The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, June 19, 1896, Image 4

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    Of tut end irlal ptors Hood's arsaparllla to be
fen)ak!ld for purifyin the blood twnsass
r4.
f,
FAIR PLAY.
J
r- Gartupariila
Is the On True Blood Partner. All droffrisU; n
Hoed' PIMa ear all Linr Ilia. oenta.
' THE ELECTRIC SUCKER.
Omasaerti Aeaoani of a Wonderful Hah
rM In the Nils.':
In an article in Ceber Land nnd
Sleet on "Electrical Phenomena In the
Animal World," Dr. Frolich tells about
a sucker flint found in the Nile and its
tributaries by modern acientitio men in
1881, bat well, known to the ancient
Egyptian the "racier thnnderer
god,"! being worshiped at such in a
acker god temple in the city of the
thunder sucker, or Oryrrhynchos. The
reason they called it the thunder nick
er, instead of the "thunder fish, " was
because they knew; of another fish,
, known to the English speaking people
as the electric oat (fish), to the Germans
as the fdtterwels, or the shad that
makes one tremble. It grows to a length
of about a foot, of which the head and
nose take up a quarter, and at the deep
est part measures more than a quarter
of its length, s. , .-.
Just why the modern ecfantifio men
did not know of this fish before is a
question a layman finds it hard to an
swer except that the sucker is a bottomy
fish. The Old Egyptians probably learned
of the animal after a Nile flood, when
some philosopher was meditating over
m mud puddle left by the receding wa
ter. He saw a funny fish struggling in
the water, and, out of a desire for
knowledge, reached for, the fish and
touched it. If there were any disciples
. or the philosopher hard by, they proba
bly saw the philosopher act surprising
lyas the stoic Indian did when he got
hold of a galvanic battery. Thereafter
the fish was worshiped, having a name
which appelated it with the "thunder
god of the skies, " although the ancients
knew nothing of electricity according to
the learned of today. '
A peculiar thing about the various
electrical fish is that should one swim,
even at a considerable distance from
human bather, the bather would know
of its proximity by an "electrical sen
sation, " while many of them have bat
teries actually fit to kill a horse on con-
toot There fish are far ahead of the hu-
man rjeings in tne matter or weapons.
"for they stun their prey at a great dis
tance in tne water. "
THE RETIRED BURGLAR.
Hot Often Bealty Frightened, bat Now and
Thoa Perhaps a Little startled.
"I don't suppose a man in niy busi
ness is apt to get frightened very much,"
aid the retired burglar. "He's all the
time expecting thiugs to huppen, and
ne s always on tne lookout for them.
Still, I suppose that any man, unless he
nas an absolutely cast iron nerve, and
such men are very few, is likely at
times to be startled. I know that I am.
For instance :
"I went into a house one night, and
after groping around down stairs for a
while in the blackest kind of darkness
I went up stairs. There I found an open
door. I had located from theontside of
the house the windows of the room that
this door opened into, and when I struck
the door I knew where the bed ought to
be. It was there, and I went along the j
siao or it until I came to the head. I
found a chair there with a man's clothes
piled up'on it I picked up the trousers,
and as I began to feel in the pocket
br-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-rl went an alarm
clock on the bureau, not a foot from my
head, and out of bed jumped a man,
bumping square against me, of course
not knowing I was there, but knocking
me endways and tumbling over on the
floor himself. - - .
I certainly was startled by
Be Didn't Like Banna, hat BTa Ate
Them Alt the dame.
Mark Twain lived some forty years
ago, In the limits of a very wild, half
crasy frontier mining camp. Thla was
divided Into two parties, the so-called
"Boston crowd," which contained the
better element, though few Boston men,
and the "Missouri crowd," which was a
pretty bad lot, though not composed
exclusively of natives of Missouri.
Fight to the death were of dally and
nightly occurrence, gamldlng outfits
were In constant demand, quarreling,
bullying drunkards were omnipresent.
and few used water xcept to wash
now and then In the little mountain
stream flowing through the diggings.
Despite It all there was a strict camp
etiquette, which was recognised and
considered law by all, and It was of this
etiquette that Mark Twain told me ao
example. : -
A "Boston man" was fating break
fast early one morning at a table near
tne open door and the half-bar. half
restaurant of the place. He waa lust
finishing his plate of pork and beans
when two "Missouri" men passed alone
and saw the "Boston" man and bis
breakfast They stopped within a foot
or two. .
"Look at that!" said the bigger of
Missouri" men contemptuously, "do
you see what that blank-blankety-blank
Boston thing is eating? Why, down In
Missouri, where I came from, we feed
them things to our horses. Only the
brutes eat that grub down there." i
Presently the bully stepped Inside and
sat down opposite the "Boston" man, at
the same table. When the nlate nf
beans had been eaten, the "Boston"
man called out to the bartender:
"Pete, give me another platefuL Pile
it up. I like "em."
When the heaped-un Plate came the
"Boston" man, quick as a flash, bad
pulled out his revolver, had the "Mis
souri" man covered with It, and then,
pushing the full plateful of beans
across the table, told the "Missouri"
man to "eat It and like It or he'd shoot
him like the dog that be was." The
bully had his choice between beans or
death, and he knew It When he had
eaten every bean he was made to say
that he liked beans, and then, and not
till then, did the "Boston" man put up
his pistol, paid for both orders of beans
and left the saloon.
"Now," said Mark, "the reason the
Missouri' man didn't whip out his gun
and shoot as soon as the bean-eater's
back was turned was because of camD
etiquette. Each man had his fun with
the other, and they were even. If the
'Boston' man had been shot the 'Mis
souri" man, as quick as news could fly,
would have had his body filled with
lead from the revolver of every man In
camp, regardless of party. Tou see we
were quite sticklers for fair play In
those day s." New York JournaL
Impellhuert are countless, ami, with
the cruelty by which he showed, led
to bis denunciation by Mr. Gladstone
forty years ago In the philippic which
that statesman directed agnlnsft !ner
dlnand. Tho executions wer only In
part public; It was the executions In
! secret usually at nlghtwhlch ave
the man bis power. It was he who ex
ecuted In San Francisco place, Nation,
the Calahrlnu Agesllas Mllanoque, who
on Dec. 9, 1838, had made a Iwyouet
thrust at King Ferdinand II., and pa
triots Innumerable became bis victims.
When Garibaldi entered Naples In
September, 1800, the excited populate
went In search of the hated headsman;
out ne cared much for his own life,
although be thought little of that of
others, and escaped with his wife.
Later he was Imprisoned on the Ul.-tud
of TJstlca, where he became an offl
cer of the fort built In those days to
protect the Island against pirates. ' Ho
was In receipt of a pension of 3 a
month much more than he deserved
He was 81 years old at the time of his
death. New York Tribune.
THE HAT TRICK.
California's Edible Idaard.
There Is living in the mountainous
parts of the Mojave desert a very
strange llsard, which often reaches a
length of over a foot, and which Is
nearly as wide as one's hand and of a
uulform dark slate color, or even black,
while the tall is spotted with white
and orten nearly uniformly white. At
a distance this species, which scientists
call Sauromalur ater, looks like a Gila
monster, and many people, unacquaint
ed with the latter, have supposed
them to be the same, and I think It Is
due to this mistake that many peopl
believe the Gila monster an inhabitant
of California. But there Is no really
authentic account of the monster be
ing found In our State. Prof. Balrd
states that In his Pacific railroad re
ports, on the authority of Kennerly
ana uoiihausen, that It has been found
along the Mojave River, but this must
be a mistake.
The chuck walla, aa the black llsard
above described is called by the In
mans, is almost entirely vegetarian In
its habits, and consequently edible.
several specimens which were exam
ined contained In their stomachs speci
mens or a little lotus, an ephedra and
a few bits of the gray desert tree, delea
rremontll. The Indians eat a great
many of them, and I, for one, can test!
fy that although very repuslve to look
at If one has not had fresh meat for
three or four months, a nice, fat chuck
walla is quite palatable if properly
cooked. The meat is very white and
tastes much like frogs legs, which
are sold at such a good price In our
markets. San Francisco Chronicle.
Why Hawley Sold His Cows.
Secretary Morton recently visited
BUtmore, N. C, to make a personal In
vestigation of some experiments in
arboriculture that have greatly Inter
ested him, and while there he made ex
amination of George Vanderbilt's 80,-000-aore
farm. Mr. Vanderbilt has re
cently purchased and shipped to this
farm the famous herd of recorded Jer
sey cattle belonging to Frank W. Haw-
ley, of Plttsford farm, near Kochestor.
N. T. The cattle number 125. and tho
herd Is the third In value and reputa
tion In the United States. .
Mr. Hawley sold his corns because of
the recent decision of the New lorlr
Court of Appeals confirming the right
of the State Board of Health to confis
cate and slaughter animals suspected of
tuberculous, regardless of thdlr value
and upon careless and casual examina
tion. He claims that the decision of the
Court and the regulations of the Board
of Health are too severe and unjust
and that their tests are Imperfect and
unreliable. The Court also denied the
doctrine of aristocracy in cattle. It held
that a cow Is only a cow; that one cow
is no better than another cow, and that
that the law does not authorize tlio
uwiu viui., uiojlo ui miuuce uuum or a larger sum lor a nign-r.red Jersey
that and I have no doubt in my own J that is condemned and killed than for
mind that the man that Jumped out of a stump-tall, burr-covered vagrant that
bed was startled when he fell over me, ' Is nicked ud alone the hi2bw.1v Th
but I didn't stay to ask nun about
that" New York Sun.
. The Daac Old lady Mistake. '
Old Mr. and Mrs. Shnman from Bryan
went to town, and in going to the hotel
far dinner saw a crowd around the jus
tice coort The old couple, with pardon
able curiosity, inquired the cause of the
gathering. They were Informed that
man was on trial for beating his wife.
Edging their way through the bystand
ers to get a look at the prisoner, the old
lady whispered to her husband : ;
'"What murderous looking creature
the prisoner is I I'd be afraid to get near
fclm." . v -: .
"Hush t" warned her husband. "That
isn't the prisoner; he hasn't been
brought in yet " '-; "
"Itfsn'tr Who Is it, then?"
"It's the judge ("Atlanta Constitution.
This world is like a mint We are no
sooner oast into the fire, taken out again,
hammered, stamped and made current '
but presently we are changed. Decker '
and Webster. I
regular price or a condemned cow in
New York Is $35, and Mr. Hawley re
cently received that sum per head as
j compensation for a herd of prfza-wln-ners
that cost him KiO.600 when they
were heifers. Among his cattle thus
slaughtered by the Board of Health
was the famous Catherine of Plttsford,
which won the butter t3.t at ihe
World's Fair, and was considered the
most valuable Jersey cow hi the coun
try, if not In the world. Mr. Hawley
paid f 2,500 for her when she was a calf
and received $35 Indemnity when hc
was slaughtered. He claims that the
Inspectors were mistaken in their diag
nosis. After this experience Mr. Haw
ley became discouraged In his attempts
to cultivate the Jersey and offered his
herd to Mr. Vanderbilt by telephone.
The latter accepted the terms, the trade
( was concluded In three minutes, and
I the next day the stock were en route to
North Carolina. It Is said that the pur
chase price was over $ 200,000.
BSESFOM8ITK BOTH TO HARSH AND
tWIII SODADS, .
Th nerves are often painfully aente. Wben
thin ii tba ease, the beat ibln to be done is to
seek tba toufo mud trauquilislnf assistance of
Hosteller's fctomacn Biuers. a superb nervine.
No lew beneficial la It for dyspeptic, bilious,
malarial, rbeuinatlo, bowel and kimev com
plaints. Uaa witk penlstent regularity. A
wineglanlal before (curing confer sleep.
"The giraffe bi a tongas eiehteen Inches
long," Mid Mrs. Garrlli: "And knows how to
bold It, too,'' mapped Mr. dan-Ill, who had bad
a long curtain lecture the night before.
fHm TT. 8-Journal f Jfottdn.
Frof. W. E. Feeke, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, baa without
doubt treated and cur
ed more cases than any
living Physician; his
success la astonishing.
We hare heard of cases
E w so years- standing
If re by
- J him. Ha
IT aOTat' publishes a
I I f fmtikg valuable
II 1 " I I' i work on
It I I tkia dia.
it 1 R H I ".which
I f f ; IVV P aenda
a of bis ebsolnte cure, free to any sSfferare
who nay send their P. O. and Express addrcsn.
iL.'i!' J?nr1?ewi,hinf mT to addre
mt.W. B. JPAIXS, g. fx. 4 Cedar St, lew Vera
s L . ,&sjl
CURE CURE FOR PILES
U. awuu) m mO. OH. JWesAMte. raUaa.
Allowance for Daughters.
There can be no doubt that the cus
tom of making an allowance for daugh
ters Is an excellent one. when a girl
I reaches a certain age, eay 17 or 18, she
should be made an - allowance, paid
monthly or quarterly, out of which she
sBould be expected to provide herself
with gowns, bats, and all the staple re
quirements of her toilet As to luxur
ies, like furs, jewels, ball-gowns, and
such things, they may be left to the In
dividual generosity of her parents, who
need not stint themselves In that be
cause they give her an allowance. Too
much stress cannot be laid upon the
fact that every girl should have an al
lowance, and thus be trained to the ex-
peuuituru or. money, . many a young
girl when she marries and goes to her
husband, excites alternately his irrita
tion and alarm, owing to her utter Ig
norance or money. ir such a girl had
been trained from girlhood to the re
ceipt of a stated sum out of which she
had to meet her needs she would make
k better wife. gan Francisco Argo
naut A Headsman with a History.
On the little Island of Ustiea, forty
miles from Palermo, Italy, there died
recently a man who for years was the
terror of the people of Naples and the
kingdom of the two Sicilies. He was
Gaetano Impelllzzerl, once the heads
man under Ferdinand II. of Naples.
The useless execution attributed to
The Bight of Birds.
Birds are commonly credited with an
extraordinary ranrs of vision. Circum
stances lend aid to the development of
the mental factors In their case. The
usual distance at which terrestrial spe
cies use their eyes Is limited by the
ground horizon. But In the case of
the soaring birds, such as vultures and
eagles, the horizon, the natural limit
of sight is enormously extended. '
Macgillivray early noted that though
birds of prey have orbits of great size
the eyeball of the common buzzard
beinc an Inch and a third in diameter
they do n t as a rule, soar when seek
ing their prey. The eagle, when hunt
ing, files low, as do the sparrowhaws:
and the henharrier. Yet the vultures
and condors, birds which do soar when
seeking food, have been proved to find
carrion by sight A carcass was cov
ered with canvas and some ofral placed
upon It The vultures saw this, de
scended and ate it, and then sat on the
covered portion within a few Inches of
a putrid carcass. When a hole was
made in the covering they saw and at
tacked the food below. But tba rapid
congregation of, vultures from a dis
tance to a carcass Is probably due to
their watching their neighbors, each of
wiiich is surveying a limited area.
Charles Darwin pointed out that In
level country the height, of eky1 com
monly noticed by a mountain man Is
not more than fifteen degrees above the
horizon, and a vulture on the wing at
the height of between three thousand
and four thousand feet would probably
De two miles distant and invisible.
Those which descend rapidly and ap
pear to have come from beyond the
range of human sight, were perhaps
novenng vertically over the hunter
wben he killed his game.
Points Abont Matches.
A Commission appointed : by the
French government baa been investi
gating the manufacture of matches,
with the object of ascertaining If there
was not some substance whose substi
tution for phosphorus would render
that Industry one In which men and
women could engage without becoming
tne victims or norriwe and fatal forms
of poisoning. The commission has just
made Its report, and the conclusions
reached by It are of great Interest
There Is, the commissioners say, noth
ing tnat can replace phosphorus as
quick and convenient means to start
combustion. Other chemicals would.
indeed, be safer for the employes, but
none of them Is even approximately as
safe or useful from the standpoint of
tne public. It Is evident therefore, that
the use of phosphorus must continue;
but, though that Is the case, It by no
means roiiowa that the manufacture
of matches must be at the cost of hun
dreds of lives every year. By using
proper precautions, the commissioners
declare, in the ventilation of factories.
In the structure of machines and In the
personal habits of the work people,
practically an clanger can be removed,
In the best-regulated establishments
measures have already been taken that
pnt an end to the diseases thnt a care
less and unscientific use of phosphorus
produces in those that handle It A
startling feature of the report Is Its as
sertion that the match factories owned
and conducted by the French govern
ment Itself are precisely those in which
the conditions are the worst
How the Verchante' Kschanare Jokere
Worked It Upon a Visitor.
A Inrge, good-looking and evidently
good-natured mau walked Into the ex
change room lu the Hoard of Trade
building the other day aud was soon an
luleresled, not to sny anxious, specta
tor of what Is known on 'Change as "the
hat trick."
me largo man wore a glossy new
derby hat
A member of the exchange walked up
to him, neatly lifted the bat off his head,
and In a moment the newcomer saw
what ho supposed was bis hat flying
acrosa the room.
It had been propelled by a kick. Sev
eral others made a rush at It and It
was sent hither and thither like a foot-
bull. ... V ,
Ihe man looked on In amazement
Presently the hat came his way and he
seized It. He gave the now dilapidated
headgear a brush or two with his elbow,
looked It over dubiously, then put It on
ana started hurriedly for the exit
Before he could make his escape the
hat was again seized and again became
tne center of a rush.
Once more the man got the hat clnu-
ped It on his bead, and was rushlug
away when he was Intercepted by tho
man who had originally taken It from
the visitor's head. .
With great politeness the Joker band
ed over the visitor's own hat, as glossy
anu perrect as if it had Just come from
the hatter's block, and took the old hat
In return.
The visitor's surprise Increased. Ho
scrutinized the new hat It was cer
tainly his. Then he Joined In the gen
eral laugh. He bad simply been Init
iated Into the mysteries of the Board of
Trade hat trick, the first point in which
Is a bit of slelght-of-hand work by
which hats are changed and the stock
hat, kept for the purpose. Is kicked Into
the ring of Jokers. Buffalo Commercial.
JUDGE OF THE SUPnEIYJE COURT.
Congressman Powers Enthusiastic Over Palno'o Celery Com'
pound, tho Greatest Spring Remedy.
. Too Mich Heform.
Friend What is the matter, old boy?
Judge Well, the fact is my wife and
I never get along very well and of late
the relationship has become so un
bearable that we both want a divorce.
Friend I eee. Why don't you get
one?
Judge (sadly) I have tent all the
bogus divorce lawyers to the peniten
tiary. New York Weekly.
The women can always depend upon
this: that a man at bis meal will ask
for something that Is not on the table.
' Vanished from Human Ken.
w nat strikes us most markedly In
reading the book of the rocks Is not so
much the strange forms which are nor
trayed In Its pages, as the tact that so
many of them are extinct Indeed, ex
cept In the very newest of formation
It is extremely rare to come upon any
forms which con even approximately
oe considered identical with anr now
living on the face of the earth.
AH are vanished species. What
more, when we once get clear of any
formation it is tne rarest possible oc
currence ever again- to see any of the
species of fossils characteristic of It.
Each period of the world's history bad
Its own fauna and flora that Is, ita own
assemblage of animals and plants and
once they disappear they are gone for
ever. Yet within the historic nerinri
we know of the extermination of only
few animals, and of no species of
plants at alt Even then the extinct'
animals have, In every Instance, met
their fate at the hand of man.
The dodo, a curious bird of Mauritius.
and the solitaries of the Islands of Re
union and Rodriguez were exterminated
by ruthless seamen within the last two
centuries. The moa of New Zealand
lived long after the Maoris reached
these Islands. The great auk and the
Labrador duck have ceased to exist
from an Identical cause, within the
memory of man. The Philip Island
parrot is a still more recent loss, while
the only mammal which can be said for
certain to have been utterly destroyed
rrora on tne race or the earth la the
gigantic sea cow (rhytlna) of Behrlng
Strait, though, when It was first dis
covered, and took the taste of the sea
men who liked oily beef, Its numbers
were small, and seemed on the wane.
These, and a few other species of less
Interest, form the total extinctions of
which history preserves any record.
But In the rocks composing the earth's
crust there are the remains of thou
sands, which disappeared ages and
ages before mau came upon the earth.
Our Earth and Its Story.
.'rzzd '' .,.).' VV,i'.K'.wi'ii'w w w Tuiiiw v .cio. .
Judge Powers, who today represent!
Vermont in congress, entered the na
tional house with a magnificent record
as lawyer and judge of the supreme
court of Vermont
thoughtful charges to a jnryt
Hons, of Representatives, V. 8, I
Washlnston. D. O.. Pan. IB. lain r
I bae for several years han acquainted
with the medicinal qualities of Falne's
He is a fine type of the oarrf?!?'i''p?uJ-???
which Its use is racommtndad by Its cro-
viivwie. n. neaaz cuwaas,
IstlJist. Vt
learned. New England lawyer.
Though but 66 year of age, he was
a member of the Vermont legislature
third of a century ago, and again in
1874, when he was speaker of the
house. He has been state censor, a
member of the ooetitntional convention
and of the state senate. In 1874 be
became judge of the supreme court of
Vermont, and res mined on the benoh
until 1890, when be took his seat in
oongrese. Judge Powers presided at
many of the most notable trials in the
history of the state, and is the author
of many of the most important opinions
to be fonnd in Vermont reports.
xso lodge on the supreme benoh In
any of our states has reputation for
more clearly and nnimstakably expres
sing his opinions. HI unqualified in
dorsement of Paine' celery eomnonnd
in the following letter is a straightfor
ward and concise a any one of his
By far the best ne that any tired or
ailing person can make of these preci
ous spring day t to purify the blood
and regulate their nerve with Paine'
celery compound. It is plain to any
observant penori that the best remedy
for neuralgia, penlstent headache
and inoh like indication of low nerv-
on vigor, 1 tl one that mot rapidly
and complete!; noorishe the worn out
part. It i not in the power of any
other remedy to do tho vigoroo work of
Pains' celery oomponnd in strengthen
ing the jaded system, and In bringing It
baok to an energetio, healthy condi
tion. The real danger that atare sick peo
ple In the face i the potting off at
tending to ilckne and disea, and
letting slip these heslth-lnvitlng
spring day,when everything oftrong?
ly favor getting welL Tbi grMtetl
of all spring remedies U doing an J
tonisblnjr amount of good these day.
among tick people and tho teal-in-
valid who lire "run down" by the
long, trying winter, or worn ont andl
fllUited by disease.
Tb. iool nd lif. of sound health la
well-noturlshed net von system.!
Paine' oelery oomponnd repair the
worn, nervou system as nothing alas
oau do. It it the on certain nd per
mtnent ours for sleeplessness, bysteriaj
nervou debility and ezhauatioo, rheo
mntftm, neuralgia snd the varlon
nisnifestations of an unhealthy bodily
condition, inch a languor, nervous
ness, heart palpitation, loet of Beth
and mental depression.
With Paines' oelery oomponnd, re
turning strength and cheerfulness toon
how that on 1 undoubtedly on the
right road to health.
Paine' celery oomponnd i the one
real spring remedy known today thai
never fail to benefit Get Paine'
oelery oomponnd. and only Paines'
oelery oomponnd if oo wish to be well.
A Veteran Woman's Oeatb. -
With the "frontier" fast disappear
ing, even in the further West It seem
a far cry back to the day of the fron
tier in the further East but there are
yet In Maine white people who are
living links with those days. Mrs.
Sibyl Dow, who died In East Dover,
Me., a few days ago, at the age of 91
years, was such a link. She was the
fifth white child born In the region
which Is now Piscataquis Countv.
Maine. Two years before she was born
her father, Eli Towne, moved from
New Hampshire, crossed the Piscata
quis River, made a clearing In the
HOITT SCHOOL FOB BOTH.
BrBLiaaaiia, Cel.
"Tbi excellent Institution cloaea its fifth
ear aooreoitea at ootn or our universities,
.X-etate Burjerlntamdent Hnitt la il
known in educational matters. The men
tion or bis nam. as master of the school Is
a guarantee io all who Know hlru, that
none but first-elasa taanhara ara amnlnmul
and that th. school under his management
no smvng us or qi iu una. TSowoere
are boys better eared for." 6an Francisco
vaxi. -
Piso's Cure lor Consumption has been
family medicine with us alnce lm.J. tt,
mauiaon, ztw via Ave., Ulilcago, 111.
Dr. Peter, the African explorer,
abont to undertake new exploration
oi rjomaniano under th ansploe of a
numoer or wesitny Americana.
HOW'S- THIS
W offer On. Hundred Dollars Rm
case of Catarrh tbat cannot be cured bj Hall's
Jr. J. I.H HNKV Jk f?fl Vmm rx
We. the .T,rt,r.iJ C.;'.V.nr'
hnnor.hr. '.TT V..7rV ""c"
nritn.nl tnr ..,.1 K..iu .Z . i SiTrn. -u.1". ". ano
mere a 'Og j "-:-"'h " em euj obligation
cauin, in wnicn Mrs. Dow was born.
He was one of the first band of white
people who settled In the wilderness.
and Dover now stands on the site of
bis cabin. Mrs. Dow was the nmt
white child born In the present town
limits of Dover.
. Forests of fipaln.
Spain is waking np to the neeea.itv
of reafforestlng her mountains. The
little king recently went to a village a
few miles east of Madrid and nlanted
a pine sapling, after which 2,000 chil
dren selected from the Madrid schools
each planted a tree. Medal were dis
tributed among them, with the Inscrip
tion -jj irsi aroor aay instituted In the
reign of Alfonso XIII., 1896." Similar
festivals are to be held yearly In dif
ferent places and the children are to be
taken out to see now their trees grow.
In the hope that they will foster tree
planting In their districts. ;
Low Down.
"Enpec played a mean trick on hla
wife while she was away."
"What?"
'Taught the parrot to scream . Ton
talk too much T "Exchange.
Bhe Knew,
Bilklns How do you
Scotch, Miss Vassar? -
br tbelr Arm.
wsirr ATBtTAX.
, Wbolessle Urnztlsts, Toledo, a
Wiiniao, Kidman h JUavm,
tr.ii.. r. . Wholesale llrunitis, Toledo, 0.
iiEi'.i! Catarrh Cure Is takeu liiternelljr, eln
dlreotlr upon the blood and mnoous snraces ol
ine system, f nee 76o per bottle. Sold br all
Hall's family pills are the best.
FITi.-4Il . .topped free br r. Kline's
Snas Narva Kestorer. No titsaftec li e nr.t
TT; . " . ""res. Treatise and 12 00
TAXSt&Siss&f" 1"""'
TT Gzimsa ior breakfast.
make a hot
Mlsa Vassar call him an Irishman;
If that dosen't make him hot I don't
know anything that wilL Exchange.
. Advertising In London.
It Is estimated that 4,000,000 is sDent
In advertisements and that something
like 1,500,000,000 cople of newspaper
are told In London every year.
An Interpreter.
Mrs. Nupop Oh, you must come and
bear baby talk.
Uncle Bob I shall be delighted but
you must act as Interpreter. Truth.
The less a girl trie to b nice, th
nlcerah!. , - ,
By special permit, and in msilina?
package approved by the postoffio de
partment, baoteria or disease tissues
may now be sent through the mail to
United State or muniolpal laboratories.
t,M.Aftit
One
One
Cup
Cent
Less than a cent in fact and all flvm
pure Cocoa no chemicals. That describes
waiter Baker & Cb.'s Breakfast Cocoa.
WALTER BAKER ft CO., Limited,
Dorchester, Mam.
nnlch burden and shorten .,, aaVa '
7fdtoi?u,l i0',"' ItwU'K' hwlth and strength
lie Very remaramblai and I
relief given woman hy JrlOOKE'8
REVEALED KKMEDY ha given
uniformly toooeea
and weakne
life. Thousand o4
AMERICAN TYPE FOUNDERS CO:
Evervthlnar for th Print.- at
Second and Stark St.
PORTLAND, OR....
IRS. WINSLOWS 8o8oyTRH0VNa
rOft CHILDREN TttVHIMO .
'JSZStZ'nZZZf?!!. Cu settle,
fOrPE0.IfHTHI IICHor
Ooit't Peal Wall,"
xfeVnUVER PILLS
eve the One Tbine io ase.
. Onl One for Doss,
Sola br eruesieieat BBo. baa
Bwaplae rM. Adarms the
Of. Reunite Me. Ce., l ulls, re.
fT$ llils Mat ails yog?;
Hsrs na a awllee j
ef wsiskl la tbi
gSaEffiitaCajtejfl
I Si
is
This
the
very best
Smoking
Tobacco
made.
Blackwell's Genuine
BULL DURMAInl3:
""" see aowtotMruurshsreormni.ini. .
ttSMeca Blastlaa.4
iwrraiinr- lit Irs.
lWI.VM.I.i
I'Xl FmS .!. '
fcra.e Htsrtfcera I
iss tsms la tks '
Hratk la lb. u. I
lat-PsieitatiM,
Heart, in tettle.
Mauea el St.iaack
CsnbmS lt.,ii i
OssletkelUwiie.
-mm ef riMk :
rlnie Ammiu i
Dtfmw, Irritable
teasitiee ef tee i
Mies mule I
M.eiieekeCmtla. ,
silts er Dlerraaer i
TM f kas i
DYSPEPSIA
! iVH.' "r ". Tks eas aeeluvs s..
. ws ewtniMini essisislat is ,
flcRr'$ Dyspepsia taMm,
J II, ptfM, m mtipt f 05
'hai.m Kammrt, Hot.
'AMI "I lltTxra.rl
. AUKrt IRUIal),
t tiorrlbty
Imtwrtot
.Davstflurtd
Tfrrll,
but
, ACKKM MKDICINtfCO., il ChbtmiL, X.t
AGENTS W1NTED. Ufa fete
mu "i "ii mt0' "' bMt " srllnles
ms-le, Uteri by erery men, woman and ehliS.
Fredericks tanltarr xioth HrZ.u
Tuu
Knamaed
sua vieaalne; AUaehmeat.
aI '.! ." I'' T'.'.lat '"din phrslelaut and
lu I'm? ' "' Hatallslor Mi
mm m,M BIreet. Han f raaoUi, Cal,
''oh CjukCum &Juifl7w I .
" tlma "ilkTdn' . I w
... . ..
I'
ew. mvmmi