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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1896)
mas rruotio Hittwo toNa Mrs, .. leMmi Marshy sat Her sTavarlte Fad. A drawing -room entertainment U hardly considered complete nowadays unless It Include something by a guitar or banjo performer. Among these (aw r mora popular than Mrs. Jeannette Robinson Murphy of New York, herself , compos ir of not a few pleaalng Utile aongs. Her unusual success Is the nafc jural result of giving the subject of ne gro songs a great deal of attention, , 'Born and raised In the South, she early Jtublbed a great lore for the peculiarly plaintive airs with which the negro snen and women lighten tbelr work. (Like all other Southern children of well-to-do parents she had a "mammy," and It happened that this colored woman was renowned for her ability as a sing er. Mrs. Murphy recently said: i "As a child I used to follow this old colored woman about when she was jbusy Just to near her sing, caring more for the sound of her voice than for the sweetest Northern music. As I grew up I began to wonder as to the reason of the strange fascination of the negro songs for all classes of people. I found It was not merely In the mode or words, for the quaintest of darky melodies ren dered by one unfamiliar with the ne groes Instantly lost Its charm. I final ly grew so curious about the matter that few years ago, In Tallahassee, I set About to solve the problem for my own satisfaction. I found to my delight that ths weird effect of the plantation songs Is from ths observance among the darkles, probably unconsciously, of cer tain rules la regard to the accent and breathing. They never take breath, as we do, at the end of a line or phrase, connecting their sentences with that 'peculiar wavering tone so full of pathos and melancholy. Another singular thing Is ths heavy accent on the Utter bras, ninm nosrssos Mvararr. part of every monosyllable word, thus .giving twe musical tones for each word Cf one syllable, with ths same, long 'drawn, wailing sound between the itones. There are many other peculiar Ities in the exact rendering of the plan tation songs, but these are the most es sential and the most strongly marked that have come to my notice." 1 Mrs. Murphy does not confine herself to parlor recitals, but gives her ser vices gratuitously to prisons, hospitals land missions. lOnlv One Way to Get Vol There had been a lack of men Joining the ranks, and the colonel waa visit ing a recruiting station, inspecting the .workings of his recruiting sergeants. Suddenly a terrible noise of shouting and shuffling of feet came through the' open window. Now it came from the 'stairway, intermingled .with sundry joud bumps and knocks, and the door burst open, showing a red-faced, pers piring little sergeant pushing, haul ing and tugging at a big country lad." The latter was doing bis best to es cape the firm grip of the soldier. "Halt V cried the colonel. "How Is this?" be aald to the sergeant "Is this the wsy you secure recruits by force, sir J" The red-faced sergeant looked np and down, then at the colonel, and blurted out: ' Sure, air, the only way to get them voi nn tears Is by force, sir." . Trained. ' "Are you afraid, Lily, when you go driving with Mr. Phillips, that the horse will run awayr "No, indeed. Mr. Phillips has train ed his horse to drive without lines. " Exchange. ' ; ' . "v" . .. How mixed up divorced people must get In their kin affairs I When the planet Mara is nearest ths . earth it Is 88,000,000 miles away. AX APPEAL -OK ASSISTANCE. The nan who la etaaritable to himself will Caten to tha note appeal for aaslatea a nude T bl stomach, or hla llTer, la tha shape el diren drspeptlc qualms and nneasjr sensa tions to the rations of the glands that secretes his bile. Hostetter'a Stomach Bitten, my dear Ir, ar madam aa the caw may ba ta what Ton rsqalre. Hutea to dm. it yon ara troubled Vrlih heailbnrn, wind In the stomach, or nota that your skin or ths whites of jour eyes are taking a sallow bus. - Boms St Louis physician! insist that ths anti-toxins treatment will euro ths consumption as well aa the diphtheria. DBAMESS CANXOT BE CTJKBD By local applications, aa they cannot reach tha diaeaaed portion of tha ear. There la only one k,v tAflHMdMfnHi. and that ia br const! tatton. si remedies, lieafnesa Is caused by an inflamed Condition of the mncons lining of Eustachian Tube. When Ibis tuba (eta Inflamed you have a rumbling soand of i tmi mnerfect bearioa and whan It 1 entirely eloeed deafnaaj la the remit, and unlaas tha Inflammation ean ba taken out and tbii tube restored to Its normal eoi'dltlon, bearing will be destroyed forcer; nine eaaea out of tea are caused by catarrh, which la nothing bni aa inflamed condition of tha anncous surfaces, Wis 111 (Ira One Hundred Dollars for any ease of DeafDess (caused by catarrh) that ean col ba cured by Hall's Catarrh Cars. Sand tor circulars free. t. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 760. Hall's family Plus are tbs best. I believe Piso's Core is ths only medi cine that will cars consumption. Anna it. Boss, WUliameport, Fa., Nov. 12, '95. TITS All fl'a stopped free by Dr. Kline's Greas Xerra Restorer. No flu after tbe first day's ttsa. afarreloua cures. Treatise and ta 00 trial bottle free to fit eaaea. send to Dr. Kline, SI Arab St., Philadelphia, Ps. Tbt Gsaarsa for breakfast . S'atnratlr, bars a good appetite, keep your lood purs and your nerree attune by taking (Hloodl's Sarsaparilla The best-to fact' the One True Blood Partner. Hood's PHIS sure biliousness, headache. 16c (me a a LA. Aatf rail. AQBICULTUfi AL NEWS THINGS PERTAINING TO FARM AND HOME. THS realtrx aad Ksst Prodaettoa la Prof table laflaoaoa of tha Karepsaa Wksat Crsa-Workljs- Boreas afcoald Hot Ba Fad Qraee Fares Notes. Profit ta Cblckaae. . But few realise how profitable poul try and egg production can be made, provided aa much time- and attention is given to It as to many other less important vocations. Some one has decided that a hen can be kept for loss, than fifty cents a year, aays feiile Hawks In the Agriculturist It Is a poor specimen of a hen that will not lay ten dosen eggs a year. At the low price of 10 cents a dosen, this would leave a net profit of SO cents. At thts rate It will pay every farmer to keep a flock of hens and give them proper care. There Is no danger or overpro duction. As long as the United States annually Imports millions of dosen of eggs, the market will not be glutted. Fowls to be profitable must be given proper attention. Those running at large will almost take care of them seuves for a part of the year. They are our gleaners and economlsers, for they every day convert Into eggs what would otherwise go to waste. How ever, fowls In confinement need differ ent treatment Meat food must be supplied. The most satisfactory means of providing this is to secure a green bone mill and give them green-cut bone. Thla meat food, or at least some sort of a similar food, is almost an absolute necessity for yarded fowls. Tender green stuff Is also valuable. Last fall I sowed a patch of rye for early spring "greens." . Early - this season a patch of oats waa put into furnish green food after the rye bad become too far advanced. ' Early each morning and every evening a basket of green stuff was cut with a pair of shears and given to them. The results have been most satisfactory. We have had lots of fertile eggs, and nice, thrifty, healthy fowls. It pays to raise ehlckens a d to attend to their wants and needs. , Tka Inftaence of tha European Crop. So far as thla country alone la con cerned the wheat situation would not Justify the extremely low range of values which has been the rule of late. The winter wheat crop la certainly abort, and the spring crop Is not likely to be a large one on account of the re duced acreage. But in Europe the con ditions are quite different the outlook being very favorable for a good yield. We must remember,. too, that In wheat production Europe means a good deal more than it once did. Even France has Increased Its production of wheat of late years, while Bussla Is an enor mous exporter as compared with five or ten years ago. Evidently the abun dance of wheat abroad, as reflected in our light export trade. Is the chief Influence which Is keeping wheat prices In this country close to the low water mark. Ho Grass for Working; Horses. It is a great temptation to cut some grass to feed either green or partly dried to the horses that have to work bard every day on the farm. It should be resisted, for grass will surely Induce derangement In the digestive organs, which will make the horses too weak to do effective work. After the plowing is finished many farmers think the hardest work Is over, but a horse culti vating all day will need good dry bay and grain no less than when plowing. The step Is quicker In cultivating than in plowing, and requires quite as much muscular exertion to -keep at It all day. Lata Peaa for Home tJaa. There Is not generally a very good market for late peas, because after the first new peaa have satisfied the appetites of lovers of this vegetable the price rapidly declines and It will not pay to grow and market It But a fresh succession of peas until fall is very desirable, and It Is easily In the power of every farmer to secure it by later plantings. The farmer ought always to bare fresher vegeta bles and a longer season for them than the average city resident can expect It Is one of the advantages of country life that be should not only not fore go but make the most of. It is hard work providing three palatable meals through the summer for men at work on the farm. A plentiful supply of green peas win furnish food that Is not only palatable bat nutritious. Marina- Apples la Boxes. Square boxes with open tops and separated by cleats nailed across the corners so as to allow air to circulate over them are better than barrels to store apples In. We saw some recently In the fruit cellar of Dr. Fisher,' of Fltchburg. The apples are put In these boxes in the orchard, loaded into wag ons, and are then drawn to the cellar, where they are piled one above the other, nearly to the celling. The boxes are made to hold a full bushel each. and can be easily bandied without disturbing the fruit There Is great Injury to fruit even from the most care ful handling. When the bloom is off. it can never be exactly what It was before. The square boxes take less room than the same quantity of apples would In barrels, and are much better than if put In bins, where the natural heating of the apples plied one upon the other induces rot which once start ed quickly spreads. The boxes are made of solid boards, and are there fore heavier, as well as more costly than the boxes used In harvesting pota toes. Cultivator. Horseless Carriages Mot Tat TJsefuL Ws once knew a man who worked for many years trying to solve the problem of perpetual motion, and be finally completed a machine that would run down hill. Those who have been working on horseless carriages seem to have met with a little better suc cess, for their machines will run down bin and on the level, bqt on the op grade they are useless. A recent test in New York showed conclusively that these machines are not yet adapted to road work, as they cannot climb even moderate grades without the as sistance of horses. There has been great improvement In them, however, and they may In time be further Im proved so ss to be useful But It does not seem likely that they will soon be mi 19 f?4 dis- place horses, and ths bors 4 breed ers who now go ahead as If they had never heard of a horseless carriage will probably not regret It Exchange. Pla, Not Hogs, Waatsd. 1 Almost every body now agrees with the little girl who said that clean little pigs are nice, but it waa such a pity they would go and make hogs of them selves. Nobody nowadays wants the large hogs even for pork. As the hog Is fattened largely on corn hla diges tion Is Injured, and the body becomes feverish and unhealthful. Thla, of course, affects not only the palatable- ness, but the healthfulness of ths pork that the animal makes. Pig pork Is more generally fattened in a reason able way, feeding so aa to keep the pig growing and its digestion good. For this reason pig pork Is generally sweeter and more tender than pork from older hogs. But let a pig be stuut ed on corn feed, so that It fattens with out growing, and Its flesh though fat will lack the fine flavor that the flesh of a UUrftlly growing pig ought to have, Tkoa and Now. In an Interesting article Mr. Ingham concludes that farmers might succeed as well as they did forty years ago If they would be content to Uvs as plain ly as they did then. We do not Uke the Idea of farmers living as they lived forty years ago. Comparison should not be made that way,. but between farmers and other classes of people then and now. We presume that forty years ago farmers lived aa well as aid other people of the same resources, and they should now. The luxuries of those days are the necessities and com forts of to-day. Farmers aa a class do not and should not deny themselves these things, and when It Is necessary for them to do so to a greater extent than those engaged In other Industries something Is decidedly wrong. Strict economy Is now a necessity with a great many farmers, and other people, too, but It does not and should not ex tend to the plainness of forty years ago. Farmer and Stockman. What Kind of a Maa Art ToaT We were recently shown some re plies from local banks received by a large manufacturing house that waa inquiring Into the condition of farmers' credits. In all parts of the country Some of the comment carried with It a world of suggestion, aa will be aeen by these extracts: "Sensible farmer." "A good man, makes money." "These are all successful farmers." "Bubetantllal man, Interested In all that advances the community.' "These men all make money every year and could name 100 others who do the same," aays a re port from Warrenton, Oa. "This man never renewed a note." "He haa a fine looking place, but heavily mort gaged, la a good deal of a blow." "This farmer's word Is aa good as his bond." Which of such opinions would be ex pressed about you? Farm and Home. Poaltrr Remedies. A farmer's wife gives the following remedies for the worst troubles the poultry has to contend with cholera, roup, lice and diarrhoea: Plenty of room, healthy food, and at Brat sight of disease, for cholera, give one tea spoonful of carbolic add in a gallon of water; dlarboea, one teaspoonful of tincture of Jamaica ginger in a gal lon of water; for lice, one teaspoonful of sulphur In four quarts feed or mash; for roup, mix boraclc acid with water so that It can be poured down the throat give teaspoonful, and they will be cured. Tbe Beat Boll for Rhubarb. It requires high manuring to make rhubarb growing profitable, especially aa most of the money to be made Is from the very early cutting, and these must be grown on warm, sandy land, which Is not generally very rich. Tbe plant Is a great consumer of nitrogen, and this Is not supplied early In tbe season by coarse manure. Either the' manure applied must be well rotted, so that it will have available nitrates, or these must be applied in tbe form of commercial fertilizers. Tbe rhubarb is eaaily grown with coarse stable man ure, but Its price Is always very low. Well-Balanced Ration. About one-fourth sheaf oats run through the cutter with the fodder makes an excellently-balanced ration, and will make the latter keep better In bulk when cut a little green, and solve the problem of early gathering, says Western Plowman. In the spring this feed can be wetted and mixed with bran, and makes a feed equal to en silage. Odds end Ends. White spots upon tarnished furniture will disappear If a hot plats be held over them. Half a pound of broiled beefsteak twice a day Is the best tonic for nervous or rundown women. A hot bath taken on going to bed. even on a hot nignt or summer, is a better cure for Insomnia than many drugs. , A little powdered borax added to cold starch tends to give the linen extra stiffness, and a little turpentine put into tbe boiled starch adds luster. If an upper pie-crust Is brushed over with a little milk or egg before placing in tbe oven It will brown quickly and have a better color. A handful of carpet tacks will clean fruit Jars or bottles readily. Half fill the Jars with hot soap suds, put In the tacks, cover, give vigorous shaking and rinse well. ; ' Tbs correct way to drain a wet um brella Is to stand it nanaie down. If pnt tbe other way the dampness re mains In the center, where all tbe water collects and very soon rot tbe cov ering. A raw egg swallowed Immediately win generally carry a fish bone down wbich cannot os removed rrom tbe throat by tbe utmost exertion and haa gotten out of reach of the saving fin ger. Some people suffer very much from their eyes when peeling onions. It Is said that if a steel knitting-needle Is held between the teeth during tbe ope ration this discomfort will cease or be very mncb reduced. A heavy flatlron, weighing seven or eight pounds, will do better work If It Is passed over ths clothes ones with a firm, steady pressure than a lighter Iron hurriedly passed over tbs clotbea two er three times. Ad EcMtbeTrnckee Smash-Up Many Will Recall This Sad Affair Which Happened In 1892, Mr. U. W atklas, of This City, Whs Was Injared la tha Wrack Tells sf HIS Terrible Sufferings aad flaal Cure. From the Xxamlnet, Saa rranolsoo, Cat Mr. H. Watklns lives at 8008 Geary street, Ban Franoisoo. He is a railway postal olerk, and has been in that bnslnesa for years. When seen at his horns he gladly told his experience with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pals People. He narrates the faots leading up to his trying them, the benefits bs has enjoyed by their nse and tbe re suits of recommending them toothers. Ho saidt "I have suffered from rheumatism for years. At times I have been so bad that I could not raise mr arms over mv head. No one had worse rheumatism than I had. I got it first in ths Truokee smash-up. I was laid on ths mow in ths wreck and then taken to ths railroad hospital. Ever slnos then I have suffered at times terribly, that ia to say, up till a year ago. Onoe at Redlands, in Ban Bern ardino county, I thought I should die, and at Promontory I was so crippled that I had to be carried to the mail oar. Ko ess who b.M not had it can understand the agony. I was not able to get out of bed at times. I had to orawlon hands and knees from the bedroom to the kitchen. " Occasionally when I tried to rise in ths morning the pains would seise me snd I had to bs caught to prevent my falling. I tried every kind of medl olne. Ths only thing that helped me at all up to a year ago waa some tear ful stuff sn old Mormon gave me when I wss taken down in Utah. It was horrible stuff to take and only eased me for a short time. "About a year ago I went into the No Percentage Pbannaoy,' on Market street While I was there an old man named Cowen, of Vallejo Junotion, came in. He told me he was going to get Pink Pills for his rheumatism. I told him if they oould do him good they might help me too. Be had been up to Byron Springs and was nearly doubled up with rheumatism. Tbe doctors told him Just aa they had told me, that medioine would do him no good. Well, I didn't give up. I am a young man and you would not expect me to give myself up ss a hopeless rheumatio at my age. I waa ready to try anything. , I bought two or three boxes of the pills snd began to take them. Tbe way In wblcn they took bold of me waa simply wonderful. I did not take many of the pilla either, and of oonrse, I am careful not to ex pose myselt I have never been lame since and have never lost a night's sleep from rheumatism. I recommend ed ths pills to my friends and I have yet to hear from the first one who has not been benefited. As for myself, I would gladly make affidavit to the good they have done me, in f aot I am only too happy to do so, for I cannot say too mooh for the benefit I have re ceived. "Going through Vallejo Junotion on my train one day I saw the old gentleman, Mr. Cowen, and I called out to him 'how are the Pink Pilla' He replied they are fine.' "I waa down in Los Angeles and called upon a postal olerk, a friend oi mine. He told me that his wife was a great sufferer from rheumatism. I told her to try the Pink Fills, and now there ia no one in Los Angeles wbc thinks more of the pills than Mrs. Can, that ia her name. I don't think she had rheumatism quite so badly ai I, but the was Just as anxious to get rid of it, and she is just as grateful to bt well again. "I always keep a box of the pilb handy just in case I should need them, though my wife will tell you bow rarely I use them now." Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla contain, is a condensed form, all the element! neeeesary to give new life and riohnesi to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific tor such dlsesses as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St Vitus' danoe, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nerv ous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitaiton of the heart pale and sallow complexions, all forms oi weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid ou receipt of prioe, 60 cents a box or six boxes for 13.50 (they are never sold in bulk or by ths 100), by addressing Dr. Wil liams' Medioine Company, Sheneotady, N. Y. Bs Was Wot at Gettrsbarg. "People sometimes ask me," said an Old soldier, "if I was at Gettysburg, and when I tell them tbe fact that I waa not, do you know that I sort of im agine that some of them think that then Ioouldn't have been very much of a sol dier? I suppose it's natural enough too. It is perfeotly natural that people should bs most impressed by the greatest bat tles of the war, and natural enough to get an idea that tbe greater the buttle the greater the danger and the greater the call for bravery, bat as a matter of fact a man can be killed just as dead in little fight as in a big one. "New York Sun. It is now olalmed that foods stored in an atmosphere of carbolic aold gas are preserved indefinitely, ths fresh ness snd flavor being retained better than by the nse of dangerous antisen- vtioes or of loa. Oxalate of lime is found in the bark of trees. Tbs strange discovery has recently been made by Dr. Kraus, in Germany, showing that there is a steady loss of these crystals during the winter season. The man who sits down to wait for a golden orportunlty to knock at bis door will need a tbiok cushion on his chair. Tbs trouble with tbe man who is al ways talking about what he'd do if he bad plenty of money, is that he never has any. . : : - - - - Over 800,000 specimens of fossil in sects bav been oolleoted from various parts of ths world. Of these, butter flies are among ths very rarest, as less than twenty specimens all told, have been found. FACING A GRIZZLY. A Boy Kills aa Aagry Bear wltk Blow of aa Ax. It was in Septemberand ths Colo rado sun had done Its duty and made Phil as brown of face and stout of limb as any of us-that tbs geology class consisting of tbs professor and ten pu pils, mads an excursion Into the range with tbs object of taking a practical lesson among tbe limestone beds at ths back of Lincoln Teak. Away we went feeling very hllari ous at the Idea of making an Independ ent expedition, even with Blinkers for a general-scrambling over rocks and fallen trees, cbaslng squirrels and chip munks, throwing stones at birds and rabbits, and behaving generally just like what we were- parcel of school boys. Presently ws emerged from the trees and came out upon another little open, park-like stretch of ground. Half-way across It our attention was suddenly at tracted by a stir among some high grass, and out Jumped a little, dark-colored, short-legged animal, which looked like a woolly pig If there be any such thing In future. Away It scuttled, and away ws all went with a shout In pursuit Phil happened to be some distance behind at the moment, being busily en- gaged In dlKglng a tarantula's nest out of the ground with bis knife; but as soon as he saw whst we were doing, he came racing after us, shouting, "Look out! Lookout! It's a " We did not hear what we were mak ing so much nolHe ourselves. But the little animal, whatever It was, waa too quick for us snd ulitappeared Into some willows, while we were still twenty yards behind. Ths next moment tbe willows waved and bent and out bounced a grca.t she-bear a grlaslyl With a yell of dismay we all turned and, scattering like a flock of sparrows when a cat Jntnpa Into tbe midst of them, fled for the nearest treea. Blink era, quite forgetting that he was ths general of the little expeditionary force, made auch use of hla long legs that he was safely up a tree before any of the rest of us had reached . As for me, I never reached one at alt In turning to run I tripped over ths ax, and though I waa up again In an In stant the check made me the laat of tbe fugitives. Tbs chase waa soon over. In six Jumps, it seemed to me, the great beast caught me, and, with one blow of her paw on the middle of my back, sent me, face downward, to the ground, with every atom of breath driven out of my body. , Thla last circumstance waa a good thing for me; 1 could not have moved a muscle If I had wished to. Consequent ly the bear supposed that t waa dead, and Instead of tearing me up Into small pieces, as I expected, she began sniffing me all over and turning me about with her claws. Suddenly, however, she ceased snd began to growl, and I beard Blinkers up In bis tree cell out "Go back! You can't do any good. You'll only get yourself killed, too." From which I concluded that Blinkers and the bear had one thought In common; they both supposed me to be dead. I waa beginning to recover my breath a little by thla time, and In my anxiety to see what was going forward I made a slight movement with one arm, and In an Instant tbe bear had that arm be tween her teeth. It hurt me so horri bly that I fainted, and all tbat happen ed afterwards I gathered from tbe other boys. Pbil, when he saw me knocked down. Instead of climbing up a tree like tbe rest ran back to where I had dropped the ax. and. picking It up, advanced to my rescuo. It waa a mad thing to do, there Is no doubt about tbat; but Phil did It and without a thought of bla own danger. It was in vain tbat Blinkers called to blm to go back; be did not seem to bear, but kept coming on slowly, with hla eyes fixed on the bear, and the ax held In readiness to strike. The bear dropped my arm and ad vanced a step, standing across my body, growling and turning up her Hps until aU her great white teetbwere exposed; but stIU Pull came on. At alx feet dis tance be stopped. Tbe bear took a step forward, and then another, and then, with all tbe strength of bis body dou bled by tbe Intense excitement of the moment Phil struck at ber with aucb force and precision tbat he aplit her situll clean In two. But even In dying, the bear succeed ed in doing some mischief. With a last convulsive effort she struck out, and, with bcr great claws, tore away the front of Phil's coat, vest and shirt, and made three deep cuts aU across bis chest from the left shoul der diagonally downward. Another inch and Pbll must certainly have been killed. As It was, be stood for a mo ment swaying to and fro, and then fell forward upon tbe dead body of the bear. St Nicholas, Imitation Reed Packages. There seems to be no end of trouble to the Agricultural Department from tbe distribution of seed this year. Ths department has learned that requests have been made on commercial seeds men for seed put up In papers similar to those used by the Government snd printed In simulation thereof. Acting Secretary Dabney has sent out notices to a large number of seedsmen In re gard to tbe matter, stating tbat tbe department cannot permit tbe Govern ment seed contractors or any seeds men to sell seeds In packets bearing the name or tbs Department of Agricul ture, or any words which might cause tbe receiver of tbe packet to believe uat It was a part of the Government seed distribution. No seed can be dis tributed free of postage through the malls except that delivered upon the orders of members of Congress by the Department of Agriculture, or sent out directly from the department Tbe act of March 8, 1870, confines the franking of seeds by members of Congress to those seeds which they receive for dis tribution from tbe Department of Agri culture. Flower Perfumes. It Is claimed tbat the perfume of flowers disappears as soon as the starch In the petal la exhausted, and It may, It Is said, be restored by placing the flower In a solution of sugar, when the forma tion of starch and the emission of fra grance will bs at once resumed. Every thoroughbred Is able to make bis own salad dressing. "hOITT'I BCHOOI. 'Oft BOIS. (Tssm Coiiiibbcbs AooctT 4tn.) "An exoellent Institution, bseuttfnlly situated at Btirllngams, Ban Mates Oottri. ty, Cel. Having bad occasion to Jnysstl gate ths BiAuaicsment and Methods of lioltt's Sohool, ws sre sstlsHad careful supervision of boys and thormiRh moral, mental and physical training it has no superior. It has fairly earned its in orsaslng popularity.''- r. tytning iVt A temperature of 4,000 to 6,000 de gress can be produced only between tbs carbon points ot an eleotrio arollgbt Ths next hottest plaos in the world is in ths crucible of an eleotrio furnaoe. The highest tobaccos good ss Every knows there aa nsnnn n each two ounce pons inside was. an msoi uiarawcus uurnam. Buy s bag of this cele brated tobacco and read tbs eounon which aives a list of valuable to get 3 3 R one increases every year. Try it and you S will see why. Walter Baker Si "Knocks Out rrMi n I r.f-il II I V-.aVVJ foss il 1 vy I IV vJ u I ' ' 3- The Large Piece and High Grade of "Battle Ax" has mjurc3 the sale of other brands of higher prices and smaller pieces. Don't allow the dealer to impose on you by saying they are "just as good" as "Battle Ax' for he is anxious to work off his unsalable stock. Uthenamsof Woman's Friend. It I. rullulngthebackaches.hewh.i which bnrden and shorten a woman's woman taaf fw ! Is T. -i . . -- sui kits saaiui ana mate life . . . . . j leature. For sals br ULUMAUB-FJ K DBTJQ CO., Pobtlamb, Agents, AGEKTS WANTED, UiaCcta In every ' fownw oneof the best selling articles umi uj mwmrj nan, woman ant eniln, rradarlehe Ksnltsrjr Teoth Brash with Tonga. Cleaning; Attachment. Endorsed br all lha leaiUm dentists. Send I Be. lor samr nr an ine leaning phrsiclaue Send lSe, lor sample. HeUflslor 2Ao aiM linn. urrr t j. ,mv suvsw Market Street, San rranoiaoo, Cal ... "a..... r 1 I. A UU.a fOTmn.lTHTflI SICK er iyuf.f jl't real Wsll," LIVER Miu ere the On Tains to asa. ,P"J One or a Doss. Seia br Droaaiste at SSo. a an SK." free. i Of, Seasake Med, Ca. Phlla. fa. sjsbsswi iiiiiv-vil aj OTnVJ- - rOH CHILORIN TVITHINO - X.tf'wfiUt awajs VVI" B PJI1 L I m iirr.e, pioir, TF SJfa s-wrj-. , kbjp 4 :.yc K. P. V. V, No. .-!. F. JT. U. Ko. 7$f a r.S Mraaly tim 'asa a spally a . fplleps: donbt ti ad mora oas,, ha , living Physician, 2 sncueea la aatosl,V2? We have heard of oa.Ii of sa rears' standi- er cared b! lalfara. . ho tnur Mni th(r K U mnt AirJZ Wel sailVlIM ft raf.w. a. ntn.v.. 'iviw a 'M 'ir" " ssvuia, ip sianr autvi rsu law vara claim for other is "Just as Durham." old smoker Is none just good as I poo bag, and two cou earn four ounca presents snd bow them. 1 WW mem rv hundred and fifteen K -4 abas silk &4sW if'-a Ja xmmm. UUJrtlkvU I - i . A years Walter Baker & Co. have made Cocoa and Choc olate, and the demand for it & Co Ltd Dorchester, Mais. o o Others." 9 n or Ths very remarkable snd certain relief given woman by IfOORK'S -r J' ZtoJ TTOT? IndVkZTT, W iurE2Z2B . Ill a. InOUSanOSOt all dnimrlatn. ana airanetn Tstbis tytoit ails your aes res a sf ssisM Is Iks Steaeck SlMUsf anac rtea ana lB ! VeaiHV lsf t4 Wales, brash Maarrkara , nae Tarts la the Msaib Is lbs Hens, latrslsi UMSMrMssteOls- UaalM sf Steauteh CasbarsS Heath Oas la ths Sewels Use af '1Mb riskls AsaetlM Psynnsia, Irritable CeeaiUea af the Ceaatle. Tbse rs bars DYSPEPSIA Mcr'i Dvnwila tablets, ' I br Bitl, meals. s ranM af sa easts i CJwf,V t.v. Hotel Imperial, Wew TmH, i I bar'' ."J S'iBWl Borriblr frrtia drijpt, boil . AcaarltTable.issaBalMiSMaaa.bsireoursdBM.'' , aCIIB HBDICISICO., at a is Chassbsrs St, S.T.S