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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1895)
Klgheat of all la Leaveatag Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report U4 . 5223 ' U NVVC OI7 MR, HOWELL'S FIRST BOOK. He DM Mot Have Much Faith In It, But It Had sua Instant liewH. Before I left Venioe I had made my sketches into a book which I mmt on to Muiwr. Trnbiier & Co., in London. They bad oonaented to look at it to ob lige my friend Conway, who during hU sojourn with us in Venioe, before bis Kit clement in London, had been forced to listen to some of it They answered me in doe timo that they would publish an addition of a thou sand, at half profit, if I could set some American bouse to take 500 copies. ! Fnmois Knollys, K. c. M. o., on of the f rooms till . . - - - 1 In wafHnu n..nn IMnu W.I 1 THE PRINCE'S DENIAL A Startling an a Roman tie Btorjr Which Is Important If Tram. I ace that the news associations hare been authorised by the Prince of Wales to deny that the Duke of Vork was mar ried previous to his union with Prinoess May of Teck. The Prince of Wales was quite right to make the denial; the morning newspapers were quite right to publish it Permit me to quote the prince's statement, which was issued by pis private secretary, colonel Sir Fran cis Knollys. Thon I wish to add a rider: LoxDoa, A oc 15.-A letter signed by Sir PARKHURST ON CHILD TRAINING vvnen 1 stopped in JjODdon 1 bad so little hope of being able to do this that I asked the Trubenrs if I might, with out losing their offer get some other London boose to publish my book. They said yes, almost joyously; and t began to take my manuscript about At most places they would not look at me or it, and they nowhere consented to read it The bouse promptest in re fusing to consider it afterward pirated one of my novels, and with some ex pressions of good intention in that di rection, never paid me anything for it; though I believe the English still think that this sort of behavior was peculiar to the American publisher in the old buooaneering times. I was glad to go DaoK to tne Trubners with my book, and on my way across the Atlantic I met a publisher who finally agreed to take those 500 copies. This was Mr. M. M. Hurd, of Hard & Houghton, a house then newly established in New York and Cambridge. : We played ring-toss and Bhuffieboard together, and became of a friendship whioh lasts to this day. But it was not till some months later, when I saw him in New York, that he consented to publish my book. I remembered how he said, with an air of vague misgiving, and an effect of trying to justify himself in I an imprudenoe, that it was not a great j matter anyway. I perceived that he bad no faith in it, and to tell the truth 1 had not much myself. But the book bad an instant success, and it has gone on iroui edition to edition ever since. Ihere was just then the interest of not wholly generous surprise at Ameri can tilings among the English. Our success in putting down the irreat Con federate rebellion bad caught the fancy oi our cousins, ana I tbink it was to this mood of theirs that 1 owed largely the kindness they showed mv book. There were long and cordial reviews lu all tne great London journals, which I used to cany around with me like love-letters; and when I tried to show them to other people, I could not ueiButua ineir coldness concerning mem. Harper's Magazine for August Pratt? Girl, of Inland. . "Do you know bow very pretty pretty Irish girl is?" asks a well known and enthusiastic writer. bhe is tall and slender. Crisp little black curls lie against her white neon, Her akin is clear red and white, and Her fine black brows and curved laanea accentuate it And then her eyes 1 Why should poets sing of the languorous orbs of . Oriental bouris or the violet eyes of the fair women of the North when the Irish girl has them all at one and the same time? Starry eyes that sparkle ana glow. "You think they are darkly brown until some day she turns them upon you as she stands in the sunlight and a sappnire ia not more blue, and aa you watch her in surprise they are gray ana tney are black, and you despair of teiiing wnat color they are, but are content to watch them assume what ever shade they will; and then, if the orogue is not too pronouoed, what a charm it oonstitues to unaccustomed earsi"Family Story Paper. A Soldier Answer. Emperor Napoleon, after one of his great battles, gathered the remnant of nis foroes around bun, and proceeded to compliment them in bis characteris tic manner, so endearing to the hearts of his soldiers. Finally Company D, of the guards, who had been in the thick of the fight, were ordered to pre sent; tnemseives, ana to the astonish ment of the emperor a single soldier appeared, ne was Dound up in band ages, and could barely walk. "Where is the rest of your com pany?" asked the emperor. A tear welled in the old soldier's eye as he answered, "Your Majesty, they lie on the field dead," and then sor rowfully added, "they fought better than I." Harper's Hound Table. Shotting Out Banker HJll. v So the Banker Hill monument is in : danger of isolation? The old Charles river bridge baa for a long time been in a shaky condition, and two or three weeks ago it was officially declared to oe nnsare and closed to all travel except to foot passengers. Now City Engineer dacKson says tnat be ia in doubt how long warren bridge the only other di rect connection with Boston proper will stand the strain. Springfield Republican. In waiting noon the Prion of Wales, la nnh. lished today, sajlng that the Prince of Wales direct him to say that there Is not a shadow of foundation for the report that the Duke of Vork was married previous to hit anion with Princes May of Teck. The letter adds that the report of a previous marrbure waa obvioualr Invented to cause pain and annoyance to the young oouple. There is more than a "shadow of proof" for the duke's marriage there is the record in the English church in Malta. The marriage took place four years ago, when Prince George was with the Mediterranean squadron. At that time his elder brother was living and waa heir to the throne. There would never have been a question of the legal ity of the marriage had not "Collars and Cuffs" died. His death made the Duke of York Prince George, ashe was then heir to the dignities of his grand mother. His marriage to a commoner was out of the question. Now, mark the odd course of events. The Duke of Clarence "Collars and Cuffs"-bad been betrothed for nine months to the Princess May of Teck. When he died suddenly, his brother, Prince George, was ordered to keep t he engagement In spite of all his resistance be was mar ried to bis brother's fiancee. His own wife his morganatic wife, if you please forced her way into the church on the wedding day and created a scandal which was only half suppressed. She was his wife, the mother of his two children. Had he not been forced by circumstances into the direct succession to the throne there would have been no question of the legality of that marriage ceremony performed by the English chaplain at Malta. ' But the woman was repudiated. She was a Miss Tryon and the niece of one of England's famous sailors a man under whom the "sailor prince," this charming Duke of York, bad learn ed his seamanship. When Admiral Try on learned of the shame cast upon his name, he was half mad. The drink he took did not mollify him. Theone thins he could do was to kill himself, and he committed suicide by sinking the finest man-of-war in the English navy. He drowned hundreds of men, sank a mil lion pound ironclad and went down laughing drunk on the bridge. Tne .Prince of Wales denies? Not even the Prince of Wales can bury that scandal. The Duke of York's morganatio wife has been pensioned. She is living at Bichmond with her two children. In the latter part of June she obeyed orders and married a poor gentleman whom tne .Prince of Wales provided. Now that everything has been "covered" in these days when the Duke of York is rejoicing over a son and heir to the throne the cry ia raised that the "sail or prince has been slandered. What about that ruined woman? What about Admiral Tryon? Vance Thompson in New York Commercial Advertiser. He Claims That It Ia Ethical Rather Than Intellectual. Child training is, in the first in stance, ethical rather than intellectual, writes the Bev. Charles H. Parkhurst, D. D., in the August Ladies' Home Journal No one will ask to have this point argued who considers that the child is to be educated for the piirpoao of bis own personal enhancement and not for the purpose of making him an expert or a sharper. It is a great deal easier to make people bright than it is to make them sound. Mentality is an easy art aa compared with mortality. There is a good deal to bo said about intellectual discipline when we get to that point; bat it is still true that the issues of life are out of the heart and not of the brain. The brain can be taught from books, but morality is not a thing that can be printed. There are, it is true, books that are published on ethics, but few read them and prob ably nobody practices them. The old Hebrews were deluged with moral pre oepta, some of them written by God's own hand; but even the first genera tion that had the Ten Commandments had to be killed off before the Promised Land could be entered. I am not going to underrate the value and importance of mental school ing for the children; but it needs to be said that unless a man has a pure and honest heart, the less ho knows the better it will be for him and for all oonoerned. And it needs, also, to be said that even trustworthiness of intel lectual action waits on personal sound' ness. Sound brain and unsound mind are incompatible. Even if our object were solely to secure the finest and fullest intellectual development, we should still aim, first of all, to secure a foundation of personal integrity for the scions of wisdom to root aud vege tate in. It is something as it waa with the planting of an astronomical ob servatory; however fine its equipment ana whatever the power of its lenses, we depend, first of all, upon the solid ity with which the observatory is planted. MACHINE MINING. Gradually Becoming Hare Popular and Supplanting the Old Method. We notice with considerable pleasure that machine mining may be said to be euvroaching upon the older methods of mining in tho wines of Europe. Ao cording to recent report received from scientific institutes in Scotland and England, we find that the adoption of the machine methods aud the use of coal outtera in the mine) of the oouu try above specified is becoming daily more popular. This is very enoourag iug, and it is still mure encouraging to know that the major portion of those machines are of American construction. We have every reason to be proud of the fact that in mechanical methods we lead the world. Now here has in ventive genius been more prominent nownere nas it met with greater suc cess in the devisemeut and successful application of all kinds of mechanical methods, than it has iu this country. It may be said here that machine min ing in our own coal regions is beooiu uig aaiiy more popular u not more necessary. In fact it ia being realized that machine out coal can ooine to mar ket, can bear a jouruoy, oan be more successful than coal mined under the old system. This is owing to the fact that there is hiss friability, less teud eucy towards disintegration, all of whioh are'important points in the par ticular virtues of coal. We are in clined to believe that there is no par ticular line of manufacture which has opened before it wider prospects of trade than that in regard to the an plication of machinery, not only in the mining but the handling of the prod net We live iu days when time is money, when machinery is Koiucr to gradually mitigate original expenses, wnen it will enable those UBiug it to obtain far higher results in a given space of time than they oould without it, and it becomes very apparent that it is not only needful, but exceedingly usefuL Machine mining will un doubtedly be the vogue for the future. DO WOMEN NAO? Mrs. Lyman Abbott Writes on the Sub' ' Jeet of Nagging. - A well-known physician, s student of health as well as dtsottso, has called out indignant denials by printing hia opinion that they do. Ho has done it in tho most considerate way, remind ing one of tho person who, iu calling snother a liar, said he did not mean it opprobrious! but murely stated it aa a faut And the denials are made in a fashion quite too feminine. "It isn't so, and besides there is good oxouso for it, our defenders say. Nervous irri tability, a narrowing and belittling upbore, the constant presence of ob noxious and vexatious persona what wonder that human nature exhibits unlovely traits under these provoca tions? It will do us no harm to look this accusation fairly in the face and see whether it be a fnmilinr of ours, with new and ugly name. Thoro is no dictionary at hand, and I cannot verify my definition, but I suppose that what is meant by tho won! "uagging" is a constant repetition of putty reproof or oommaud. It ia a habit whioh every conscientious housekeeper and every thoughtful mother is very much in danger of weaving for herself and for fear of whioh many a woman "lets things go," to the injury of her home aud her children. How ofteu the tired mother has "picked up" after husband aud children, or done the forgotten er rand, rather than seem to be "Bag. gillg.": ) - It does fall to the lot of women to do most of the so-called training of child ren. In many oases it is truly the bliud leadiug the blind, aud the un trained training. August Ladies Home Journal. l I There is no pain that PainKiller will ache, sprains, cuts, bums, bites and stings, all yield to its magic. A record of more thau fifty years proves that One H.in is certain Pain-killer : kills pain Keep Fain-Killer constantly on hand you can never know when it will be needed. The quantity has been doubled, but the price la still j cent. itnnmi.il hu.i auuniiiuics may om oiiereu you look out. iue genuiue oowo Dears the name Perry Davis & Son. ..lifflllllli ii SHEEP-DIP LITTLE'S POWDER DIP THE BEST MADE 1 Mixes with sold water. Reliable and sal. JAMES UIOUI 10, fH Or. lOT'2Sffi SMALL BELONGINGS OF DRESS. the A TUNNELING MACHINE. STUDENTS STEAL AN EDUCATION CAUGHT A HUGE SHARK. Pair Saiunq through life for the who keeps ia health. With a torni ' and the impure blood that follows it von STi rson liver are an easy urev to all sorts of ailment. That " used-up " feeling- is the first warning that your liver isn't doing its work. That i the time to take Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discovery. As an appetizing, restorative tonic, to repel disease and build op the needed flesh and strength, there's nothing to equal it It rouses every organ into healthful action, purifies and enriches (be blood, brace up the whole system, and restores LvuUh aud vigor. Guests at Atlantic Highlands land One Eight and a Half Feet Loaf. Guests from hotels of Atlantio High. lands -went bluefishing early Tuesday morning ana returned with a shark 8 reet long. The sloop yacht Brnnhilde. Cantain w. u. Overton in oommand, was en. gaged for the day. When about three miles at sea, the fish began to bite. One ol the party felt something tugging on the end of his line and gave a sudden pulL As a result he was nearly pulled overboard. He called for help. The captain, crew and bis companions went to his aid and helped haul in the line. ' When they had brought the monster to the surface, he was found to be al most exhausted. A rope was fastened around him, and the fishermen started for home in triumph, pulling the shark astern. A landing was made at Curtis' J bathing pavilion, and the story of the unusual capture spread like wildfire. The shark, which was dead by this time, was dragged ashore. The fish tipped the scales at 200 pounds and measured Yt feet in length. His mouth is nearly a foot in width, and he has three rows of sharp triangu lar shaped teeth. The fish is on exhibi tion. Professor L. Wenger, the local taxidermist, will stuff and mount the monster. Cor. Philadelphia Press. . A Continuous Kail. The Cleveland Electric Railway oom pany is now laying a continuous rail without the breaks that are usually be tween lengths. The ends of the rails are carefully welded together with entire disregard of expansion and on traction. A feature of the welding, as explained by the superintendent, is that it can be done only in streets that are paved. The stone, brick or asphalt holds the rail in position and covers it so that it is not subject to heat and cold. Experiments show that under these conditions the welding can be done without injury to the track and with great increase of comfort to passengers. Columbus Dis patch. ftew Form of Theft Discovered at the University of Chicago. jrresiaent xiarper nas discovered a new species of crime whioh is peculiar to educational institutions and partio ularly to the university of Chicago. This is the theft of an education. The students this summer are nearly all transients. Most of them are school teachers who came to aoquire new atoms of knowledge and a general pol ishing up in pedagogical methods. The university charges an initiation fee of (30 a quarter for a regular course or three majors. For each ad ditional major subject an additional fee of $10 is assessed. No Btudent is allowed to register for more than four and usually not more than three. It has been discovered, however, that many ambitious students have been ao. quiring knowledge on an extravagant range of subjects by registering in only one or two courses and taking in a great many more as visitors. The re sult was that professors who had few regularly registered students, have been surprised by the spasmodic popu larity of their courses. In several classes President Harper says the regis tration has been small but the attend ance has been immense. The presi dent has sent to each instructor a no tice which was also posted upon the bulletin board, to the effect that no one would hereafter be allowed to visit classes without a written permission from the dean. Chicago Times-Herald. The Cook lu I'ulltlca, The spoils to the victors system holds good in France in a small way, though not to the extent it rules in the sister republic. Louis Tabernet, the late Pres ident Cornot'scook, is to be replaced by Fieuret, the chef of it Casimir-Perier. The new head of the kitchen at tha Elysee is one of the most celebrated cooks of the age and draws the salary of a cabinet minister. France is famous for its cooks, but its supply of cabinet ministers has been far ereater of lata This Was Good One. "Did I tell you the latest bright thing that my little boy got off?" asked McBride, as he joined a group of friends at the club. "Yes, you did," replied all, in con cert, with discouraging unanimity. mat's where I've caught you," re torted McBride, "for it only happened last evening, and I haven't seen a soul of yon fellows since. Besides this was really a good one." Then you haven't told it to replied Kilduff, speaking from the crowd. "Go on." "Yes, tell ns quickly," added Skid more, ana let ns nave tne agony over." Thns encouraged, McBride began: "Yon know, boys, little people have snarp ears, and they are not at all backward about telling any little craps of information they pick up, This peculiarity has led a good many parents to resort to spelling words when their young children are present. Of course that thing is of no avail after the youngsters leam to spelL Well. Mrs. McBride and I are in the spelling stage now, ana little Freddy is often very mystified by our remarks to each other. Last night we bad our new minister to dinner, and Freddy watch ed the good man helping himself very liberally of biscuits. He thought it a good opportunity to put into nse the family verbal cipher, feeling perfectly certain that the minister would find it unintelligible. So he called out, 'Mammal' " 'What is it Freddy? asked wife. 'Mamma, isn't the m-i-n-i-s-t-e-r a p-i-g?' spelled out Freddy triumph antly." The fellows had to admit that this story about McBride's boy was really a good one." Harpers' Magazine for August. Twenty Feet Per Day Ie Claimed for It by the Inventor. L. Kecard, of Calaveras, Cal., has patented and is now having built at Altaville a machine which is intended to revolutionise present methods of tunneling, says the Mining and Scieu tino Press. He olainia that it will saw out a tunnel" at the rate of twenty-three feet per day, which, if practicable, will materially reduce the cost of drift work. The subject is of interest to every miner, and if Mr. Re- card can give practicable aud satisfao. tory showing of his machine he has as good a thing for himself and the mining world as has been evolved for some num. Aiio mucnine is described as being twelve feet long, four feet wide and six feet high, and with the four teen horse-power engine which runs it, weighs 6,800 pounds. The wiuciDle is tnat oi a circular saw. Sixty drill points attached to each of the two wheels, four feet high and eight inches in diameter make 600 revolutions ter minute; eacn point one-half of an inch apart, every revolution feeding one eigth of an inch. The inventor says it will cut twenty feet of a 6x8 tunnel in a day in the hardest rock at a cost of f 1 per foot The machine costs $1,000 and requires three men to run it. The rock is crushed as fine as wheat grains. tuuucu iu ma jrwar ana aumpea in a car. The drill points weigh one-quar ter oi a pound each, last four davs. ana are Kept cool Dy a steady stream of water. While all things are possi- Die, ana it wouia be unfair and prema ture to attempt discussion of a project yet in emoryo, it is to be said that some of the inventor's calculations seem difficult of practical fulfillment The Collar, the fulT, the llelt and Latent in Buckles. For wear with uutrimined bodice there are shown large flaring collars and cuffs of dead white embroidery trimmed with butter-colored Valenoi- ennes laoe. These are pretty, and as they stand laundering well, really give, in wear, thoir money's worth, A belt and oolar of gold braid caught with out jot hooks and eyes are in vogue, and may be worn with any dark colored or all white bodice. The oollar ia formed of gold braid a little over an inch wide, while the belt is two inches wide and the olasps are se lee ted to suit the width of each. Bolts may be of silk, ribbon or leather. Seal or snake skin belts with silver bucklea are liked for outing or traveling wear, and very often have bags to match put upon them, but for elaborate waists a leather belt is not considered in good taste.- p ..... The regular beHing can be gotten iu any color, and is most effective when its clasp ia a small gold buckle elabor ately oarved. Young girls fancy sil ver buckles, upon which are engraved their monograms, but these can be scarcely spoken of as new, though they are popular. August Ladies Home Journal. - MALARIA I I Thv rliMo only. Try it. IX) YOU FEKL BAOT IKK8 YOUK HACK ache? Does every step seem burden? You nwd MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. WEINHARD'S WELL-KNOWN BEER -(IN KKUM OK B01Tl.lt) Breond to nnue- THY IT.. No mailer where Irom. l UUTttNl), OB. Antifermentine Preserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retain, their natural flavor. rsniiwimU' Puius A . tmi oajaiaL asauint. Tta Ml, ay, a.r n , rai.. WiT '""., Take em klad. w i,lumm.i m4 )mi.i V b.U MM Wit. IW.eo TtlML!. ?Vot. aa a all lrml Rnul.k iMU MKalKK lBk.Mlt7i VArt2i M?!:iTlL4MKI.rHl. r. Ma. Ailn...i. . kw. v mm Mail, WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OP SAPOLIO 1 1CV vmm nium HERCULES 0Wm Engines BUI Nye's Opinion on Marrying. Yesterday a young man asked me if it would be safe for him to marry on $500 and a salary of $50 per month. I told him I oould tell better when I saw the girl. There are girls who have grown up in ease and who have kicked great black and blue welts in the lap of luxury, yet who are now ready and willing to accent a little rough weather than the poor girl who has stood for eighteen years lookiun through the soiled window of life wait ing for the rain to rinse it off and let the sunlight through that she might see her approaching lord. August La dies' Home Journal. THE best FOR INVALIDS N CARILB 5NS- Verfc. my What Papa Was Trying- to Do. There is a man here in Washington who fancies he is the head of his house. There are plenty of other men who think the same thing, too, and, be. tween yon ana me, it's with the most of them as it is with this man merely a iancy. xnis particular man has sev eral small children, and it pleases him to discourse a great deal on the train ig oi mo cniiaren. a lew aavs atro ne naa irienas visiting him. llis two little sons began to nlav about noisily. It is one of his theories that children should obey implicitly, He wanted his friends to see how he carried it out in the training of his own children. "Johnny", he said. ternly, "stop that noise instantly." Johnny looked up in surprise. Then he grinned a little. "Oh. Freddv." he said to bis brother, as they went on witn tne noise, Mining Note. ine last weekly shipment of cold bullion from the Boise City assay office amountea to f44,l67.5. The Pobnnan mine at Burke, Idaho, nas iaia on its mgnt shift, thus throw ing seventy men out of emmovment It is not at all unlikely that this nrorj- oiijr nm iiiuw(uuwn in tne near lutnre. it is significant that the productive mines of Silver City, Idaho, and those wnioh are on the point of beirnr Dro. ductive, are for the most part old mines SMALL BEGINNINGS' Make rre.t endttien somellmn. ailments lhi we sre act lo consider Crivial often Kr.w. inrougn neitlrct. Into atrnnious maiadlaa .1.- geroiis in thfnueives and productive ol otbi-rs. If tsinttduwKiirdot the earlier Indlnallons oi hi jiv.iiu wim;n iron u tne eotaoiinhmerit ol . II sons ol nisl.dl.lon a chrnnlo hal.. Mntu. over, there are certain disorders Incident to the season, snch as malaria and rueuinatism, SiKlnit which ills always desirable to fortlfr "uitii uruunm tpei, i mo.aimniM miasm are surely counteracted by Hosteller's stomach "lr. Aller you have Incurred risk Irom .uirir, imiiieiMwa. a wmeirisssnii or two ol Hos- twtier. niom.cn nuiers CHICKEN Raising PAYS If yon use the Paie liustatsrs HrsiMitr. Mke money while other are wasting time hy oldinciirs. CataloKtellaall about It.and describes every article needed tor the. poultry business. ShOUld be SWSllowed. tfnr m.l.rl. rl v.. which have been big producers in the nroS,1:,.n1d,'d"br!t,n,,! VftrS? serveaiy popular of remedies and preventives. A wineglassiul before meals promotes appetll. past Five and one-half tons of ore from the Ooodenough mine at Kalso. B. C. shipped to the Tacoma smelter, re turned to the owners $1,877. The car bonates averaged 226 ounces of silver to the ton and the galena 688 ounces. The Idaho Gold Mining and Smelt. ing Company, of Butte, Mont, was re. cently registered to do business in Brit ish Columbia, its chief operators beinir in the Trail Creek division of West Kootenay. The company is capitalized at f buu.uou. It is learned that the Union Com panion Mining Company at Cornn copia. Or., is having prepared plans and specifications for a twenty-stamp mm ana mat tne l. a. Hammond Company, of Portland, has the contract lor buidling the mill. The site is be ing prepared and the mill will be erected this fall. Prospectors are still rushing into Central Idaho. They find the stage wagon roaa oi mucn convenience and it is extensively used. Many of them are paying attention to the Iron Creek country. That district was very rich in placer, being worked for several years after 1870. The gold waa very coarse and found only for a short dis tance along the creek. j 1. 1 i , year, than its supply of cooks. -London 7 iu ,.! ' . .. ?"pa. 7m Globe. I mmuum. w asningcon 'Post The June reports of the twelve min eral commissioners appointed by an act of the last congress to ascertain the character of the public lands in Mon tana and Idaho are being received at the interior department. The commis sioners are divided into four parties. jiixee imiuvB are m juontana ana one in Idaho. They have only been able to examine and report on about 80,000 acres out of a total of some ten millions submitted for their adjudication. Com missioner Lameroux computes that it would take five years to merely ride over this immense territory if they made no stop for the examination of the land. The appropriation for this work is limited to fSO.OOO and the monthly expenses are about $4,000. So far about one fifth of the land ex amined baa been certified to be agri cultural. Wisdom In this yon'll surely find, Where'er your steps may range: No matter bow you change your mind, He sure to mind your change. DBAFNEBM CANNOT BE CVKED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is omy one way to cure nearness, and that is or cuuftMiuuunsi rerneaiea. lienrripHs i. caused ;bv an inflamed condition of the mucous lining oi the JStiatachfsn Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its nor inal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surface. We will give One Hundred Hollars for any case oi nearness (caused by catarrh) that cannot ha nnnut h. u.ip. ...: Cure. Send fur circulars, free. v , r,'A C"NK Y 4 CO., Toledo, 0. 8old by Druggists, 76c. Piso's Cure for Consumntlnn ml "" ounviiiuwi nuugn.Ker. V. Hvvw musllik, Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24, 1801. Tst Girmia for breakfast. m Yll llluuraUdl 1 QJL Cstsiogu l M milOMA IltdrjBATOC to., BSAMCB lions, sti a v.i. u The "ERIE mecbsnlcslly the bestl "heel. Prettiest model, I w are Pacific Coa.il Airems. Blcvrla rla.S logue, mailed frce.glves I AOairrs wawtko I rstal.ma.Cil. I -NOTED FOR SIMPLICITY, sfRENGTH ECONOMY DR. GUNN'S IMFBOVSO UVtPUS A MILD PHYSIC. AND SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP a pwirriix von a immb. L.. I.T "V" ""mow MCII QU M 1 memmntm IttH. LOSAKKO lUtl. In Every Detail. These Inner Ely's Cream Balm QUICK LV CVUK8 COLDinHEAO Price flO :nts. 1 npp v nim into earth imMrll El linos., MW.rreil Ht.. H. f ena-ta r ackwowlftrigwl by expert en. to he worthy of highest onmniendatlon iter Forattntillflltv. hi.k.V.. J - ML r: . " V'."u work mi.,-it tw iv : t: ,:r" :r p""t .,.; : . '" siejup MIS IHtl M1IIM1 (Hints rsftWatf assi . a.111.,... - vi. 7 ft.?., .avaaa ,n,.u "' For wimnlns outflta fne imIhiu. wne7htah!i?,0"w,,,,w mlne Uy met For IniarmltHni qneaiHjtretl. I power their soooomy Is na- Impure Blood Manifests itcelf in hlvett, pimples, boils and other eruptions which disfigure tho face and cause pain and annoyance. By purifying the blood Hood's 8arsaoarilla com pleteiy cures these troubles a nd clears meekin. Mood's Karasparilla overcomes tliat tired, drowsy feelimrso General at una eeaaon ana gives strengtn ana vigor. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tbeonly true blood purifier promineur- iy in uib iu jiu-eye inoay. j six lor 1(0. MnrtH' Pille dire habitual constltm" nutju a rni3 t, ,n Prl(!ej n Mnta- A SURF PJIRF PAR Pll PC Ilehinn Pi Mknmra l,j moUti.m like TarsplrstlnnTeaDM hituniw itclmis wlwi warm. I h frrn aurl Wind. S iug or Protruding Pilas yield at once 10 DR. BO-SAN-KO'8 PILE REMEDY hloh Mis directly on parts aeti. absorbs tumors' s. rs Iteliing, IfseUns a permanent enroT PriosVi vngguu or msU, Dr. hosmali. Ph laJL.!! P! Artificial Eyes Elastic Stockings Trusses ... Crutches . . . Writs for Prlesi,. wTmONAR' I CLARKE 4 CO. ORU.flllTI Psrtland, Oraao 22 fTMIME NEW WAY Portland, Walla Walla, Hpnkan, via O. It 4 M. Northern Hallway to Montana point, St. rsui. Minneapolis, Omaha, Ht. Louis, Chi- f.man anil lia.i a M.t asaayja. . . f.. e.... rvassit. AUtirUU HodUstrrSBtblla;?. farnlir.? 1"1 a"'l""i baireuibrwWw; family tourist sleepers; new equipment. -eUXUrACTUXXO Y- PALMEH1 BET TYPE FOUNDRY. Cor. Front and Alder It., PORTLAND. . OREGON. ' send for catalogue. AMERICAN FRA7FR AXLE BEIT IN THE WORLD. VajHCHdC i in WHKrintr rmaii Mas ....... , 0 HAL BY OKK0ON AND 1 FOUNDERS ft Palmer & Rey Branch K. P. K. U. No. 609 -8. 1, N. V. No. 680 M Bc,t1;",'n y"'P- Ts..i U M lnt ." "v ""-.'- - IJ Electrotype Stereotypert... Merchants PrcsKcs, in Gordon and Cylinder PrcHaeii. Cutten, Motors of all kinds, roiacrs, I'rlntlng Material. Peerless Paper Patentees of Self-Spaclog Type. Sole Makers of Copper-AHej Tjps