The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, July 05, 1895, Image 4

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    Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report
ADSOXWTEI.V PURE
THE CAMEL.
Be Is a Pigheaded, Obstinate, Unsociable
and Unmanageable Brat.
Camels are not like horses. If horsa
floes not want to do anything, we make
Dim. If a camel does not want to do
anything, he leaves it undone. No
mount of coaxing, no amount of cruel
ty, will make him bndge. He has the
determination of a mnle combined with
1 the strength of an elephant A camel
is one of those aggravating brntes which
will drive a hot tempered man to distrac
tion. Nothing will persuade him to lis
ten to reason. He will oppose your will
with a passive resistance that is abso
lutely unconquerable.
The only way to treat a camel is to
humor if you cannot humbug him.
They will often lie down if yon load
them with the proverbial last straw,
and yon might beat them to death or
offer np all the pleasures of paradise be
fore they would get up. They are pig-
headed beasts. Sometimes when they
have quite a light load they turn nasty
and throw themselves to the ground.
Cut although they are obstinate they
are not cute, and an Arab, by pretend
ing to submit, can generally get the
better of the stubborn beasts. Thednv
era will ostentatiously remove three or
four packages from the load, and the
animal, with an inward chuckle of
satisfaction, rises at once without per
ceiving that the parcels have meanwhile
been returned to their former place. As
he flatters himself he has shirked some
of bis duty he swings away with light
heart, gratified beyond measure, like a
spoiled child, at having bis own way.
The camel is an unsociable beast. He
is also habitually dull, except when he is
sniffing, the salt air of the desert. When
he is treading the sands, with the burn
ing sun on his back and the boundless
waste before him, he feels himself at
home. The immense heat makes him
bubble over with pleasure and fills his
frame with a sublime intoxication. It
has been stated on the best authority
that he can go nine daya without wa
ter. ' And if yon bad ever seen a camel
drink when he does get a chance of
quenching his thirst you would not be
surprised at this, xhey nave been
known to nut away lit gallons at a
time. Ash ton Reporter.
A ChlMM Lottery Dan.
Entering a Chinese lottery den, one
sees on the walls a large representation
of a lottery ticket beautifully engrossed,
and also large slips of paper, each slip
containing one of the 80 lottery charac
ters. When the drawing is to take
place, these slips are taken down, rolled
into pellets so as to conceal the writing
and then thrown into a pan. They are
there well mixed np and again taken
out and placed in four wooden bowls
marked 1, 8, 8, 4, 20 of these charac
ters being distributed equally among
the four bowls.
One of these four bowls contains the
, winning characters of the drawing.
Which is it to be? Again four pieces
of paper, each printed with a number,
1, 2, 8 or 4, corresponding with the
numbers marked on the bowl, are rolled
up, thrown into a box and shaken. A
disinterested person, sometimes a little
child, is called in to draw out one of
these numbers. . For this service he re
ceives 5 cents for good luck. The paper
bearing the given number is straight
ened out, the number, read and the
bowl selected which corresponds with
the number. This, of course, contains
the winning 20 characters, and all the
other 60 characters in the three other
bowls are destroyed. The bowl chosen
is taken np, and one by one the charac
ters are unfolded. An assistant is sta
tioned near the large lottery ticket hang
ing up, and as each character in the
bowl is read off the corresponding char
acter on the wall is marked. As soon
as the 20 lucky characters are called
out they are pasted on a piece of paper
and bung up where eveiy one can see
the drawing for that day. San Fran
cisco Chronicle. , . , "
Obstacles In the Way of Civilization.
Elephant Yes, I'd like to keep up with
the times, but I can't afford it. It would
bankrupt ma to have to buy even a spring
overcoat.
1 Giraffe But think what it would cost
ma to wear standing collars. Chicago
Tribune. '
Caffarelli thought so much of his
voioe that once when challenged to
fight a duel he refused on the ground
that he had no right to expose to any
risk the life of so great a singer. '
; The slashes or openings in an outer
garment to show the one beneath were
formerly called wines
1 It u the medicine alovA
all olhert for catarrh, and
U worth ittv eight in gold
I can use Ely't Cream
Bam with tafetu, and if
does all that it claimed for
it B. W. Sperry, Hart
ford, Conn.. T
CATARRH
ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses
the Nasal Pannage", Allays Pain and Inflamma
tion, Heali the Sores, Protect the Membrane
from colds, Ken tores the Senwa of Taste and
HmeiL The Balm la quickly absorbed and gives
relief at once -
A particle is applied Into each nostril, and Is
egreeable. Price, 60 cent at DrtiKgists' or by
mail. ELY BROTH KR8,
.-, ,. ' ,. M Warren Street, New York. :
5C Cigar 5C
KING OF ALL. !
Full naba'leros size. 3S per thousand: 8 per
cent rath dlse unt. All Bret-elass dealers should
keep them. If your dealer does not keep them
v- WRITE .
SIS SI M I CO., Grf Portland, Or.
Sample free. Correspondence solicited.
INFORMATION . WANTED OF
1 wswnwb'.nu of' JAMES M. NEWABD,
IihsImiki" f KIlenM. Neward, whether alive or
d-d. Uiilwi In Mansville. CeL, In 1X71. Ad.
Axvm P. O. box 20Xe, Ban rrauelsoo, Cal.
REX
TOTAL PARALYSIS.
PHYSICIANS ARE ASTOUNDED BY
A PECULIAR CASE.
A Tours Man Is Stricken With Lan
dry's raralysls and la Cured In
Eight Mouths.
From the Times, Philadelphia, Pa.
Stricken with Landry's Paralysis
and yet oured. That means but little
to the average layman, but it means
miracle to a physician. Such is the
experience of O. E. Dallimore now a
resident of Madison, N. J., and a rare
experience it is.
"Yes, it's true that I had Landry's
Paralysis, said Mr. Dallimore to a re
porter, "or else the most celebrated
physicians of London were mistaken.
"It was on the 15th of March, this
year," he continued, "when I was in
New York city, that I first felt the
symptoms of my trouble. I experi
enced difficulty m going up stairs, my
lees failing to support me. I consulted
a physician who informed me that
had every symptom of Locomotor
Ataxia, but as the case developed he
pronounced it a case of Landry's Par
alysis, and knowing the nature of the
disease, advised me to to start for my
home and friends. I gave up my work,
and on April 1st Btarted for London,
Ont. A well-known physician was
consulted but I grew rapidly worse and
on Saturday, April 7, several eminent
physicians held a consultation on my
case and informed me that I was at
death's door, having but three to six
daya to live, still I lingered on, by this
time completely paralyzed, my hands
and feet being dead, I could hardly
whisper my wants and could only
swallow liquids. Oh, the misery of
those moments are beyond all de-
soription and death would really have
been a welcome visitor.
"Now comes the part that has as
tounded the physicians. Rev. Mr.
Oondy, a clergyman who visited me in
my last hours, as he supposed, told me
of the marvellous cures of paralysis
that had been performed by Dr. Will
iams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I
started to take the pills about April
28 and a week after that, felt an im
provement in my condition. There
was a warm, tingling sensation in the
limbs that had been entirely dead and
I soon began to move my feet and
hands, the improvement continuing
until May 28 when I was taken out of
bed for a drive and drove the horse my
self. By the beginning of July I was
able to walk upstairs alone and paid a
visit to Niagara.
"Slowly but surely I gained my old
health and srteugth leaving Ontario for
New York on October II and begin
ning my work again on October 26,
1894. Cured of Landry's Paralysis in
eight months." To confirm his story
beyond all doubt, Mr. Dallimore made
the following affidavit. .
Sworn and subscribed before me De
cember 3, 1894. Amos C. Rathbun,
(Seal) Notary Public
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, Schenectady, N. Y., for 60 oents
per box, or six boxes for f 2.50.
A Bit of Royal Fun.
According to a story which is going
the round of the French press, the queen
of Italy on New Year's eve had a seri
ous conversation with her consort as to
the critical state of affaire. . "If things
go on as tbey have been doing of late,"
she is said to have exclaimed, "we shall
soon arrive at a revolution and then at
a republic." King Humbert did his
best to laugh away her gloomy appre
hensions, and next morning on present'
ing himself to wish ber majesty a hap
py New Year banded ber bis accustomed
gift in a dainty casket on which was
fastened a label thus inscribed : "To the
Citizeness Margaret of Savoy, from the
Citizen Humbert of 8avoy." The
queen, so the story goes, wss much de
lighted at this bit of playful and affec
tionate raillery, which had the effect
of restoring her to her wonted good
spirits.
Poor Woodcock Poor floull
Some years ago a woodcock, tired and
weary with bis long journey, fell ex
hausted down from midair right into
the middle of London. Nearly all birds
migrate at night, so it was dark, as,
half stunned, he found himself lying in
Albemarle street A woodcock's first im
pulse is always to hide himself, to steal
under something, to crouch down. In
nature wild be would choose some
bracken or some low shrub. " Holly he
particularly loves, and there he would
nestle down and doze the hours away,
but here, poor bird, in rural Piccadilly,
he could find none of these, and so he
finally nestled np to a lamppost, and,
tunned and stupefied, he fell asleep
and was so found by the early milkman
on the next day. Critia ' '
The Pompadour Roll
A rumor comes from Paris that parted
hair is not to be the fashion much lon
ger; that even more trying still the
pompadour roll surrounding the face is
to be the thing. If this be so, then for
a return of the rats, those curious
abominations of our mothers' time over
which the bair is brushed, will onoe
more be used. With the hair brushed
back in this fashion it is to be arranged
in the shape of a figure 8, quite high at
the back of the bead, and the Psyche
knot, which bas been with ns long
enough to become modified into quite
a graceful arrangement, will have to go.
Fitted. -
Applicant; I want to be a
concert
singer. . . ., '.
Manager Can you sing, sir?
Applicant Not a note, but I have
the most sudden and unaccountable fits
of illness yon ever saw. Detroit Trib
une. i . t
CEYLON TEA INDUSTRY.
Everything . in Connection -With
Work Is Scrupulously Clean.
the
Some idea of the extent of the Ceylon
tea industry may be gathered when
is remembered that to produce last
year's crop of reported tea no less than
840,000,000 of pounds of green leaves
were gathered from the plants and oou
veyed, for the most part on the backs
of the pickers, to the factories for
manufacture. Last rear tliuro were
about 80,600 acres of land in the isl-
and planted with tho tea shrub, and
there is every prospect of this acreage
being doubled within another ton
years.
The rise of this new industry has
had the most beneficial effect on the
native population of the distrcts
which as yet it is confined. Go whore
one may in the tea country there is
general air of prosperity, which ex
tends both to places and people. As
rule the planters' bungalows are mod
els of neatness and of that luxurious
comfort which nowhere seems to be
bettor understood than here. And even
among the natives of the district the
pervading influence of prosperity
very apparent. Of course the wages
earned are nnnU absurdly small from
our point of view averaging certainly
not more than the equivalent of five
cents a day, yet this as it is regular,
and as it allows or considerable pro
portion of each family becoming wage
earners, it is to their class a competency
There seems also to be what might al
most be called a moral side to the toa
business, which distinguishes it from
most other kidns of labor in the fields.
From first to last the tea business is
scrupulously clean. The girls and
men, yes, even the old women, in the
tea fields are clean both in person and
clothing to a degree not elsewhere to
be met with among native races en
gaged in out-door labor. The baskets
into which leaves are put when pulled
are also scrupulously clean, and when
they arrive at the factory they are
handed over to operatives who are
even ostentatiously clean in appear-
anoe. The dark skins of the men in
the withering, weighing, and packing
rooms are not more glossy in their
cleanliness than are those of the girls
in the sorting department; and their
olothing, if somewhat scanty, is at any
rate a model of purity. All this is, ol
course, a matter ol commercial policy,
but it is none the less a matter which
enters, and will more and more enter,
into the advancing civilisation of the
people employed in one or other por
tion of the work. Harpers' Weekly.
Hinta on Summer Dressing.
Growing girls do not need many
dresses at once. A pretty toilette for
best, which may at this season be of
wool crepon or of summer silk, and
serviceable frock of serge or some other
strong woolen stuff for every day and
roughing occasions, will meet the re
quirements of ordinary life. A girl
should have besides these, for summer,
one or two dainty ginghams simply
made, a half-dozen shirt waists, four
of linen or percale, and two of silk,
and a white gown either of Swiss mus
lin or China silk. A sailor hat for
common nse, a wide-brimmed picture
hat for very best, and a jaunty little
toque will be enough in the way of
covering for the head, and she will be
wise to have, if she can, several pairs
of shoes. It is economy to have dupli
cates of one's shoes and boots, as these
last much longer when frequently
changed and relieved. For tramping
about the roads and bills one needs, as
also for the city promenade, an ab
solutely comfortable walking boot,
with broad soles, low heels and a shape
that fits the foot to perfection. Too
loose a shoe is as disagreeable and as
bad for the foot of its wearer as one
which is too tight. . A dress boot may
be of cloth and patent-leather or of soft
kid. Let me insist, girls, on your
keeping your boots in order, so far as
the buttons are concerned. Nothing
gives one such a careless appearance as
a boot from which buttons have fallen.
Harper's Round Table.
Having a Glorious Time.
He stood quite six foot four in his
boots, and looked the very picture of
rugged health. His friends saw him
off from the landing stage at Liverpool
and he laughed boisterously when they
hinted at mal de mer. Below is given
the diary of the voyage:
June 1. Left Liverpool at noon, and
am having a glorious old time. Have
been all over the ship and have got
acquainted with the captain and mate.
But I like to sit on deck best, and am
going to sit there most of the time. It's
grand to be away out on the ocean, out
of sight of land. They've splendid
things to eat at the table, and I'm hav
ing such a good time, I would'nt care
if we'd be a month reaching America.
I'm awfully glad I could come. It's
glorious.
June 2. Queer.
June 8. Queerer.
i June 4. Awfully queer.
- Jnne 6. Still queer, and I don't
know as I'll ever live to get home, and
I don't care if I don't
June 6. A lot better; ate a biscuit
June 7. Was helped up on deck,
but am feeling very queer yet
June 8. Maybe we'll get to New
York tomorrow. Wish we were there
now. Am going to bed.
June 9. We can see the coast I
wish to gracious I could walk home or
else stay abroad forever. I've had a
terrible time. Liverpool Courier.
A Great House.
An actor who plays juvenile roles
met a leading man on the Rialto. The
leading man was dressed in deep black.
There was a wide band of crape on his
hat, and he bad discarded the patent
leather shoes an actor loves for shoes
of a subdued polish that spoke of grief.
"What's the matter?" asked the
juvenile.
"My father is dead," answered the
leading man, in a heartbroken voice'
The juvenlie expressed his sympathy.
,." When did he die?" he asked.
"Last week. We buried him today
a nice funeral," answered the heart
broken voioe.
"Large attendance?" asked the juve
nile. , ,
A smile of enthusiastic delight flash
ed over the mourner's face,
"Large attendance!" he cried. "My
boy, we turned 'em away. "Philadel
phia CalL
TAMING POWER OF MUSIC.
rinafora Produced by Children of the
Homo and Horary Association.
The main room was filled with little
vacant idlers who could make up their
minds to nothimr but noise, until, at
the end of the evening, they wore gath
ered to the piano; thou, indeed, the
marvHlloua nuwor that musio has for
them was made plain. At first they
were unwilling to be silent; they
romped, they scrambled, they jibod in
masses, drowning the player s aotumi
pauimont; it seemed a hopeless bedlam,
Yet the musio went on. A little fol
low was iuduoed to sing. He sang
mauv Lyrics of an extreme and to
him, I must think utterly incompre
hensible pathos. One in particular,
which reiterated "Take back the en
gagement ring," followed by lugubri
ous waits chorus, seemed quite incom
patible with the emotions of thirteen
summers. Yet it was ovorionnoa sen
timent that they desired to hoar, and
they listened and joined with fervor
and solemnity. Steadily tne noise aun
skylarking were forgotten; they
watched the musician intently, and the
spell was obviously at work. Why
they should wish melancholly songs,
and a moral whore virtue is reproach
ful and maguauimous, I cannot clearly
guess; I suppose the melody and half
comprehended words make 'some dim
appeal to that spark of the divine
which is implanted somewhere iu all of
them. At any rate, it was this charac
teristic of theirs that brought Pinafore.
Musio could keep them attentive; they
should be set to learning musio, and
words that went with it
The first trial, Pinafore, was some
thing at which the mere contemplation
staggers. They would not learn tne
linos. They assured the leader that
they could not possibly remember all
that stuff. To give them books
would have disbanded them on the spot
Teaching began orally, word by word.
They listened for two minutes, marched
out of the door, and roamed the town
for several days. They were made to
know that plenty were ready to fill
their places, and this brought them
causally back to see what was going
on. They saw the indomitable lender
standing at the piano, striking the
keys with one hand, waving the other,
and shouting melody to the chorus,
who shouted, "We sail the ocean
blue," in response. Then the recal
citrant sat down once more, and suc
ceeded in committing some lines to
memory. This was the only argument
used to them: "You said you could
not learn anything by heart You
have learned that, and therefore can
learn some more." Again some of
them went away, but returned, to find
the leader eternally shouting by the
piano, and the chours replying, "Sir
Joseph's barge is seen." By this time
the music and possibly the drama, be
gan to interest them, and they caught
at the sentiment of "Fair moon, to thee
I sing." Pinafore was now creeping
from chaos, when a sudden twist in
the boy nature cropped out and threat
ened to tangle the whole enterprise.
The big boys of 17 would not sing with
the small boys of 12. They could not
submit their dignity to this affront
So they sat in a corner together and
looked on cynically. The worst of it
was that this first set of boys had not
been long enough under tho influence
of the Home to acquire any sort of in
dependence. They herded with their
leader; and if Jim came in and sin
cerely wanted to sing, but discovered
that Jack had decided not to sing, he
too forsook the troupe and sat in the
corner. It was explained to tnem an
that little boys are necessary, because
only they can sing treble, but this tech
nicality had no weight with them.
And then Josephine and Little Butter
cup struck on the issue of petticoats.
Still the leader stood by the piano,
week in and week out; and at length,
in the spring, Pinafore was actually
given. To say it was astonishing is
pale comment The audienoe of po
lite "grown-ups" that came to hear it
went home entirely amazed. But the
best of Pinafore was that it established
two fundamental precedents. : They
knew now that they could learn and
remember out of a book, and the chorus
who finally sang made their first step
in independence. - When the Pirates
of Penzance came there were Jims
ready to sing, whether the Jacks re
fused or not Owen Wiater, in Harp
er's Magazine for July.
The Advantage ot Being- Widow.
"If I were a woman a young worn
an it would be my rrst ammtion to
be a widow," said a young man.
'I was in a big store this morning
and a pretty widow came in. She
wore becoming black and a high and
wide Gainsborough hat The clerks
rushed over one another to wait on her.
"A little, insignificant-looking fel
low with a sandy mustache and light
hair was the lucky man. She gave
him a smile that fairly made his head
swim.
'The clerks were simply consumed
with jealousy.
"She wanted to look at some dress
stuff, and she toyed with it daintily.
She paid more attention to the little
clerk than to the goods.
'She looked at every piece in the
store and consumed three-quarters of
an hour of the little fellow's time. In
the meantime a number of men came
in and managed to lounge around
where they could get a good view of
her.
"Finally she bought one of the cost
liest pieces in the house, and the clerk
was so agitated he made three mis
takes in fixing the checks.
That was not alL She had com
pletely demoralized the whole store,
The clerks had eyes for nothing but
her.
And it was all because she was a
widow and wore black. There's an oc
cult fascination about widows that I
could never fully understand. "At
lanta Constitution.
A Very Heavy Loss.
., The doors of the circus were just
about to open for the performance.
"I don't suppose you know that our
poor manager has met with a heavy
loss?" remarked the Bearded Lady.
"No; has he?" gympathet.oUly
chorused all the others.
"Yes," was the reply; "the Lady
Giant has eloped with the Fat Boy.
Loss oouldn't be heavier."
And the joke made the Indiarubber
Man so tired that he went over in the
corner and stretched himself. Ex.
THE MISHICOTT MYSTERY.
A Family Receives a Lr Money
and a Flno Watch From an Unknown.
Some mysterious person i playing
the role of Santa Claus for a family at
Mlshicott, Wis. The gifts taks the form
of large sums of money, as much as
14,000 having been received at one
time, and watches, jewelry and other
costly article!. In the early part of
October of last year ash anger appeared
in the village and inquired regarding
the Hallberg family residing there,
claiming to lie a Mr. Harris and to rep
resent a biother of the Hall bergs who
had left his home about 80 years ago to
seek his fortune in California, and of
whom the iiuuily had never since beard.
Before leaving the stranger promised to
write soon and send goud news. He was
looked upou with suspicion, and no
faith whs placed iu his promises.
Several weeks later Jens Hallberg re
ceived a letter containing matters relat
ing to the long lost brother ami bits of
family history only known to the fam
ily. Inclosed was a check foi 14,000,
which was to be equally divided among
tho sisters and brothers, giving each
3,000. The check proved to be good
and was cashed at the Mauitowoo Sav
ings bank.
The ilallbergs are respectable people
and rank high in the community. Tbey
are as much mystified as all those who
have looked Into the matter and cannot
account for the strauge action of their
brother, in case he Is still among the
living. This week the family received
a gold watch studded with diamonds
from "Mr. Harris. "Special in Chi
cago Inter Ocean.
Reassuring Visitor.
"I don't sea why yon didn't want rat to
say anything about Alias Mlxley'a age,
mamma," saltl Tommy, looking at the
guest "She doesn't luok nearly so old as
graudfa ouch I Who's that a-plnehln me
on the laigf" Chicago Tribune
THE KIVSTONK OF Til ARCH
In the edifice of hesltlt Is vigor, which rw-ans
not merely musoiilareufigy, but an acilvedls
ehstva i.f tho rations functions of the holy.
such as digestion, seorellon of the bile, the no
tion of the bowel, the mrt-niation oi me oinoo.
Nothing more actively and ihnrotighlv contrib
utes to the milled performance ol these lime
tlons than the renowned tonic and regulator,
Ilosletw r's Htomai-h Hitters. The result of Iu
use is a speedy gain In strength, totteiher with
the agreeable eonsoloasuesa that the tenure of
lie Is being atrenin hetied that one Is laying
ttoastnre of vitality asalnst the unavoidable
draughts which old age makes upon the system.
The fortifying Influence of the Bitters consti
tute ii a reiiaoia saieguaru againii niaisria.
rheumatism and klduer trouble. Appellie and
sleep im Drove through ll me, and II protect
mo system ageiusi tne enicis oi viu sum
damp.
.Hoarder What's that noise out IhereT Home
body beating a carpet T landlady's Husband
my wife laoulohlm.
A! ii a Jones Irvine 10 Deal nis ooaru uiii aiiu
Radam'a Mleiobe Killer cures cancer and
uloers. Aeucj, stiO Morrison St., Portland, Or.
ON THE ROAD
.to recovery, the
young woman
bo is taking
Doctor Pierce's
Favorite Pre-
acriDtion. In
maidenhood, wo
manhood, wife
hood and moth
erhood the Pre
scription is a
supporting tonic
and nervine
that's peculiarly
adapted to her
need, regulat
ing, and strength
cmng the system
and curing the
derangements of the sex. Why is it so
many women owe weir Deauty to nr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription? Because
beauty of form and face radiate from the
common center health. The best bodily
condition results from good food, fresh air
and exercise coupled with the judicious
use of tne prescription."
It reaches the origin of the trouble and
corrects it
ECZEMA
irlyc
hood until I was '
grown my family J
spent a fortune ;
trying to cure me (
I of this disease. I visited Hot Springs i
and wa treated by the best medical I
, men. but was not benefited. When '
' all things had p n A I failed I de-(
I termined to h l( 1 1 1 1 try S.S.S. i
and in four I I i Ulll months was i
entirely cured. The terribl; eczema f
was eone. not a sicn oi it leu. mv
general neaitn Dutit up. una I nave (
i never naa any return oi tne disease, i
. CHILDHOOD
yet knowa s failure to cure.
usu. rv, luvtin, irwin,jru.
Never tans to euro,
I even when all other
remedies have. Our
. treatlseon blood and
I skin diseases mailed
' free to any srliireas.
SWlFf SFBClflC CO. Adsau, Oa.
lVAsSWVWsl
urn dr.liebic & coM
IIIImII
to. luting Dtasts.
Dr. Ab,K' In y Iterator Ihm ftrr tMt ranwly for
HftnlniU WrakneM,. IxtMOf Munbood and Privst
DlneaiMHi, Ovrcomw PrtmiftlureiiMM and prnpmrm
all fur marrfaK life's dull, plufi and roapon
tlbl)lti; fl trial bottle given or wmnt free to any
one tlfwcrtblnit' mpUmia; call oraddraM400jary
Hi., private entrance tot Maaon kit., Han Praoclaco.
G.W. STAYER ICQ.
succusou
TO . . .
STIVER & WALKER
PORTLAND, OREGON
General Agents for Aultha & Tayub
Tukbshkks, Traction Enoimss and
Dikois WoooBuar Powsa.
, Hare for sale
HAND-CASE SEPARATORS 1RD ENGINES
And other Machinery of Slaver A Walker
Steck to close ont cheap.
Wrlta for Catalogue and Prices.
Room 650 Worcester Block, Portland, Or,
TO THE SICK
Radam's Microbe Killer
Is the only known remedy that will destroy
the Mlcro'e in the Blood without lulnrv to the
system. Millions of people testify to Its wou-
uviiu, vuies.
BY RKMOVISO Till! OAItK
IT Cl KKs AIX HUMAN MdKASKS.
Advice free. Try a bottle. 10O Doses 1.00.
n rite lor circulars ana testimonials free.
Radam's Microbe Killer Company
360 Morrison Street PORTLAND. OK.
N. P. N. U. No. 604-8. F. N. U. No. 681
2ES23QE2
I I rvf"u J)"S 1lussTail. I f
I 1 Beat Cough brup. TaMw Goud. Has 1 1
J 1" time. Bud by arnsglsta I I
HOITT'S SCHOOL.
Nowhere are boys bettw oared tot and
more thoroughly taugnt " "
Sohool. Burlliigame, Ban Mateo counW,
Cal. Ths loliooi Is in charge or Ira U.
lioitt, fh. 1)., and will rsonsn August 1Kb.
-8, F. Ohronlole.
, , Ths aomhat Is osrstos ...
tils Ills Is both lill "! hs'nbls.
Il may lie uiiahle lo see )'.
But uo out U qui' to '"'"tile.
HOW H TIIIHt
' We offer Ons Hundred Dollars Usward
for any rass i f Catarrh that oannot be
eund ny Hull's Catarrh Our,
y, J. CHKNKY A CO , Props., Toledo. 0.
".If- .. .. .l havu- kllllWII F. J.
CXmwy fur tht ln 1ft yw. 1N
him iHTlaMitly bonorabU in all buamwa
iraiiaaottiMia and fliianolaliy aii to carry
,ii.ii..ti... ....i tw il.Mir nrni.
uu 'jr wifiiawtn iMP" s-j
W t & TauAX, WhulesaUHriiKglsti, To
ledo U
Wai nimi, Kisnaw A Masvih, Wholetals
Ilrngiilsis. Toietio, u.
Hall's Catarrh Curs Is taken Internally
,lu...lu ........ (ka hl.ukil atul niU
suiting oirwuy i'vu ...
bottle - Sold by all druggists. 'I'tsilmon-
lala iree. .
jutw way" kawt-no oust.
Go Kast from Portland, Pendleton, Walla
Walla via O. H. A N. to Spokane and Oreat
Northern Hallway to Montana, iaoins,r.
Paul, Minneapolis, Uhioagd, Omaha. Ht.
t ....!. Ki ai.ilHf.iiih. kiHik-lia llast track:
line scenery : newetriilpnient Great North
ern Palace Weepers and Diners) Kam ly
Tourist Cars; Bullet-Library Cars. Write
0. 0. Donovan, Oeniml Agont, I'orl and,
Oregon, or F. I. Whimsy, t. P. A T. A.,
Ht. I'attl, Minn., for printed matter ana in
formation aboit rates, routes, etc.
I use l'lso's Cure for Consumption both
In my family ami practice. Dr. . W.
f ATTkaSOK, muster, at ton., uv. a, .nr.,
ntffllt) STOKK-Wlley II. Allen Co., ths
olilesl. the Isrgost, ll Klrst St., I'nrlland.
piiii-kerlng, llardinait, Fischer Plauos, Kstey
Organs. Cnw prli'es, ussy terms,
10-CKNT St I'etisj Send lor oatalogsss.
Tat Oimsa for breakfast.
All Out of Sorts
Tired, wtk and weary. If Ibis lit ymi'
nm.illtltvt. stun and llilnk. Yuu are a
sufferer from dy 0la and gre t misery
awaits you ir you uo not riiecg it now.
Hood's Bunmpurilla Is the ti nifdioli e
you can take. It bus ner-u'iar poasr to
tons and tttenglhen ins atotnat n.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is lite only true blood u Itlcr piomlm'i-Ht
in the public je today. Hi 0 lr I
U..JI. Dille si tariMOm.u ly with
nOOU S THIS Hood's s.Mwril
Walter Baker t Co. miiei,
Tka iMfsst MsasksSaMn sf
PUM, HIGH GRADE
G0C0A8tndCH0CQUT8
Oa Ms OsaMaaat. kennssMS
HIGHE8T AWARD8
Seas tks at
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
II EUROPE AMD AMtWCA.
Caution: L'T
f Iks IsMs sag a-rasam fa
wmt, soaaamMSaaottMstaasMrt
that aar atata at MftBuSjlra,
aam.lr. Borvkeeta-r. Siaaa.
Is sttaiassa saak aackags.
SOLO BY OftOCIRS tVlSYWHEM.
ffklTEl lattl GO. LTD. OMCHF.eTCt, HAH,
AMERICAN
I if MB' I
Palmer & Rey Branch
Electrotypen
Stereotypen...
Merchants in Gordon and Peerless
Presses, Cylinder Presses, Paper
Cutters, Motors of all kinds,
Folders, Printing Material.
Patentees of Self-Spacing Type.
Sole Makers of Copper-Alloy Type.
FRAZER pdcacc
SCSI IN TNI WORLD. MUCMwC
Its Wearing analUlesarannanrrjaaaMf .tiiallt
outlasting two boxes of any other brand, free
irom animal una. till Ttll linui5l,
WOH 8AKI BY OK IK JON AND
WASHINftTON MBRCHAMTS-M
aud beelera generally.
SB WARS
1 lasltatlew trade
Burks and labels.
Is Tl .
fl-lA
HA
is the whole story
about
iW A1IP HAiVP SOW
111 IM rilTtGPC CM M more ihu other Pek) sods never spoils
111 tt Viyclg V.3. flour universally icknowltdged purest In the world.
Kade only y CHURCH k CO., Hew Tor, sold hy groan ever re.
Write to Arm mmd Bmmmer Book at rtlumbla fiis-irEirir
SHEEP-DIP
Antifermentine
Preserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retains their
natural flavor.
WEINHARD'S
WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES."
GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF "
APOLIO
MMJm
KNOWLEDGE
firings comfort and Imiww mnnt and
Inula to tKirsonal enjoyment wlirn
rightly usMl. Tho many, who live bet
tor than others and onjoy life morn, with
Vss e-apcmlitu-o, by more promptly
minuting Hie wo. Id's best product to
tho iiwiTs of physical being, will attost
Jte value to With of tho pure liquid
axative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Iu exwllence is due to Its presenting
In the form moat siwptahlo and pleas
ant to the taste, the rof rwrnlng and truly
beiitiflcial properties of s erfct lax
ative i emicttially cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing contimtlon.
It has given satisfaction w millions and
met with the approval of tho mod Ira!
nrofosalon, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and lUiwrls without weak
ening them and It Is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Hyrup or Kiirs la for sale by all drug
glstelu 60o and 1 bottles, but it Is man
ufactured by the California Fig Hyrup
Co. only, whose name Is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well Informed, you will not
accept any substitute if olleretl.
CIIICKE.I?
Ifvou use tlie Fatal,
larakalan Brasaara-
Maae Btoney while
others are wasting
tunc bvold DBKTwre.
Caulugtalissllalioul
It.and drscrllH-s every
article nmlrd for the,
Douilry Duswesa.
The "ERIE
mrrhanlrally the beet
wheel. l't'lllrlmodi.
We art I'a. ilic Coaal
Aernta. blrvrle tats
lugus.maiUd fret .gives
full description, prices sle. . Aoawts WAWTgn.
riTALrMA IHCUBATOR CO., rstalna,Cal.
BsahcM Hot , n S Main St., I." AngvlM
HIGHEST AWARD
WORLD'S FAIR.
the best
prepared
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
JOHN CARLO A SONS, New Yerfc,
DR. CUNN'S
mraovKo
UVER PIUS
A MILD PHYSIC.
!. ru.f. row a rmsjR.
A snisaiH ii as sf Um Uwrals
hasHa, Ttwas salla aoixJr l
saaaa M navular. Tbaa sues
aasaaaf H
Im arstaai uis w
Eras, aad elasr the CMaisaitoa Iwtur II
engMaat I
That aaWbaf grtua was stakwa, Te afmatoea yua, wm
wtSBsaaaswirraa.orsfuu'Mef'wrs. aV4daa
WSsss, IkitoaOTUiA UA.ailadrills,aV
MEN
infTVrliig Iron) the errors, In
dlanri-lliHis.eaenuee ol vnnth.
or diseases ol the retirodor-
tlveorgaiia, sll of which lead
taronaumpilon or Insanity If not Irwed In
II me, nan if nd rgaauNSKT was !y eornaix ud.
Ing alinna. Our remwlles are endorsed by lb
medii'sl prnf sslnn. No Ol'mv.
HOFH I MS M Kit 10 A L VU., MsiMhatlar, CMS
yiECUREIORPILES
Bri.Miim nsi m iseu..
MRS WINCinW'S soothino
ninvi IIIIIVSVU V 9ISUP
- FOR CHILDftIN TCtTHINO
Fee sals kr all lr!ale. ge tisatsa ssHle.
dV
D HA,.
1
if m
III tnuslraledl I
ff 1 Caielogne US
sX r
i r
LITTLE'S POWDER OIP-THE BEST MADE
Mixes with cold water. Reliable and tale.
WELL-KNOWN BEER
. IM KKOH OH BOTrl.KH) .
Second to none Tit V IT
No mailer where from. l'OKTI.ANU, OK.