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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1895)
Highest of all in Leavening Power Latest U. S. Gov't Report - I I I j 4 V t aw 2Q2Amitf PURE REDHOT HAYMAKING. One Aroatettr. Expwtleaee Th Couplet, and HatLractory la One Day. The hottest experience I ever met with in tlie oountry was tbo day I help ed to make hay. : The f uruier began to cull us shortly after midnight, and after a long siege of iutarinittt'jjt yelling be anrcecded in his design of getting as out of bed several hours before it "was uoora- wiry. It wat then 8 a. m. About two hours later we had had our break! itsta Mid were entering the hayfleld. ' When one goto into trouble, the open ing scenes are always alluring. A gor geous sunrise was iu full swing in the east The dew lay on the grass, mid the air was cool and invigorating. I could not but agree with the poets that the soent of the new mown hay was very inspiring. I felt like a colt and was keen to jump into the sport The first heat consisted in bunching the hay after the rake, which the farmer himself drove about the field with many loud "gees" and "haws," but few "whoas. " The old rascal took a fiend ish delight in crowding us. It began to look a little like work. . When the hay was all bunched, the h igh ladder wagons were driven into the field. Being a novice, I was assigned the duty of loading. I stood upon tho wagon and built the load as the hay was pitch ed to me theoretically, but oil me actual ly. The first dose knocked all the poetry out of me. The blazing sou had sucked np all the dewdrops and was now high in the east He seemed to focus his scorching rays on. the wagons, and the hay crackled and sizzled about me like frying fat It was noon 20 times all at once. I thought I was becoming liquified. I sank to my neck in the hay and roasted in a cou centrated oven of absorbed solar heat Not a breeze stirred. No friendly cloud . hovered near to screen the orb of fire. I vainly tried to fancy I was in the Arctio ocean and the wagon was a floating ice berg. .The old pitchers, inured to the heat and the avocation, still fed on the hay. " We were jerked into tho barn from the frying pan into the fire and I was there barbecued for half an hour in the hot beds of the mow. - t Out : we shot again into the broiling field. All day long this process of slow torture continued. It was a little drama from the snow less land inserted into real life, the farmer impersonating Sa tan, the pitchers his archangels and my self Charon's lost passenger. , - But, thank heaven, the farmer was' no Joehoa, and the sun at last complet ed his trip across the skies and disap peared beneath the mountain. The next day my place on the wagon was occu , pied by some other foot Philadelphia Press. ' Tha Bank of Scotland. The Bank of Scotland, now 800 years old, naturally sought to encourage Scot tish industries, and this is shown in the manufacture of its paper for notes. The first large notes were made in 1696, 20 shilling notes, as they were termed, be ing only issued on April 7, 1704. In 1729 the bank's' paper was manufac tured at Giffordhall, near Haddington. Attendants' had to be present in the bank's interest, and their account was paid by the bank.. One item was "ale and bread furnished to the workmen, 10s.," and another for "drink money to servants, 4 17s. 6d." The items are suggestive, although it is possible they only represented drink money in nama In 1735 the bank got its 20 shilling banknotes made at Collingtoun Miln Colinton mill), and there is an "ac compt for drink money" in connection with it A barber came twice from Edinburgh to shave the officials and re ceived 3s. for his professional attend ance. Green tea must have cost at this time 24b. per pound, for in the bill a quarter pound sells for 6s. ' At this Cohnton mill the bank appears to have kept all the employees in food during the time the paper was being manufac tured. A man was engaged 13 days at the pape? mill in dressing meat, and he cut up in that time 200 pounds of it Heat and mutton cost only 2d. per pound in those good old days. ' A hen is charged at 8d-, a duck at 9L, one "sol lan goose,'' Is. 8& ; a dozen eggs, 3d. ; six chickens, only Is. 4L, and a wild fowl, lOd. ; cheese cost id. per pound . and bacon 81 per pound. In 1709 the bank's note paper was made at Ked haugh Miln (Bedhall mill). Chambers' a Journal. At supper recently giveV to some1 vagrant sandwich men in Loudon 7 out of 12 guests had been ordained clergy-. men of the Church of England. Oats were not known to the Hebrews or the Egyptians. 1 ASSIST NATURE . a little now and then in removing offend ing matter from the , stomach and bowels and yon thereby void a multitude of distressing de rangements ana dis eases, and will have 1M 4r,iMit of your doctor's I Of all known I airenta for this nnr. rpose, Dr. Pierce's pleasant Pellets are the best Oace awed, they are al ' ways In favor. The Pellets core biliousness, sick and bilious head ache, dizziness, cos tiveness, or consti- jinni'u, mm Blum- ach, loss of appetite,; coated tongue, indi- uj'ipoia, winuy oeicnings, "heart-burn," pain, and distress after eat ing, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Pure Vaccine. Two Ivory Points . . . f .25 Ten Ivory Points .... 1.00 (POST PAID) j WOODARD- Chemists... CLARKE t CO. Portland, Or. in O j 1 I . 11 1 IU 4. b . A DREAM. Oh, It was but a droain I had , While the nnaMu played And here the eky and here the (lad Old oorwn EiKiwd the. glade. And hero the laughing ripples ran, And here the row grow V That throw a kins to awry man , That voyaged. with the crvw. Our silicon aalla in uuy folds Drooped in the brvaUilraa breeae, Aa o'er a field at marigolds Our eyes . o'er the etma, While hera the eddlva lisped and purled Around the Island's rim. And np from out the ondwrwold Wo aaw the merman swim. i And It was dawn and ailddle day And midnight for the mooa On silver rounds aercwa the hay Bud oltrobed the akiee of June, And here tbe glowing, glorious king . Of day ruled o'er the realm. With stars of midnight glittering . About hla uladum. The seagull reeled on laniruid wing In eiroles round the mast; We heard the aonga the sirens sing ' As we went sailing past. And up and down tbe golden aanda . A thousand fairy throng Flung at u from their flashing hands The echoes of their aonps. James Whitoomb Riley. PRINTING BY TELEGRAPH. An Electrical Typewriter That Transmits Printed Character. , The printing telegraph, though a de vice of comparatively recent develop ment, has been the subject of ceaseless investigation, and practical workers in electricity have directed their whole at tention in some instances to the trans mission of messages and the recording of them in plain Roman characters. - Its advantages are simply those of an electrical typewriter, by means of which the message is printed in tbe jh-eseuce of the transmitting operator in page form, and a duplicate of the same print ed at all the receiving stations on tbe line, whether it be a long or short cir cuit. A single transmission prints it simultaneously in page form ready for the compositor s case in all the news paper offices of many cities. It is said to differ materially from all other known means of telegraphy in one essential particular. In it tbe impulses move the instruments, whereas in other systems the instruments move the im pulse that is to say, the transmitter of the message is caused to run by a sepa rate Dower. No combination of elec trical impulse or currents is employed. An even succession of dots or impulses, which operate the polarized relay arma ture at the receiving station, places tbe revolving type wheel in the required position, when the local mechanism causes the letter to be printed. The apparent impossibility of trans mining printed characters 500 or 1,000 miles over a single wire at once presents itself to the mind, and it is overcome in this system, it is asserted, in a very simple way. Each letter of the alphabet is represented by a certain number of impulses, which revolve the type wheel to the required position, when the let ters are struck by the local mallet. Fourteen impulses represent the eu tire alphabet, making a complete revolu tion of the type wheel, which may be turned 200 revolutions per minute, thus securing very rapid printing. Its advan tage also is tout of absolnte secrecy as a means of communication. The advan tage of the printing telegraph for tbe transmission of news to the newspaper offices is unquestionably a subject com manding attention on the part of pro gressive proprietors. x'aper and tress. Too Mnca Machinery. "Do yon know the curse of modern journalism?" asked an old journalist the other day. . . . - , "It's the typewriter. It destroys orig inality. It gives to everything that is written a mechanical touch, here's no style or individuality about anything composed on a typewriter. "Yon will find that the newspaper writers in all the larger offices use type writers. The use of them has extended in many other directions. Mgr. Satolli has one. But wherever you find a man writing on one and composing as he writes you will find that his work is cramped, mechanical, " unimaginative, without the slightest touch of fancy or vitality. "Go into the offices of the big dailies and you will find tbe youug men who make the papers seated at a typewriter, grinding out columns of colorless, un readable stuff for the paper. You can't turn out thought by machinery, and the young men who write their matter for the press on typewriters never rise above the level of mediocrity. Go into the composing rooms of the big dailies, too, and you will find the printers setting type by machinery. No style about that It's straight, stiff, formal, unattractive, without any individuality. It takes the human touch to give the proper life and color to anything. There's too much machinery. "Atlanta Constitution. . Geodee. Did you ever see a geode, the ugly, creamy, yellow, rounded rook, which, upon being broken open, presents a per fect wilderness of diainoudlike crystals? They are oddities of the oddest kind, and are not too plentiful anywhere. Tbe word "geode" means "earthform" and is applied to all hollow stones which are lulled with crystallized matter. When broken open, some are found to be full of pure looking, clear water. Oth ers appear to be full of yellow or brown paint, while a third class are filled with what appears to be a very fair quality of tar. No odds what the filling of the cavity may be composed of, the sides are always studded with crystals. Should the filling be yellow the crystals are likely to be of the same color, but by far the greater portion of them are as clear as ice or diamonds. St Louis Republic. The New York town of Bolivar has streets lighted free of expense by a com pany which fnrnishes the illnminant as a payment for the privilege of doing business in the corporation. A lie is often told without saying a word, by putting the rotten apples in tlie bottom of tho backet Ram's Horn, WAYS OP BUSINESS. THE- MERCHANT WHO CORRECTS ONLY ONE KINO OF MISTAKE. A Svra Criticism of the Ways of Shop, keeper and Couleia The Steamboat Clerk Whs Said, "We Never Rectify Mu tates Uere." ' No one perceives tho wisdom, aud in deed the necessity, of accurate book keeping more fully than yonr humble servant, who onu t keep books to save her life and who finds herself approach ing dementia every time she endeavors to balance a cash account But why iu all bookkeeping systems, from banks to the smallest retail shop, is it invariably the customer who gets cheated if any body? Toll me, ye winged winds, which e'er my pathway, roll 1 It is useless to contradict and say that it isn't The one exception in a thousand years dues not count against the millions of oppos ing instauces. I have lately read the pathetio accouut by some recluse, who never goes shopping, of the bloodthirsty monsters who take more change than is due them and stalk out, leaving no ad dress behind them, little recking tho sufferings of tho poorly paid employee who has to make good the deficit out of his or her own pocket Fudge I No such mistakes occur, or, if they do, they aro rarer than fresh vegetables on a country table. In all large establishments there is a hawk headed Horns at the "desk" waiting to pouaee on a mistake iu tbe customer's favor of 1 cent, and many's the time every one of ua can testify the little slips have been returned to bo cor rected of mistakes to our credit, while we fumed, v Thank goodness, there ore instances in which the sharpshooters have wound ed themselves. Owe I was on a "sound" boat going from New York to Fall River, and the man at the desk gave me a 5 bill too much in change when paying after supper. There was something of a crowd, but that mistime would have made itself evident to mo iu a mob. I dashed back and said, "You've made a mistake in my change. " "Can't help that," said tho lordly clerk. ' We never rectify mistakes here, ' ' "Oh, you don't?" retorted the head of the party. "Well, it will cost you some thing this time, for you have given us $5 too much. But if yon never rectify mistakes you are the loser for once. It is foolish to dwoll on tho sequel. and I have forgotten it ' I only remem ber that the youug man, pale and agi tated, danced in supplication around tho unmoved figure of the stern admonisher for some minutes. I suppose he got his money, and I dare say there was no law upholding one in keeping it, but I hope, at this distance of time, be didn't One day, not long ago, I was at a furnishing shop in State street, Uhicago, buying a tie. The price was fl. 00, and I present ed the man with a t'J bilL He swung over the littlo birdcago on a telegraph line and it came swiftly back with a 60 cent piece. , Seeing another tie for that price, I handed back the change and was about to leave, when a voice came from the elevated desk at the other end: "Hi 1 This half dollar is counterfeit I" Although it was a public place aud I am a retiring lady, I burst wildly forth into a clarion shout of joy. It is so sel dom a modest customer has the chance of beholding a nntural enemy caught with his own quicklime. The mortifica tion of tho salesman serving me was ometliing to see. It did me good for a ,-holo dav. Sending a counterfeit half dollar cheerfully and with promptitndo in change and repudiating it on its re turn tho next minute t It was a sharp cranio and a little too sharp. Everyb xly who shops mncn knows that it ii next to impossible to get a "returned" articlo credited, or, indeed, called for. If roa take two rugs on ap- croval I nieation rugs ; because you can't very woli return them by hand and Btato clearly aud plainly and over and ovor the prioo of the one you have kept aud tho ono you wish returned, you ore more iiKoiy man not 10 nnn both on your mil tuo next montn, ana yon aro lively to find the rug day after day littering your hall unless yon tele nbouo twice a day and end by flouncing down yourself in a rage and demanding its instant removal. VI courso II it is kept long you are charged with it, any way. Tho other night, when it was very hot, some friends of a lady in moderate circumstances dining with her suggest ed a drive in tbe park. One of tho men telephoned for a landau, and at the end of the drive paid for it The next week the bill came in to the lady. Now of course this was an accident But why doesn't tbe other accident ever happen! Why should thousands of bills come in to be paid twice, while by no oversight or bad management does a bill ever get forgotten or overlooked? Money getting, grasping, greedy generation of shop keepers 1 Business is business, if yon like, but business need not tie a cut throat, bloodthirsty system of demand ing what is not due, need it? Must it be in this way that men grow rich? It is because only one Kind 01 mis takes occur that one is justified in think ing that only one kind is guarded against Tbe customer has to look out for himself and the shopkeeper too. The shopkeeper only looks out for himself. As for the brooking of promises, the calm delays and the superb independ ence of "purveyors," words fail me when I attempt to depict their aggrava tions. Success breeds contempt, it seams, and the only way to get a thing done promptly is to patronize a littlo up town place where they can't do it-i-Mine. Lorgnette in Chicago Post. Againet Bacins of Liner. Our Paris correspondent tells us that the French admiralty is preparing a bill to put an end to racing by "ocean grey hounds," a practice which is recognized in Paris as the chief cause of collisions and loss of ships on the high seas. The thirteenth paragraph of the internation al regulations of 1883 limits the speed at sea, but it has become a dead letter, owing to the lack of penal sanction, the bill of 1801 only dealing with lights and fog signals. The new bill provides heavy penalties fur excessive speed, even if put on for a short space of time. London Globe. Bead Yonr Letter Again. Never mail a letter written at nfght until it has been reread in' the morning. Yon may materially reduce the number of your correspondents by persisting in this course, but you will gain in reputa tion for prudence and common sense. What seems philosophy by candlelight is but folly by day, and tbe brilliancy of , night lacks gparkla in the morning. 1 MUST KNOW THE STREAM. The Information a Waatera Rlvar rtlot MimI Carry la Hla Bead. At -tho season of the year when the river exenrsiou buBiiiMS is at Its height and hundred of boats ore carrying thousands of people to nnd fro along the entire length of tho Ohio rivor from Pittsburg to Cairo many persons who ordinarily never give tho subject a thought aro impressed with the wonder ful way iu which navigation on onr beautiful stream is carried on. The first thing noticed generally is the accuracy with which the pilot handles the boat, avoiding tho bars, which are near tlie surface of tho water in tho summer, go ing from 'one sido of the rivor to the other, and finally, without a jar, land ing them all sufoly at their destination. When tho exoursitin business is over, these Hamo men assmno similar poxitious on packets and towbouts, carrying hun dreds of tous of freight and thousand of bushels of coal on every trip with the same accuracy with which they handled the excursion steamers during the sum mer. A large number of tho pilots running out of Cincinnati know the river from here to New Orleans, others from hero to Memphis, aud others still to points up the river as far as Pittsburg. ""Know the river." Tfiis phrase moans much. For instance, a man running from here to Now Orleans must be ablo to take churge of the wheel of his boat at any hour of the day or night at any point on the river and on any stogo of water. Ho must be ttblo to tell at a glance ex actly where the bout is at any point on this long stretch of 1,513 miles. Ho must know every bend aud chute, and by day the different points by which to steer, such as houses, bams, trees, fences and even haystacks ; by night every light placed by the government in con spicuous places as wen as tne nuis ana thoir shue. Ha mast know exactly how long to hold the boat to one light or ob ject before changing to another. When the Mississippi river is reached, a new feature presents itself in tbe shape of the constantly changing chanueL To work here requires more skill and great er judgment probably thau all the rest of the difficulties combined. Going down a boat may go on one sido of the river. Coining back it down t go with in two miles of that place. When theso things are appreciated and they are only a few of the things a pilot must know then it is that the pilot gets credit for what he does. Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. , Kipling's Mulvancy. The statement published in various newspapers to the effect that the orig inal of Mr. Kipling's inimitable Mul vaney is now living and talking in San Francisco under the name of McManus, has called out a pleasaut letter from the author. It is addressed to the editor of The Book Buyer. "In reply to your letter," Mr. Kip ling writes, "I can only say that know nothing of the Private McMunns mentioned in the cutting you forward. "At tbe same time, I should be loath to interfere with a fellow romancer's trade, and if there be such a person as Private McManus, and if he believes himself to be the original of Terence Mulvancy, and can tell tales to bock his claim, we will allow that be is a good enough Mulvaney for tbe Pocifio slope and wait developments. "At the same time I confess his seems to me rather a daring game to play, for Terence alone of living men knows the answer to the question, 'How did Dears ley come by the palanquin?' It is not one of tbe questions that agitato the civ ilized world, but for my own satisfaction I would give a good deal to have it an swered. If Private McManus can answer it without evasions or reservations, he will prove that he has some small right to be regarded as Mulvauey's successor. Mulvaney he cannot be. There is but ono Terence, and he has never set foot in America and never will. " Died With Hla Chora. ' In the reminiscences of General Sir Evelyn Wood, himself a brave English soldier, a touching instance of courage and self sacrifice is given. One June day in 1885 a detachment of English ma rines was crossing tlie Worouzow road under fire from the Russian batteries. All of tbe men reached shelter in the trenches except a seaman, John Blewitt. As he was running a terrific roar was heard. His mates knew the voice of a huge cannon, the terror of the army, and yelled: "Look outt It is Whistling Dick!" But at tho moment Blewitt was struck by tbo enormous mass of iron on the knees and thrown to tho ground. He called to his special chnm : "Ob, Welch, save met" The fuse was hissing, but Stephen Welch ran out of the trenches, and seiz ing the great shell tried to roll it off of his comrade. It exploded with such terriflc force that not an atom of the bodies of Blewitt or Welch was found. Even in that time when each hour had its excitement, this deed of heroism stirred the whole English army. One of the officers search ed out Welch's old mother in her poor home and undertook ber support while she lived, and the story of his death helped his comrades to nobler concep tions of a soldier's duty. A Bur Sign. Her Brother Awfully bad news, sis ter. . 4 The Sister What? Her Brother That count of yours is a bogus one. Tbe Sister How did you find that out? ; " Her Brother I was telling him to day how hard up I was, aud he actually offered to lend me $100. Syracuse Post Tha Heat of Onr Clothe. How hot our clothes aro has just been determined by a Dr. von Bobber, a German meteorologist When the out side temperature is 50 degrees F. , the temperature on the coat is 71.2 degrees, that between the coat aud the waistcoat 73.0 degrees, between wuistcoat and shirt 75. 0 degrees, between shirt and undershirt 77.4 degrees and between the woolen undershirt and the skin 90.9 degrees. Exchange. , Edison says there is practically no limit to the speed that can bo attained on a railroad. Wo thinks the greatest speed will come when electricity is ob tained direct from coal "The pleasantest way to take cod liver oil," says an old gormaud, "is to fatten pigeons with it and then eat tha pigeon." Tha 1 rotting lloraa. There is much logio iu what tho Now York Suu soys obtmt shorter trotting races. It is not au uucoiumou thing uow for a horse attached to sulky to go a half uuder a two minute K''t " quarter at a speed rivaling Salvator Iu his palmy days. Whim five or six aud sometime seven and eight heats are trotted very uearly nt this p' "10 straiu 011 a horse must bo tremendous, Eveutuiilly ho must break down under it It seems likely that iu tho uenr fu turo tho trotting raoo will, us Tho Buu soys, bo shorter. This year iu Buffalo, however, tho old plan will bo in opera tion, except in special contents, and no thmbt tlie great majority of horse lovers will bo glad that it U. UulTuio.Tiuios. 1-arU of a t'yclona Iteut Hill United. Au interesting relio of the cyclone of hint Juno was fouud by F. A. Stital of Silver Luke in u field on section I, Rich Valley township. It Is two-thirds of a f 10 bill issued by the Belviduro National bnuk of Now Jersey. The other third of tho sumo bill was found a few days after tho cyclone by K, Ullnboskl, who left it witli tho Bank of Oloiicoo. Tho part fouud aitor n lapxo of five mouths was six milos from where thoflrHt piece was fouud and is in very good condi tion. Minneapolis Tribune, Another Adntne on Chins. Mayor Huffman of Mount Carroll hns issued an order to tho force at work sinking nil artosian well for city water purfwses to continue drilling until they strike water or China. Tho well is al ready down a distauco of over 1, 1100 feet in snow white sand. Chicago Iutur Ocean. 1 ' IN THIS AVOKK-A-DAY WORLD Brains and nervoa nyi umler the nreMure and tt-mi often give way mi 1 lei lea of buslneu. Jen ami uufoieward oollap of Hi mental and phyilflAl faculties are dully ot-eurronr, Hie column of the dally pre iliow Fortify the vstem ahen exhausted agalnit inch auluward events with tltutrlK-r'a Hr.unaeh Hlthra, thai moa helpful medleiiie of tha weak, worn out and In linn. Le II In rhouiuattaia, dynpepaia, oouatlpation and malaria. Bhe-The flail ihU nlar with a moral. I wouiter what it tT Ha (tttluktng of the prlmol the seat) -'The tool and hla money war anon parted,' I (Ueaa. 70,000 OKUBlt roil TT1WKITKKS The Western Union Telegraph Com pany bavc placed an order tor 2.U00 Bliok enwierfer's Typewrite, for use in their oftlces tbroUKliout tha United titatea. Tina is perhaps tha largest order ever placed for typewriters and is certainly a strong testi monial for tha superior merits of the Bliokensderfer Machine. We understand this machine embodies the latest patented improrenieuu (sua weighing but rj pound it i easily carried), and equals any high priced machine in quality of work, and ex cels them all in convenience, Tbe Bllok ensderfer is ready for sale in Oregon, Washington ant Idaho. Agents a a wanted iu erery oouuiy. Oood lively ouea can make handsome salary. There is more catarrh in this section ot the country than all other diseases put to gether, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. Por a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and person bed local remedies, and by oonstantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it inourable. Science has proven catarrh to be a con stitutional disease: and therefore requires conatitulioiial treatment Halt's Catarrh rtire, manufactured by F. J. Cheney rV Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on t ie market It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaipoonlul. It acta directly on the blood and muoous surfaces of the eyetem. They offer on hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Bend for circulars aud testimonials. Address P. J. Cbsnev A Co.. Toledo. O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Agents Write or call. Any man or woman can make toO per week lure. B-H taller on eertn ornamental, uieful, noeeenarr. Atuai soa fiovti.Tr Co., ISO Market til., b Jr., FIT8.-AII flt etrpned rree by Ir. Kline's Arrat Ntn HMIurtr. No Hi after IhellrU da?' use. Marrttlou rare. Tn-atl and fliol rial bottle lrm to rit nue. neiut to Dr. kiln, IU1 arch t.. PhlUdvlplila, Pa. Piso's Cure is the medicine to break np children's Coughs snd Colds. Mm. M. U. Blvst, Hprague, Wash., March ft, 1HW. Tav GiRMgA for breakfast It is a Fact That Hood's Bartaparilla hat an unequalled record of cure, tbe largest sales in the world, and cures when all others fall. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently In the public eye today. six for $5, Be "are to get Hoop's. ft; Hood's Pills ?,loV?.rp.ri!.:uh FOR CURES SCROFULA, OLOOD POISON. THE CURES CANCER, ECZEMA. TETTER. BLOOD Ely's Cream Balm QUICKLY CUKES COLD '"HEAD THreHQe7t"T1 Apply H.im into onah noirtrll aU.i fiuoiiewmiu St.,M v "IS FRAZER AXLE CREASE BEIT IN TBI WORLD. IUwearlngqnalltle an nnrarpaawd.actnall: outlawing two boxen of anv other brand. Kre from Animal Oil. MKT THK UKNUIMK. roa bale By obkuon and Mr-WASHIMUTON MIKUHAKTI-m and OaalarasenerallT R.P. N. 0. No.616-8. F. N.U. Wo. 692 A SURE CURE FOR PILES UohlrLf Pita, known bf moiitur like 9Tpil, l: 0 ILCUIfiff WO0H wrna, I Ull iottb MIU aiuau, VWW lug or rrutroujzac rum yieia mi ne im DR. BO-tAN-KO't PILf RCMEDV. . whloh mm dlnetlr on pari, alfaeted, abaort toman, av m V. aV M fl n tlmi. minces twin. When ..- or on any outing trip, be sure ana take a Doiue 01 Pairo-Mlfler For all pain internal or external it has no equal, and for Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea and Dysentery, it is almost a specific Sold everywhere at 25c a bottle. (Quantity has been doubled.) Accept The genuine bears the name NOW -: GRASS SEEDS BUY nimrnniMiirn IllfllJI rill flirii VAII1I1 1 I W IB Uftj.ll I MALARIA I Thfiwi.omo'iT. Try It. WEINHARD'S TJVl W.I1II 1 "aStiif thc oaiaiMak ana atnuiac. lalM, w OraatW ft At) Hit ". F f 4 wat.Xf. (Mmuu. m M at 4. to Mn.MIakltn "fcuW L4I, aUN.. H rate alahV UlilM&alKM, IMaaiJAL ua, M a. i-klLASgLfall, PA. "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR CAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLIO At Last. A PRACTICAL Type-Writing Machine.., AT A LOW PRICE Tbe Blickensderfer h. 5 PRICE...S3S.00 u lot ton anS chandler. Welaht Mll lb Kqual. an blah-prlml maaliliie In eapaelt anl qimlltjr of work and aaevta litem all Iu convenience. We Guarantee Every Machine. Writing alway In .l.ht, Portability, gin. Il.n; mantfolfler, rrna-wmei. mrm pin mi enu lokln. liitMrrhaiitfealila tvtte. M"i durante tn- eblne mail-, leaat iiamber of paru, Welgbt id., no riuooti. tieca. Agent, want din every oounly In Oregon Washington and Idaho. THE BLICKENSDERFER MFC. CO. roaTiiSD orncs with Palmer & Rev, Second and Stark St. CIliaEllMisapus poultry baeineaa. I th wheel. fMileMaaodel. we are pectfta Coat Arret, ntrvcl eaia- lu(aa,BuUd fraalvaa rnfldearrintlon, prices, etc.. aawwvs wiHTtii UTALOitA WtfOBAtot C0.,Ptalaaia,Cal. Biancbj Hoima, tji a Mala 84., Loe Aagelea. ASK YOUR DRIWJOIST FOR the best POR Dyspeptic,De!icate,Infirm and AGED PERSONS JOHN CARLE A SONS. Nsw York. DR. GUMS ntraoYKD UVER PILLS A MILD PHYSIC. nun fiii. row A nonn. Mm.nfc ttftha bnaol b dftf l aaeeBMrr fct buJtti, tiim aWanir hMhnM.)u.la f It ruur, TMT i'r lMMon Dniwua i , nd !lu tha Ciimpfciiloa betMr tha aorawti fir iwilinr Tlu oca icn, To eonvlnre f. will mtl wmpl f r. of i fall no Pj 7w kmi r van UoiiANa.0 aliUX (JO. PhiliiliAl. ra. NEW WAY Portland, Walla Walla, spoiane.via u. a. m it. Hailwajr nd Great Northern Hailwajr to Montana polnta, Ilk Paul, Minneapolis, winaiia, ni. I4)tlta. i;ni cago and Kast. Address IE? A OHgT! nearesl agent. C. V. Donavan, (inn. Agt. IT" MAm m rortlnd.Or.iR.O Hi. aagai aT af veni. Uen. AxtjHeattla WmIi.; C.U.DIxou.Oen. A(t,.6iH)kne.Wah. Ne dual; rock-ballast track; Una OKtieryi palao ileeplitg and dining oara; buffet-library can famllv toHrlatalacpeni new equipment. NO DIRT OR SMOKE. If our Wife Can Hun It. Iferculet dot or UomUm Kiifine. Palmer A Key, B. K (;l. and Portland, Or. B9 aaaafVwgaaawaBBBBaaaaBjBaaBBBBBBBBr I I fllaMnMdl I The "ERIE" beat aaaae" iiTlaaa L j Beat Coiuib brrup. TaMea Uuod, Pas 1 1 r 1 tntlma rVfid br dmatrista H ru 17 frrzCr 1 ifr of Bees, Wasps, Hornets, Centipedes or Scorpionsbites of animals, reptiles or insects, are instantly soothed and quickly cured with Poin-Killer. It counteracts the effect of the Twison, allays the irrita- the swellinir and stops tlie vou iro fishine, ou a picnic . .... . no imitation or substitute. PERRY Davis & Son. BUELL UMBEBSOM 205 Third St., Portland -AIXORAl)K8-CLimit M1I.I.B, Black Hlsstlnj Powder, Jutlsun liu iirovod lowdr. Heat fans and Fuss. JAMES LAiDUW I E0 Ijn't, tt fif;l 8 1 Pa M. On P""1 lowdr. Heat Cap. and Fuss DO YOU i'KKL BAUT DOKH YOUR HACK aohoT I)oa ovary stop ra burden? Yon ntwd MOOKE'S REVEALED REMEDY. WELL-KNOWN BEER (IN KBU OB SOTTLEH) Sroond la eon TMT IT.. Ma nailer whara Iroau I'UMTLAND, OH. inn a a a w rr Tv..iraa.r, no JK alaaaftaara,a4na . I. II. t I fhid MM.1II IttC. rlMM. Taakrl m almi-iiM ihmm, V HERCULES Engines OAS ncl CASOLINI NOTED FOR SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH, ECONOMY -AMD- SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. Them enaines era aeknowiedaaal be a earl an. Jllneer lo be worthy of highest eoutnienilallon or aimpllcliy, hlh rle malerlal and aniwrlnt wrroanntp, larr neveioej ma mil aciaal bone power, and ran wllhoalan Kleeirle Muark B.liary ; the intern of if nlUon Is aim pie, Inns, penalva and reliable. for pumping ouliiu for Irrfgatlnf pnrpoaN no baiter angina oao be fouud on Ihel'aolOt Coast For hotfltlng onlflui tor Mines the? bava m.i With blghaal approval. For luiermlliVul power Ihalr asonom to no qaeatlonad. MAMVFACTCRED BY- PILKEH I RET TYPE FOUNDRY : Cor. Promt and Aider Sta., PORTLAND, - ORECON Band for oatalogna. AMERICAN Palmer & Rey Branch Elcctrotypera , Stereotypen. Merchant. . lo Gordon and Peerlest Presses, Cylinder Presses, Paper Cutters, Motors of all kinds, Folders, Printing Material. Pntentees.of Self-Spacing Type. Sole Makers of Copper-Alloy Type. MRS. WINSIOW'S 8&T,TuV"0 - FOR CHILOMN TUTHIWO Fr Ml. trail lraU. Hi CaU a bettl. flffl ip aaaaiia u UUUUUUUUlsa. lift fines t