Highest of n to Leavening Power Latest V. S. Gov't Report
i w it m w,
TYLER'S FRUIT PALACE.
It Ii 4ss Now Obi of th Votf Star
Stage's Great Attraction.
The groat Texas frait palace which 11
liOW being inopooted by thousands of
visitors to Tyler ii a building well
worth the attention of a tourist in the
Lone Star State. The interior walls and
columns are covered with green moei
and paneled with German millet and
talks of sugar cane. The corners are
bracketed with sheaves of wheat, and
the great arches axe festooned with the
various product of the fields of Texas.
During the past few rears Tyler has be
come the center of a great fruit growing
district, and the main feature of the ex
position is an exhibit of fruits and
flowers. It is said that the fruits and
vegetables grown in the vioinity of Ty
ler are not even surpassed by those raised
in the wonderful valleys of California.
OutBide the palace the talent of the
landscape gardener has transformed a
virgin forest of gigantio oaks into a park
f FRUIT PALACE, TYUCB, TEX
that is adorned with flowers, electric
fountains and rustic bridges, and an ar
tificial lake of great beauty is also one
of its attractions. What is said to be the
finest bicycle track in the state has been
constructed around the entire grounds
of the exposition, and cycle races are of
dairy occurrence. The Dixie guards of
little Bock, a company composed exclu
sively of pretty women, gives exhibi
tions each day of a military character,
and there are numerous other ingenious
amusement schemes to attract and en
tertain visitors. -
Tyler is the county "seat of Smith
county, is located in the northeastern
part of the great state and is a railroad
center of considerable importance. In
.1890 the population was nearly 7,000,
but Tyler has grown rapidly since then
and is one of the flourishing cities of
the Lane Star State.
Dida Cnderstaad Twin.
A festival in the family drew home
ward the scattered kindred. The boys,
twins, had" been long parted, and mean
while one had married and in his wid
owerhood reared his little son, now 7
years old. To him, by name Bobby,
newly arrived in the house, enters the
uncle whom he bad never seen, so per
fect a corroboration of his father that
Bobby runs to hi in at once, clings to
him and hugs his knees. A moment lat
er, when his father really came and the
laughing company were on the brink of
comment and explanation, the poor lit
tie man, giving him, one mortally
shocked glance,, fell to the floor, sob
bing, "Don't want two papas 1"
The resident puppy, familiar with the
bachelor brother, had almost as disturb
ing ad experience. Be stared and stared
at Bobby's father, upon their introduc
tion, sniffed at his garments, wavered
and stared again. Then he leaped upon
his own friend and next upon the image
and echo of him bewildered, and finally
backed into the corner, after making a
brave stand against the supernatural
his insulted eye upon both men, barking
and growling and indulging generally
in the doggerel for thunder. Chap
Book. -
. GEMS OF THOUGHT.
In all governments there must of ne
cessity be both the law and the sword.
Colton.
Learning teaches how to carry things
in suspense without prejudice till yon
resolve. Bacon.
A man has generally the good or ill
qualities which he attributes to man
kind. Sh ens tone.
When will love die? Not till the stars
die; not till the heavens fall; love will
outlast them all Anon.
Bather do what is nothing to the pur
pose than be idle, that the devil may
find thee doing. Quarles.
A surface judgment is a daring on
indeed if it presumes to be other than a
pleasant one. Miss Unlock.
It is only the finite that has wrought
and suffered ; the infinite lies stretched
in smiling repose. Emerson.
Seatnees and Health.
Cleanliness is the safeguard of health.
People who are not cl-tn catch all man
ner of unpleasant things. The history
of plagues is the history of unsanitary
conditions. When the cholera shows its
hideous claws, the authorities begin at
onoe to clean np the foul neighborhoods.
Mortality is frail, but its preservation
is neatness. New York World.
' if , The Way They Talk.
Bing How do parrots talk?
Bang In pollysyllables, of course.
Fan Francisco Post.
In Our Great Grandfather's Time,
big- bulky pills were in
general use. Like the
Diuuaerouss" oi
that decade they
. were big and clum
sy, but ineffec
tive. In this cent-
of enlighten
ment, we have
Dr. Fierce's
Pleasant Pel
lets, which
cure all liver.
stomach and
bowel de
rangements i a
. the moat effec.
tive way.
If people
would pay more
attention to prop
erly regulating the action of their Dowels,
by the use of these little "Pellets" they
would have less frequent occasion to call
for their doctor's services to subdue attacks
of dangerous diseases. The " Pellets " cure
sick and bilious headache, constipation, in
digestion, bilious attacks and kindred de
rangements of liver, stomach and bowels.
-jsesV.. .......
V4f I :. Hi XJ
THE NEW WOMAN.
Whatever a Maa May Da She Is Said to
. Insist Upon Doing-.
The new woman is popularly sup
posed to be woman of liberal educa
tion and advanoed ideas, a woman pre
pared to maintain her rights and Claim
her privileges, and make and keep a
fair standing ground for herself in
whatever field she chooses to exploit
her convictions or exert her abilities.
She is supposed to look with a certain
disfavor on domesticity, to go about
with a chip on her shoulder among old'
fashioned people who fancy that a
woman's natural sphere is in the nar
row world of borne. The new woman,
we learn inoidently, cares little for
marriage, regarding it as an incident
in life, but proudly holding herself
above the old stupid notion that love
and matrimony are cardiual points in
the destiny of her sex. She is said to
be opposed to be sacrificing herself on
the altar of childhood, and to look
with pitiful scorn on the mother of a
half -dosen boys and girls. Whatever
a man may do, this product of the flu
de sieole fancy is said to insist upon
doing, setting her feet firmly down on
the antiquated myths which once ob
tainedthe myth of the weaker to
protection by the stronger, of the ad'
oration of the mother as the most
blessed of all women on the earth, of
the queenly dignity of her who rules
the home and keeps alight the fire on
the hearth.
' Our question is where to find this
personage so glibly described and dis
cussed, but so elusive when she is
sought? She is absent from our draw
ing rooms, where today, as in former
years, gracious matrons and fascinat
ing maidens impart to society the ease,
the flavor, the sweetness, which make
the intercourse of well-bred people
with one another equally reposeful and
stimulating.
She is not to be discovered in the
innumerable professions and trades
which women have made their own,
from the pulpit to the printing-office.
The woman doctor, albeit an excellent
physician, is as womanly as our moth
er Eve, and one seeks in vain for nov
elty in the woman professor, artist,
minister, clerk, type-writer, journalist
or women engaged in any avocation
known to the utility of the hour.
Purely womanly under the student's
cap or gown, or under the frills and
timings of the beautifully arrayed
debutante, our women of the hour are
just what their mothers and grand
mothers were sincere, single-hearted,
straightforward, impulsive, emotional.
self-denying lovable, tenderly loving
beings. "God Almighty made them
to match the men," and until he un
makes them they are unlikely to
change in any very important particu
lar. Harper s Bazar.
SUNLIGHT MADE TO ORDER-
It la a Prismatic experiment, la General
Terms, Applied to Electricity.
Telsa, says an article quoted in Cur
rent Literature, had two , big under
takings on hand when his laboratory
caught on fire and was destroyed in
Mew York. The more important of
these, from his point of view, was the
production of light, by the vibration of
the atmosphere. According to the in
ventor, the light of the sun is the re
sult of vibrations in 94,000,000 miles
of either, which separate us from the
center jf the solar system of which we
are a part. Telsa's idea is to produce
here on earth vibrations similar to
those which cause- sunlight, and thus
give us a light as intense as that of the
sun, with no danger of obstruction
from the clouds. The inventor has al
ready done something towards accom
plishing this end when th9 fire oc
curred. It is understood that he has
again taken the subject up in a way.
To illustrate his principle it is only
necessary to take a long bar of glass
and note the brilliancy of the light it
produces through vibration alone. It
is a prismatic experiment, in general
terms, applied to electricity. Telsa
can compute vibrations as readily as
most people count they would like to
have. Be can tell you the number of
vibrations produced by a fly in action
and draw inters ting comparisons there
from. For example, this young man
from Smiljan will tell you that a cer
tain kind of fly peculiar to the swamps
of Central America moves his wings
about 25,000 times to the second. Yon
may doubt the accuracy of this state
ment in your own mind, but if you
hunger for details Tesla will sit down
and convince you with figures adduced
from a scientific contemplation of the
problem. -. -
"All I have to do," he said recently,
"is to duplicate the number of vibra
tions required to light up the sun, and
the practicability of my theory will
have been demonstrated. . It is diffi
cult for me to give you an idea that
you will readily grasp about this ques
tion of vibration. In ordinary life our
minds do not deal with the figures that
come up in such investigations. I
have come to the conclusion that the
sunlight is produced by five hundred
trillion vibrations of the atmosphere
per second. In'order to manufacture
the same kind of light it will be nec
essary to produce an equal number of
vibrations by machinery. .' I have sue
eeded to a certain point, but am still
at work on the task."
Striped crepons' are very fashionable
Many of the silk and satin crepons show
flowered grounds and lace stripes. These
goods are made up over taffeta silk. '
Black and white is more fashionable
than it has ever been before. Black and
white lightweight silks, very narrowly
striped, are among the season's most
popular fabrics.
This is a season of box plaits. They
are often made of passementerie and of
rows of overlapping ribbon, which be
gin on the shoulder, cross the bust diag
onally and end at the waist line.'
A SIMPLE REMEDY.
If you'd he happy all the day.
Never have wrlnkl.e, never grow gray.
Feel like your work was notlilng but play.
Be sure that comfort had come to alay,
Just let the women have their way,
Just let the women have tlietr say.
, Detroit Free Press.
CATCHING A TARTAR
A sunny, morning in June. The plat
form crowded cheap trippers for South
sea, heavy swells and swelles for the
links at Bayling islaud, with bags of
golf sticks. The yachting man, strongly
in evidence, sunburnt and puffing a cig
arette vigorously. If be Is a new hand
a Dickey Sam he wears a cloth
peaked cap with the club burgee, a well
cut coat of serge or pilot cloth bristling
with bronze buttons, loose flannol con
tinnationa and white shoes. No man
Was ever so much a seadog as the yacht
ing tyro looks.
The older sailing men, those to the
manner born "swagger squadron
men," who can fly the white easign,
are dressed in long, lean, frock coats,
loose trousers turned up, pointed boots,
immaculate collars and glossy hats the
aim of the man who has lived is to look
as much like, a stockbroker as possible.
Of course, down at the Castle or on Bydo
pier they will blossom into a seasonable
crop of buttons and burgees and display
remarkable activity in dodging that ty
rant of the deep the sailing master if
the water looks a bit choppy.
Two people attracted a lot of atten
tion by their palpable efforts at conceal
ment He, although the day was so hot,
was enveloped in a long cloak, with a
collar reaching past his ears, and his
cotton white hair and mustache showed
up occasionally in strong contrast to the
deen brown of his face as he turned to
watch the porters attacking a huge
mound of his belongings.
Each box and bag was blazoned with
an imperial coronet over a monogram,
and then told one another guardedly and
under promises of profound secrecy
that was Prince Paul , Demtotr, the
owner of the new 100 rater now lying
off Southampton. "
She, the lady, was tail and gracefully
girllike. A neat, natty blue serge Red
fern frock; a sunburnt straw nat, with
a dark blue ribbon; tiny tanned boots'; a
white shirt, with a turndown collar,
and flowing tie completed her costume,
saving a thick gossamer veil that com
pletely hid her face, and but for the
whiteness and purity of her neck it
would have seemed she suffered from
some facial disfigurement It was evi
dently a desire not to be recognized that
led to the adoption of the yashmak.
She was evidently expecting or avoid
ing some friends. Her head moved with
a birdlike quickness as sue scanned encn
new arrival on the platform, and her
slender hand, white and jewelless.
twitched nervously round the handle of
the morocco monograinnied case she car
ried. Catching her eye from a distance,
he walked toward her with tho easy,
firm self assurance that women like.
She saw he was coming to her and wait
ed calmly perhaps she breathed more
quickly.
Be raised his soft bat, and witn a
courtly bow said in perfect English,
with the mere scent of an accent: "Par
don me, you are distressed. Have you
missed your maid? Can I be of any serv
ice to you?"
Now his hat was off be appeared a
prematurely white haired man of 45 or
60, with a firm face and voice a man
evidently used to command.
"Thank you very much," came in a
soft sibilant voice from beneath the
thick gossamer. "I have not only lost
my maid, but my portmanteau. I am
afraid it is under that pile of luggage.
and" with a little shrug "I am
afraid that pile of luggage is yours. "
"That is mine, madama I will get
your bag at once. May I ask where you
are going? To Southampton, and it is
of the highest importance you should
not miss this train? Pardon, do not trou
bla I will see that all is arranged. "
A few words to the guard, a rapid
passage of backsheesh, and the missing
bag with a dainty monogram and small
crest was placed carefully on the rack
of the first class carriage by which the
veiled lady was standing. With the
coolness that seemed part of his nature.
the Russian indicated to a porter a
small hamper and had it placed in the
same compartment. There must have
been some collusion and a lavish tip,
for, though the train was crowded, the
guard, after the imperceptible manner
of his kind, kept that carriage empty
until the train started, and they found
themselves alone, securely locked in.
A sudden start ran through ber slen
der frame. She paused and asked quick
ly, "Do yon know when the next tram
leaves Waterloo for Southampton?"
He was desolated. Of course she
missed her maid, but he was afraid not
for some hours.
"Madame is glad? Madame is afraid
of being followed?"
"Yes, madame is glad. Bbe does not
wish to be taken back and forced into
a hateful marriage, " blushing prettily.
The old, old story stern father, eld
erly lover, titled, rich, but horrid. No
mother, no sister, no brother.' She was
flying from bondage to her aunt, Lady
Azuregore, in Guernsey.
: Yes, she was Lady Constance Az
uregore. Bad he really met her at the
Duchess of Arlington's dance? She
thought she knew his face. That was
why she trusted him so implicitly on
.-.,.. . n . t im l-
me piatiorm, oi course, au u w woe
veiled, why was he so shrouded in a big
cloak? "Come, now," anxiously, "a
lady? An elopement?"
No. no, and again nol nothing sc
Joyous. He was Princo Paul Demtofl
and had fallen between two stools
had incurred, the enmity of the imperial
court through coquetting with the ni
hilists. That meant the Alexiefsky Ra
velin or the fortress of Peter and Paul
In St. Petersburg, and, on the other
hand, finding the "party of progress" go
ing too far, he was threatened with
death for deserting the red flag.
"You must pardon me, prince, but
we seem in trouble together, " and she
laughed merrily. "Do you know I half
thought you were a detective?"
By this time he had returned to nis
hamper and produced deftly a table
cloth, plates, knives, forks and servi
ettes, a small bottle or chateau Alouton
Rothschild and a dainty cold chicken.
Their mutual confessions had lessened
embarrassment, and the lady, after
making a little mone, said that she was
so hungry and so glad to eat, eta. '
They chatted and laughed as the train
sped through the beautiful country, and
by fbe time Southampton was tnougnt
of she had smokod half a mild cigarette
and he had kissed her hand.
Sho readjusted her veil, and be as-
urued his big cloak with a sigh as the
whistle Of the train signaled the statlou.
"The Guernsey boat does not leave
till midnight. What are you going to
do? Whore will you put up?"
"I don't kuow. 1 will never be taken
back alive. And yon, you are bunted.
What will you do?"
"Go ou board my yacht She is lying
off here, and the gig waits for this train
at tho lauding stein. I must hat I them,
as none of them kuow mo. My agnut
bas encaged au entirely now crew, skip
per included, all English. I want no
nihilists on board. " And he looked
moodily out of the window.
She made a suddeu niovcmotit, as if
about to speak, but drew back. Again
she loaned forward, and tho rcpotiton
roused him from his thoughts. Ho
looked np and saw her eyes glistening
even through the thick voiL She was
crying!
"What is the matter? You arc fright
ened. Can I help you?"
"I hardly dure ask you. You may
think badly of mo, but I will not be
forced into this detectable marriage.
Can you may I"
He divined her thoughts. "Stay on
board my yacht and board the boat at
midnight? Yes, your ladyship, yes in
all honor, yes." And ho hold our both
his hands, ami with a sob almost hys
terical she placed her tiny gloves in
them as tho tram stopped.
They loft the station by a sldo door
unnoticed, and walking down the broad
graveled road with the soft sword and
the old timo cannon passed the crum
bling walls and found the boat manned
by six bronzed typical yachtsmen, the
skipper, a fino looking old man, sitting
motionless in the stern sheets holding
tho yoko lines.
"Do you know a respcotablo woman
who can look after this lady until the
mail boat starts?" asked the prince as
ho handed her carefully on board and
passed ber portmanteau. She carried
the morocco case herself.
"Well, surr, I've took the libbaty of
invitin my old woman on board today.
She's been a stewardess, surr. "
"Capital, captain. Now, lads, give
way I"
The boat soon shot alongside a beau
tiful schooner yacht The crew manned
the gangway as the princo and Lady
Constance camo on board, and a mother
ly, sunburned woman conrtosied hor
through an exquisitely furnished saloon
cabin into a bijou boudoir with a lace
curtained bunk and a host of feminine
fripperies.
"I may sail tonight Is all ready?
Right Take the boat and go ashore,
bring off my lnggage and anything we
may want from the ship's stores. And,
Johnson, keep the men afloat, but you
just find out if there is any hue and cry
about a lady eloping. "
Captain Johnson, an old merchant
captain, slowly winked and looked very
knowing. "H'ml'hesaid to himself,
"I half s'spected as much. That's the
sort of owner I likes to sail with. Lots
o' yellow boys kickin about this voyage,
I lay."
In about an hour he returned, and
doffing his peaked cap said mysterious
ly, "I spoke to my cousin, the pleece-
mon, on he says there's a lot o cockney
detectives down a-watchin the station
an the Guernsey packet for some young
'ooman. "
Her ladyship had washed all travel
stains away and changed her frock. She
looked like a fresh rosebud, but her face
grew deathly pale, her eyes dilated, and
the nerve lines deepened into marks of
agony when ho told her the captain's
story. Bo thought she was going to
faint and made as though to catch ber.
With a supreme effort she regained her
self possession and said in a hoarse
whisper:
"Ob, save met Take me to Guernsey
in your yacht, or I will jump over
board!" He turned on bis heel without reply
ing and went up the componionway on
deck.
"Johnson, your wife doesn't mind a
trip to sea?"
"Lor bless yer royal 'ighness, she's
dying for a sniff of the ocean I"
"Get under weigh at once."
"Ajo, aye, sirl All hands on deck!
Tumble up, my hearties!"
Her face flushed deeply when she
heard the clank of the chain pump and
the flapping of the foresail, and she
thanked him with both bands and a
sweet smile.
Under a good southwesterly breeze
the yacht spun along merrily, throwing
the foam in long, beautiful, featherlike
turves from her clipper stern.
Tho lady stood leaning dreamily
against the side ropes, and the prince,
an experienced sailor evidently, took
the tiller and threaded the way careful
ly through the crowd of craft For a
time neither spoke; then, abruptly giv
ing the management to the appreciative
ly critical skipper, he beckoned ber into
the cabin.
"I will land you at Guernsey tomor
row morning," he said, "bat I have
been deceiving you. I am not Prince
Paul Dcmtoff. I am his valet I have
robbed him of 1,000,000 rubles and
am now going to the Argentine in his
yacht, " and he stood up rigidly and
faced her.
She smiled and said calmly: "Very
good I Take me with you. I am not
Lady Constance Azuregore. I am her
maid, bat I've got her jewel case. "
Million.
The Most Horrible Poison.
"It is a strange fact," said a physician,
"that six out of ten would be suiuldes now
resort to that most horriblo of all deadly
doses, carbolio acid. It causes more pain,
more genuine, lingering agony, than any
deadly dose I can mention. Yet Its popu
larity continues to increase, especially
among the unfortunate members of the
half world who have become weary of life
and seek the comforts of the grave. The
antidote? Oh, an antidote after the acid
baa been swallowed is of little avail. A
mixture of flour and water should be giv
en; also mucilaginous drinks. I once had
a patient recover after Inking a smnll quan
tity of the amd, and aha sulci she thought
she was swallowing molten lead. It is a
horrible life destroyer.
Humored by a Death Sentence.
Wilfred Flowers, the Notts cricketer,
Who has been allotted a benefit in the
Coming season by the County club, was
present at Notts assizes to hear the t rial of
Edmund Kcsteven, professional cricketer
of Button-In-A sMtiild, for murder, says
the lnuon Telegraph. The Jury found
the accused guilty, and Mr. Justice Haw
kins hud just passed sentence of death,
when Kesteven, who was quite unmoved,
looked .up at the gallery where Flowers
was standing and shouted, "A good bene
fit to ye, Flowers!" ,
Polar Ballooning.
Quo cannot but hope that tome one of
the expeditions sent out to explore the
Arctio will reach the North Pole, make
endless photographs of it, and secure
volumes of detail about its uiagnotio
ourrents and toiwuranhioul peculiar!
ties, aud set ac rest the fever that hns
muod suioiiii the adventurous for ex
ploraMous in regions which havo
proved only fatal to humanity. It
sooms as if the now expedition were
simply oourthig death in a new way,
for it is very doubtful whether, since
the idea of a northwest passage from
Europe to Asia was abandoned, the ac
tual discovery of the Polte would add
enough to our knowledge to do more
tlmn satisfy gouural curiosity. The
position of the Pole is a geographical
certainty, and it is doubtless bloak
aud forbidding beyond description, yet
men are insatiable in thoir efforts to
attaiu the possible, and will doubtless
persevere until a means has been found
of reaching it Mr. Andree, tho Bwofl
ish engineer, is about to seek the
North Pole by balloon, and his project
is seconded by men noted iu the scion
tillo world. The balloou is to be built
iu Paris at a cost of 10,000, aud will
be so constructed as to be capable of
being filled with gas at any point lu
the Polar regions whither gns iu cyl
inders will have been transported.
Tho aeronaut expects to cruise from a
ceutral point over the entire Polar
buslu, to explore it and secure such
full details oonueruing its peculiarities
that the curiosity of meteorologists and
explorers aud learned soiotitieo bodies
iu geiicral shall bo completely satisfied.
How many lives will have to be sacri
ficed in this new way cannot be fore
told, but ballooning in other latitude
is extra hazardous. In the Polar reg
ions it seems foolhardy. Current Lit
erature. Aii(lln for Human Fish,
A novelty in the way of sport , says
an article quoted iu Currvut Litera
ture, was inaugurated tho other day at
the Royal Aquarium, Westminster,
when a series of ourious angliug contests
was begun in the swiinniing annex.
Fishermen of reputation demonstrated
their skill with cord aud line in at
tempts to briug to laud human fish,
who, having been duly hooked, clever
ly imitated salmon iu their efforts to
reguin freedom. The result was al
ways entertaining, and frequently very
exciting, especially when the angler
and the "fish" were fairly matched.
Iu the first competition, although Mr.
Hardy, of Ainwick, with a seveu-ounoe
trout rod and lino, essayed throe times
to overcome Ives, a strong swimmer of
11)0 pounds weight, the latter on one
occasion succeeded in breaking the
line. Miss Burnett, whose weight is
154 pounds, proved au excellent fish;
and Mr. Slater, of Newark, who an
gled in tho Nottingham style, with a
green-heart rod and a spinning un
dressed line, had not succeeded in
landiug her when time was called after
ten minutes' hard fighting. Another
lady, Miss Sylvia, of slighter build,
however, gave in to tho angliug of Mr.
Ogden, of Cheltenham, in eight tuiu
utes.
SMALL HKOINMNOH
Make crest endlnm sometimes, ailments thai
we sre im to consider trivial oflen uroir,
throuah neeleot. into atrocious maladies, dsn-
Kvrous lii themMjlres and nrodtintive oi others.
II Is the dlsrt-Kstd of Hie t-sriler Indications ol
111 htNlin wtitch leads to the eatsullfthnjeiit nl
ll sons of maiadi'-s on a chroulo bsii. Mm
over, there sre certain dliuirders luf-ident to the
vttsoii, sHr-h ms malaria aud rheumatism,
s:aiiit wnion it is always aesirauie to loriuy
the system sue eiposure to the condition
whleh produce the n. I.'old. damp and miasms
aresurwlj fouittersi-k-d by MosUitler's Htoinerb
Hitttr'. Atler you have liii-urred rHk from
tliesw luilueoous, a witicKlasslnl or two of Hon
teller's H.omicb Miners dfreelly sflerward
hruld be swallowed. For malsrla. dysiiepsia,
liver coinplnlut, kiilii'T and Madder trouble.
nervoiiiness ana (lei)iuty it is tne mon oe
servedly ttop'Har of rumeiiea and prerenllves.
A wlucKlassiol before meals promotes appellia.
Elltb 8f you prefer a lona engftirementl
Well, I wouldn't, blanche If youllkudlheeleis
as wen as 1 uo you wouia,
IE.4FNKM CANNOT BE CUBED
By local applications, as I hey cannot reach
Hie diseased portion of the ear. There Is
only one way to cure Deafness, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness is
caused y an inllamed condition of the
mucous linuiK oi the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube gets inflamed you have
a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, ana
when it In entirely closed Deafness is the
result, and unless the inllaiumation can be
taken out and this tube rrstored to its nor
mal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which is nothing but an in-
(lamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any cane ol Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall s Catarrh
Cure. Bend fir circulars, free.
V. 1. CHUNKY & CO., Toledo, 0.
rsF-8uld by Druiwi'ts, 75c.
VIfor-Wht do roil think. M-s Jennie? I
dreamt iat night that I saw yon In yottr coffin.
jennif Tou uon i say sot wrist aim oi a
dress did I bave out
t inu m iuiv ti, c uiciiuiiiv iu ureas lip
children's Coughs and Colds. Mrs. M. U.
Hlvht, Bprague, Wash., March H, lMit.
T!.. ..t ' 1. . 1. . .. rl I 1 1 u
Tbt Gkma for breakfast.
Weak and Weary
l!i'cane of a dculetcd condition of the
blood. The remedy is to be found In
nurinvJ. enriched and vitalized blood.
which will be given by Hrvxl's Sarsapa
rilla, the great blood purifier. It will
tone the stomach, create an appetite and
give renewel strength. Rem. tuber
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the only true blood purifier prominent
ly in the publiceye today. 1 j lix for f 5.
liAswI'e' Di I 'a iiraTibltaTeohWii
nOOa S fills tlon. Price. 25 cents.
Ely's Cream Balm
WILL Cl'HE
Catarrh
l.'LV l-tvt..& WiirrftiiML.N. Y.
Artificial Eyes ""i-
Elastic Stockings woodard, clarke i to,
Trusses . . . ""i'
Crutches . . . Porllsnd, Oregon I
A SURE CURE FOR PILES
itohlnf PIUni known by motet un IIIm tMrwrlrAtion, cmm
InUraM) itcbinirwUn warm. T tils form miia ilkmi, BUndi'
tig or ProtruJaiic ftlM ytelU iuuc to
DR. BO-8AN-KO't PILK KCMKDY.
which eti dixsjotlf on parte Affoted, atiwrrta tentorial
Url ttetiinc, rfaoUsff a (MrnuuiMit nra, Vnam
A ana nchos of au annoying nature, a torturous nuiurc, a uungcr-
ous nature, can be mtiokty and surely cured with rulu-Klllcr.
? As tin finis i uroof ruminst
Pain-Killcr, Thi good old
much tntiierlng ana many cniw
J mer coinpluliits of grown folks or children it has stood with
f out an equal for over half century. No time like the present
S to get a bottle of
1 PIHo
Potd everywhere. The quantity
the siiine, 2.V. Look out for worthless liullulluita. Uuy only Ilia jouulne,
bearing the name 1'khkt Davis 4 Hon,
wttwwwwtVfMMi
poWDEB DIP THE BEST MADE I
MaTl"! Illr MUa with ould water. Kelleole aud sale.
Ul ILL. till JAMES IU (CO., Or, Z'tiXZnl
Inn a i in i a I IH) Yuu lKKL 1,Aln lMM YUUK ,,AK
iMlfll A HI A I ai-hef IKies every sinn seem burden? You nwxl
IflHLHnift I MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
Thfi itmiK only. Try it. .
II l 1 11 11 U J Xa uattsr where from. OMTL.tNM, OR.
Antifermentine
Preserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retains their
natural flavor.
"IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES
EFFORT." TRAINED SERVANTS USE
SAPOLIO
-jfTTK 1 CmcHtnrtii-i tNoim. Rro Com w Diahoho 6o a
T t;l TNI ONtftlNAt ANO OtNUINC Tw ly tWk ftejres I.
JTJ j4lftj. OM l'UlM tor lMt.-1 -fft aVMsM-al M t4 tt tMJ ttllsf y
I 111 kslst smM hk Was nkbs., Tasks tte mtk k(fl4. JUW fcHWn. WsafJ sn wliasajsM-V
rtMws. TaaMaai
AH ptHm ta muw San. Ha
4. la mt yrtwalw, imiMin
II.IMH Tasttsn..Lt. S tm tf.
4 Hl Hfr.Tfcat t
ta-i,nu Ak,
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
THE BEST
FOR
Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and
AGED PERSONS
JOHN CARLO S0N5, New York.
DROPSY
TRKATKD FREK.
PoaltlT lyOurad with ? labia fUn-Mii
UftT eatwt Monamn da of causa. Cum oaa aro
ftounoad bupalaaa by bsMtohratolana. r.a. nratdo
irtapUXD dlappM,r; tn tan (layiatlaaM two-unliMi
a. i jmiwma ramovaa. atona for rraa boot taaumo
itaia of mlrftfTuiutta enr. Tan Jara' UmimtM
fraa bjr mall. If yon onlar liial.annd lOo, In lUtxot
3T Pr fNMUkffa. I'M 11 M UHIIN DU-JH Aiiaei,
tfruaonSartrtft latum Ibta adTtruaaaaaa Ui n
DR. GUNffS
UiPilOVXO
UVER PILLS
i MILD PHYSIC.
OMR P11.T. FOR A IMrHK.
Mt nf til hiMnl. auh du U aMNMSftrV Mf
tntltn, Tims PIIU sJipplj wha tha rSa toss fa
auk. It rnruiw. Ttir ours iiMflsana, cntntwi toe
I :m srnl olw th OurapUiun buwr than atiwulra
Ifwtr iWiIhpt frit, ntw Ick.ttj To aonvliwa fem,
ill mail ..mplo fr. or fuliUn (orifco. H,M mf
km 1 UubANKO MKU UO, i-rulMlalolila. fa,
CHICKEN -msrca pays
if vou uae the Pttalai
ir
Int-tibatar Braadira.
Make money while
other are treating
time byoldproceaaea,
CaUlov tell til about
It, and dcacribra erery
article neeaea iot ui
poultry buai neat.
The "ERIE"
mecheBlcallf the beat
wheel. Prettiest model.
'We are recine Coast
Asenla. Bicycle cata-
locue.BUtUedfree.giirea
fnllrlrarrlntlon, nrlres, etc., aoairri WAirrsD.
"aTALuMA IHCOaATOI CO.,rtalama,Cal.
BsAwcai House, m a Mala St., Los Angeles.
NEW
Portland, Walla Walla,
Hpuksiie, ia O.KAN,
Hallway and Ureal
Northern Rail war
Montana nolnts. St.
WAY
Paul, Minneapolis,
Omaha, Ht. Louis, Chi
cago and last. Adilrest
EAST
nearest agent, v. u
UonaTsn, (Jen. Act.,
rortiann.ur.; a. u.nts
vein. lien. Agt.Meattlo.
Wash.) CO. lmon,Un. Agt., Hp-, sane, Wash.
rtoililMt; rocg'bsiiHat iraus; nno swinery! pal
ace sleeping and dlnlngnsrsi hiifTol-lllirarjoars;
family tourist sleopera; new equipment.
FRAZER caxle
BUT IN TNI WORLD. lAeU .? fc
Itswearlngqnalltloa are nninrpaaed,aotnall
outlasting two boxes of any othur brand. Pre)
from Animal Oils. IIKT TIIW HKNUINK,
POH BALK BY ORKUON AN U
gSr-WASHINOTOtf MKKCIMNTS-a
ana veaiers gouerauy.
MRS. WINSLOW'S ssvTBHupa
- FOR CHILDREN TIITHINQ
Fee .ale by all lrlu. tn -.u a settla.
K. P. N. U. No. 61 1 -8. F. N, U. No. 688
I!" a . j
H'J' iuws Htt la ttst TaslsT r J"
IkJ Best CouKb Syrup. Tssus Uoua. Vat f 1
rj In tima pViid by dnigictsts. 14
rutin, no one should be without
remedy kept- at hand, will save
on me tiocior. -ur un huhi-
PIP
baa beau donbled but the price remains
iw etsjraiaei aaa waiter fVltea, AiDfai
a4 "IhWilftf IW !. MbAstr. fef
torfWlM. AiD-Mia, wasa
rviani MavU.
(Ula fc s ImmsI rM
t v., wmmt i
Mti.ADKtrttiA. r.
HERCULES
1
Engines
OAS and
CASOLINC
-NOTKU FOB
SIMPLICITY,
STINGTH,
AMD
SUPERIOR
WO R KM A N SHIP
In Every Detail.
These angiiies are ackiinwiMlgerl br esnert en.
rliHwr. to ue worlhe of highest onminendatlon
fur alrnpllPlly, hlRh grad. material and sujierlor
worhrusn.hlu, 'I buy develop the full eelaal
hone power, and ran without an Kliwirlo Kjaib
Baltaryi the ayslem of Ignition Is simple, Inex
pensive and reliable.
for pumping oiitltta for Irrigating pnrposaa
no better engine can be touud ou Ilia facias
Coast.
Por hoisting oalflu for mines the hare mat
With highest approval.
Por Imermlituul bowat their aeonomt la nn
questioned.
TffTlOVKT
MANU7ACTDBE0 BY
PALMER 1 REY TYPE FOUNDRY,
Cor. Front and Alder its,,
PORTLAND, J OREGON.
Send for oatalogna.
AMERICAN
Palmer & Rey Branch
Electrotypen
Stereotypen...
Merchants in Gordon and Peerless
Presses, Cylinder Presses, Paper
Cutters, Motors of all kinds,
Folders, Printing Material.
Patentee! of Self-Spacing Type.
Sole Makers of Copper-Alloy Type