeated the duke. "A more bagatellel" "Six thousand francs?" "Anything so charming a lady chose to ask." I will not bo extortionate." trarsnod Lady Harriet "Wo will say 6,000. " And then she very composedly pro duced a dainty little pair of scissors, nipped off tho adorable Henrietta Maria ringlet, wrapped it in silver pa per and handed it with dignity to the duke. Hig royal highness looked very straight down his note, and returning Lady Harriet's salute stalked some what gloomily away. But bis privy purse duly forwarded the money next day. A Valuable Coin. A well known bishop tells a story of a olerk at a village ohurcb who deliber ately took half a orown out of the plate as he brought it np to the communion table and slipped it into his pocket "I taw him take it, "said the bishop, and intended to oharge him with it at the end of the servico, but carried away by the sublimity of the service I forgot all about it Next day I remembered and spoke about it Ob, sir, ' said the old olerk, 'never you worry about that That half crown has done good service fer many years. 1 icoep it to put down first, and then the gentry, seeing a poor man like me put 2s. 6d in the plate, can't for sham give less. "London Tit-Bits. Between 1840 and 1876 scores of pat ents for producing eloctrio light were taken oot in almost every country in Europe. Mauch Chunk, Pa, is an Indian i name meaning bear mountain. I believe Piso'a Core for Cnn.nmnHnn Mved my bov't life laat aomm.r M ivi.uia 1JUUOI.AW, Lit 18W. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures. Wt also think Ilood't Fills the beet." ci ffiasiow's Vrw; - rod OMiLoaM tiitmino raMieeaaaMfc e TAKE PruMDER'S. Obeqon Blood PURinEi UKL 3 1 a aai .KIDNEY I UVC R DISC AStS. DYSHCP8IA. 'W nunrQ nnrnute unoia nttr.ero FRAZER HIT IN THI WORLD. Iu weartngnnallUoa are niiiurtiaaaed. aetnalle outlaallng two boiea of any other brand. Vree irom Aiiinat viia iikt tiik iiCMiiNk, FUH MALI HY OKKtlON AND (r-WAIHIkllTim HKHOMAIITIfAl' aad Dealer geue'ally. HOT1V32 POWER. HERCULES GASOLINE Ensrca-iisrma. riuu in, iu rrucim, en. m Ptniiii. or.1 CIHC,EflMlSI"3PYS If you tier the Prtaleer lefekeaara a ar aire. Make Bwacy while others are wasting t In e by old orornan. Catalugtellaall about ll .and deerribre rrry artk-iearedea. lor tbi poultry BuMaces, ( fuuuiiatedl I CaJi !i'7?CIl,"!.r.lJ?J rhvaoenre warren. miLOaiA IwrJrJBATOI 60., rtalee.Cal. taawca Hooea, m t Mala at., U AaarlM raaa. . TtiallCDin" a iiv merhaaKally the beat wheel. Hetllrai model. we are Pacific ioaat Arret, airvrie rata. lugueaaUed fterjrlrea A SURE CURE FOR PILES ItoMnc PiIm known by motMiir Ilka vmfrtUaamnm ITlLeVOaVn lt)UtU Dn WlfM, I DU lUTTat Mil BlUba. BeHI1 or Protroujuff PtUa ylrll hi muc I OR. BO-8AM-KO' tILI RSMKDV, wmea vt ainwHiy a putt mnmeum, atMartw toman, tl- artificial Eyes Elastic Stockings Trusses ... Crutches ... WrHt far Prloei... WOODWCUSKEttll. DRUSOIITt ...PtrUtas. Oreget Ely's Cream Balm WILL CURB Catarrh Applr baltn IntnMuih aurtrfl. Eli baua-.M Wama M..N. Y. The only Standard Ty pewriter with Prrfertly VUlbl. W riting, suppllm for All Mactilnoe. W. A. RIDEOUT, Gen. Ag't Na. T Btarh fOKTI.ANU, OR. YQUN B YOt'CAM MAKKMONRYHAU lug bay who a good Hay 1'ivaa. VYrlle u. for luforniatlun. IIIX-rt-I.lca-.w aell til the lieel SrateiaM Hloyelea. Write xr lor t.aiaiiigue, J. TRUMAN It CO.. tS Huaa Street, Haa rraaelaeo, Cel. ' fleaae mention Ihli paper when writing WD GROCERIES -1KD-FflOVISIOHS Write for Rpeclal Caab Prlor-I.nt, CVFRDINO A PARRCLU PORTlRRD.OR. W. t. K. TJ. No. nW-fl. F. N. U. No. 670 SEEDS SHEEP- 1 lve, bought from the RECEIVER of F. L. I'OHSO.V A SON, the ttock, Hi to ret and good will of the toed bnslneat lately carried on by them and will continue tho tan at 206 Third Street. BUELL LAMBKKHUN, roim.AMD, oC ..' - i. , ia. DIP UTTL'SN0H.P0IS8N00S. SAFEST IND BEST Mlxee wlih enlil water, Inpiovea tbt wool, Mil UIDUf t CO., Mut, Or, Z'.ASZ.'&SzrZ K32SE WElNHARffSS LL-KNOWN BEER (IN KKOS OH BOlTtKr) T V IT.. I OllTX ,MT, on. none- . wbert Iron. Hoy, Mich., Oct. 20, Advice for Angler. U, gentle angler, you who are fortunate enough to get away from the business treadmill, look to it that you take your sport as an honest angler should. It may be great fun to kill them as fast as you can drag them out; there may be a certain satisfaction in killing more than the other fellow can show, but believe me these feats do not constitute the real pleasure of an gling. One need not be forever staring at an arching rod, or straining silk; one's ears need not always be filled with the click of a string-spewing, string-eating nondescript clock, which measures the life of a captive aa our watches measure our days. An angling outing oilers many better things than dead fish. The marvelous life stirring in everything, the merry gossip of the shortened. brook, the ceaseless music of the joy ous birds, the hues of conntless flowers, the perfumed, lazy breeze, the beauty, healthfulness and purity of it all, will yield to the observing angler more last ing pleasure than ever falls to the. lot of the man who fishes for count and estimates his gratification by the amount Ol life be can destroy within a I never minerrd ao little with any of my irivan r.imn Vn flab hnnl1 t. children a I did with my lat." n ' " w a .1 w OUUHiia KTV VI that cannot be properly used, and no man worthy of the name of gentleman angler will kill for count. It is not all nay, 'tis not half of fishing to kill fish 1' ' Crating for Hay, PROSPECTIVE MOTHERS and thoae soon to become mothers, should know that Dr. Pierce '1 Favorite Pre scription robs child birth of its torturct and terrors, a well a of its dangers to both mother and child, by aiding nature in preparing-the syatera for parturition. There by " labor ' and the period of confine ment are greatly Dromotea the aerr. tion of an abundance of nourishment for the child. Mra. Doaa A Guthbik. of OnkU r Ten., write. : "When I bnran takinv riv.nr Pierce'e Favorite Preacriotion. 1 w nt a.i a rtand on my feet without .uffering almoat death. Now X do all mv housework. wanhinir ctnitinv ewiug and everything for my family of eight. I am atouter now than I have been In eix yeara. Your ' Favorite Prescription ' ia the beat to lake Dcioreconnuement, oral leant it proved ao with It also MALARIA I Three rtnwww only. Trv it. DO YOU g'KEL BA1? UOKH YuUH BACK achat Does every atp teem a burden T You need MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. Antifermentine Preserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retains their natural flavor. a J Beat Ouuah brmp. Tauaa Ooud. Cae 9 1 U In tlma Bold by dri.-mrlm 1 4 ' WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OP S A POLIO Eatab. (866. CORDITT A. MAD cav fr 7iZT7Z7 fllM! 'Ilia Cnffao U tM . a a I ' J . . "I tl leMie-iriB iruin L.Nllia. JaVliBII Mllfl In. lvin.1 g :T"? ."WtTl'W fchlna Kt OH, eto. From . lr. .. tmmbii ..... i i i.n n. dla: Tea, ernnol: 1 No. 1 returned trim WhUky, SPRAYING COMPOUNDS In Convenient Form (To be diluted with water for aac) Endoi'd bj tbi Oretfon and Wisb'Dgtoo Stato Boards or Hoitlculture Write for Deaertiitlve Pamphlet and Prloet aiauuianturea or DAVID M. DUtM Prat Phanfi Oil Wnrkt KOHIXiAMr.VH,