.THE KEYSTONE TO HEALTH IS HOSTETTER'Si STOMACH BITTERS When the digestive sys tem needs toning and strengthening take the Bitters promptly. It does the work. Try a bottle today. c Almett Incredible Age. Nlaea Turaurt'.off. a peasant worn am at Telev, In the Caucasus,. Is prob ably the oldest person In the world. Recently she celebrated her one hun Ired and sixty-fifth birthday. Though aba Is now quite Incapable of using her limbs, she is still in posssessloa of her mental faculties. WHAT I WENT THROUGH Before taking Lydla LPickhara's Vegetable Compound. Katick, Mass. "I c3tmot express what 1 went through during the change of lite rwrore I tnea Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Com pound. I was in such S la nervous condition . ii could not keep . a T 1 I limbs one day cf tn wonderful cures mado by Lydia E. llnkham'a Vegetable Compound and derided to try it, and t has made me a well woman. My neighbors and friends declare it had worked a miracle for me. Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound is worth its weight in "old for women during this period of life. If it will help others ou may publish my letter." Mrs. Xathax B. G reatox, Z1 X. Mai a street, atkk, Mass. The Change of Life Is the most erltt. cal period of a woman's existence. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women throntrh this trvinsr period as Lydia E. I'inkham's ego table Compound. If yon would like nrwclal advf.ee) About Tour eaf vritr confiden tial letter to Mrs Pinkham. at Lynn, Mas. Her advice L free, and always helpful. KODAKS AND KODAK SUPPLIES Writ for rauV-raa and Htrratnra. Dlotln( and prtntwv. Mail ordara im prompt attentioa Fortland a-Uoto Supply Co. MS Third 8trM FCKTLAN'D. ORB. WOOL & KOHAIR. HIDES PELTS W Vial Tot In Mej far era mi mmm . THE H. V. NORTON COMPANY. 11S-S1S FmS. P.rtl-H) Or. ar the ufnt and moat reliable cathartic aad rvtpm c'lraoetr. Th brat remedy for Torpio Iiver, Biuocaneaeand Sick Headache. At Dratxlita' ar by Mall. 2S Ceerts Kerr Cbxiucai. Co. ItiarusD, oeoo "One Man." "I have a servant girl who Is capable and good natured and whom I wouldn't willingly part witb, but she troubles me one way," said Mrs. Clockley to a visitor. "She is a Finn and knows but a few words of English, so the ar rlTal of anyone from a guest to a gro cer boy is heralded by her footsteps and the solemn wards: "One men.' "It Is laughable and veilng. I bar. to go all the way downstairs to ascer tain who It Is. 1 am thinking of hav ing a series of mirrors put up to re flect the visitor's Image upstairs. Or perhaps I can Invent a conning tower auch as submarines are equipped with, "At any rate I shall never be able to stand It until she learns enough English to tell who wants me." newer Keeps its Fresnnees. A common bouth African Dower possesses the valuable property of keeping fresh for two months or more after cutting. It Is a white star of Bethlehem, producing a compact pike of flowers on a stiff, erect stalk II laches or two feet long. The flow. rs are of a thin and papery tissue, all White except the yellow anthers. It can be sent ever as a cut flower from tenth Africa to England, aa4 Usa lull for weeks la water. Kjva y;-. Bill i. ' ' I cold. I bad ' r- " 'creePT sensations, i'i'v:a:id 1 could not sleep U- i "tiAAVwnilht9- I was finally wftlM V'iWan that I also LLD I ? lil I '1 ad a tumor. I read FOOT A LTHOUGH Joaquin Miller, A "the poet of the Sierras." so far recovered from a recent Ulnea which threatened to prove fatal that he was able to return with bis wife and daughter o his home on the heights overlook ing Oakland and San Francisco bay, ret hi friends entertain little hope Jiat he will ever be fully restored to Stealth. He la now in his seventieth rear. Previous to bis last illness he bad been separated from his wife for hirtjr years, but the danger of his leath happily reunited them, and now :he aged poet Is spending the re mainder of bis days amid his well be- oved hills, on the spot where be baa :reated a characteristic home, called The Heights. His massive frame has weakened, his once keen eyes are lira, his flowing hair and beard sre white, and the physicians who have Himbed the wooded hills to minister 0 him declare there is little If any lope that it Is merely a matter of 1 few weeks when Joaquin Miller will lave been gathered to bis fathers, rlls ashes, according to his wish, will e scattered to the winds from the ' yre In the hills back of The Heights, vhfch marks tne last resting place of ! lis daughter, Maud, who died several ''ears ago. The reunion with his wife '. nay prolong bis days, and the care ; hat his other daughter, Juanita, be llows upon him may build up his with tred strength a little, but there Is lardly more than a shell for them to lurse. Perhaps no more picturesque figure s extant in the literary history of 7allfornla and the west than Joaquin Miller. He is a distinct type, seem .ugly inseparable from the environ cent' In which he has lived these :wenty years or more. He has gatb ired Inspiration from the rolling rreen bills, from the ruddy sunsets, Tom the blue Pacific waters, from the 'og banks that roll In witb the nlght 'all, from the vista of land and sea as teen from bis eyrie on The Heights, rom the Golden Gate and the shadowy ihlps that sail through It Into the rim f the horizon and are lost In the rapor's palL I He has been, perhaps, too familiar o the residents of Oakland and leighboring suburbs to create the In erest that be would if he should sud lenly appear In some eastern city I :lad In his high top boots, buckskin Nothing and wide brimmed sombrero, vlth his curly hair flowing from be leath its brim. ! Even to this day, or perhaps It mould be said up to the time of bis llness, Joaquin Miller retained his trace and commanding aspect He las lived much out of doors and has jeen browned by suns. With his own lands be has planted the hundreds of Tees that surround the little collec tion of houses, the chapel and the funeral pyre, which constitute The Heights. A few years ago the poet's mother lied at the age of ninety. There was i strikingly beautiful attachment be :ween the two, and since her death Jie decline has set In which Is the jails of bis present Illness. "More than twenty years ago," Mil er wrote In an article published some Jme ago, "I sat down here on a moun- l-aln side with mother and began to jlant trees. Men and women came to js-ork and to rest with us, men and women from colleges and unlversl- Jes. No one was asked to come no tin an tf.r aakait tn an "More than twenty years ago, while feeling my way along here and try ng to use what little common sense ( then had, I wrote a small book, The Building of the City Beautiful' "You want to see Ban Francisco? . SV'ell, you must come to Oakland; and lo you want to see Oakland and San Francisco and the bay of all bays on Lhe globe, and the Golden Gate, at a 'lance and all together? Then you 'nust go two miles to the northeast and then half a mile perpendicular. !n abort, you must come to The Heights, to the camp where Fremont nted half a century ago, and to the ipot from which be viewed and named :be now famous Golden Gate, long be fore gold was found." The real name of the poet Is Cln :lnnatus Heine Miller. The pseudonym 'Joaquin" was derived from his de fense of the Mexican bandit, Joaquin Murletta, many years ago. Miller was born In the Wabash dis trict of Indiana on November 10, 1841, ind In 1354 was taken to Oregon by I V-J bis father. He had little schooling and early ran away from home, going to the California gold fields. He ac companied Walker on the Nicaragua expedition, lived among the Indians and Spaniards on the coast of Califor nia and became familiar with their customs. He studied law, being grad uated from Columbia college, in Ore gon, In 1S58. He practiced unsuccess fully In Idaho and turned express messenger. In 1S63 he settled In Ore gon and became editor of "The Eu gene City Democratic Register," which was suppressed in the same year. In 1S61 Miller returned to the law and practiced In Canyon City, Ore. Here he became popular, owing to his serv ices against the warlike Snake In dians, and from 1S66 to 1870 served as a Judge In Grant county. His first Important attempts at writing were made here, and he tried to sell a collection of his poems un der the title of "Songs of the Sierras" In the east. They did not find a ready market, and he Anally went to Eng land, where they were published and created a sensation. It was in Lon don that Miller was recognized, petted, lionized and even overestimated per haps. The poet returned from England and went to Washington, and finally. In 1877, to California and settled at The Heights, where his retreat soon became the Mecca for literary people. At times persons with literary or ar tistic tendencies, forswearing the world for a time, have gone to Mil ter's home as a haven of refuge. Here are buried the bodies of Maud Miller, the poet's daughter, and of his mother. It has been said that the poet de sired to have his own body burned upon the pile of rough stones that cover his child's grave, but the truth of his request Is that he be cremated and the ashes placed upon the pile, that the wind may scatter tbem far and wide over the land he loved so well. His life has not been spent In the ways of ease and luxury, such as one usually associates with the existence of poets. He has "roughed It" and has lived hard. He has fought and has been beaten; he has fought and be has won. Today be alts before his home on the veranda, with Its trelllsed vines, and receives the care of wife and daughter. He sits by the hour gazing out from the secluded Heights upon the cities, the bay, the ships and tbe bills beyond that through twenty-five years or more be has watched and studied and loved. Every little atten tion that a woman knows so well how to bestow Is showered upon the white haired man, tbe patriarch of tbe Oak land hills, known the world over for bis flowery verse, his eccentricity, his love of the beautiful and of California A PHI In the Jelly. In "The Banker In Literature," a re cently published work by Mr. Johnson Brlgham, state librarian of Iowa, there Is a suggestion for the banker of the period, whose dally mall frequently contains requests to enhance his popu larity by subscribing to worthy causes. To all letters soliciting a subscrip tion, Samuel Rogers, the English banker-poet, approvingly quoted Lord Er sklne as replying In this form of words: "Sir, I feel much honored by your application to me, and I beg to sub scribe" here tbe reader reached the bottom of tbe page, and to learn the amount of the donation, bad to turn over the leaf. There he found after tbe word subscribe, the formal con clusion "myself your obedient serr ant." Touth's Companion. pi anm Nr. Fi.nWER GARDEN REQUIRES Carpel Beddlnj, Plans Ar. Only Effective When i C.rtola Kinds of Folia Ar Used-Hlbtxm Ar Easiest of my rni'N e. nrxronivy Personally I am nul much of an admirer of carpet or ribbon nodding or the "designs" which tbe enthusl astlc amateur gnrdfuer freiueutly at tempts, but Is pie.ty sure to abandon later in the season, because he discov er th.it designs work out uiisatis factorlly lu aumutls. The fact Is, carpet b.-dillng plnnls are only effective when certain ktu.U of follnge plants sre used became 'hey can be k.'pt within t!:elr proper limits by shearing and pruning, while tbe annuals have too much "sprawl" to be tractable and very few kinds give a sufficient mass of bloom to produce the desired effect. We are likely to think that because a plant has yellow, red or blue flow ers, that it will prove effective wher ever these colors are desired, but we lose sight of the fact that the flow ers will be so few In number and so far apart that there Is seldom any solid color effect such as Is necessary in properly working out patterns. This being the case, only the sim pler designs should b attempted with annuals, and only such effects aimed at. as can be produced by contrast in which harmony plays an important part. Ribbon beds are easiest of all tn make. Very pleasing onea ran be made with pink, pale yellow, and white pblox, planted In rows. If darker colors are preferred, the scar let and crimson can be used, always combining them with white to give the necessary contrast and relief. Do not use the soft, delicate colors Jspsn Snowball a-lth the stronger tones, as there Is a lack of harmony between them. Asters ran be planted In rows of white and lavender, with very pleas tug results, provided the same kind is used In each row. Ribbon beds would become monot onously tiresome If me were to con fine ourselvt-s to them, therefore It Is advisable to have something else for a change. Next to them the circular bed Is easiest to make. I would not advise too many colors. Have the center of one color, say lavender. If asters are used, then a row of pale pink, wlih white la the outside row. This arrangement of colors ran be varied to suit Individual taste. If sweet-alyssum or white candytuft Is used as an edging, the effect is heightened, as these plants bring a mass of foliage and bloom down to the ground, and hide tbe tall stalks of the asters. PRUNING HOOK The pain of scratches and picks comes readily to one's Imagination as he thinks of pruning the raspberry bushes or other bush fruits, especially where he has not had good tools for ner forming the Job, says the Michigan Farmer. The work is so miserable that It is generally left undone. The illustrated pruning hook will help to overcome many of the undesirable fea ture connected with cleaning out of the bills on these fruits. The hook Is tsed for cutting those canes that can be hooked, and for this purpose the Inner edge of the hook Is made sharp, while the spud Is for ampu tating such canes as happen to stand close to another that Is to be left or la otherwise situated that the hook can not be used. The spud cuts the cane nearer the ground than can be done with the hook. Both are. however, very necessary for a complete Imple ment, Besides Its use In cutting, the book Is convenient tn pulling the pruned canes from among the stand ing ones Into the row where they can be gathered and taken from the plan- r CAREFUL STUDY All to Make. A very brilliant combination t mu!e iiy filling the center of a clrcu lur bed with calllopsl. rich yellow and inuroc.n, and surrounding It with wl.Uu and palo yellow phlox. The contrast be;een the dark, rich yellow of the rallloisls and the softer shade of the same color In the phl" la charming. . . , . If another col. seems advisable use Pink Phlox. This harmonizes beautifully llh the stronger tones of the calllopsls. The center of a circular bed can be filled with scarlet saliva, with nae turllums as a border. The contract between the fiery scarlet aud the rich tones of yellow slid orange and sul phur found In the latter plwit. is ex ceedlngly lovely, while the peagreen foliage of the nasturtium affords Just the right amount of that color to bring into strong relief tbe blossoms of both plants. Such a bed any one can make with ery little trouble. A charming hedge Is made by plant ing scarlet sulvla In a row as a back ground, then a row of white nlcotlana, Ith blue ageratum a a border. Hare we have the patriotic colors of our flag effactively combined. The blue of the ageratum and the scarlet of the salvia would prove B rather violent contrast If planted next each other, but separated by the white of the nlcotlana. their aggressiveness Is toned down In such a manner as to produce a pleasing effect. A beautiful hedge Is made by using zinnias in the back row. then calllop sls witb white phlox as a border. Ribbon beds can be worked out with good effect by using different colors of the verbena In rtiws. Such beds are most pleasing when near the house or rlose to the path, where they can be looked down upon. Hut In order to carry out such de signs wlih this flower, It will be neces sary to purchase plant of each color from the florist, who grows them from cuttings. Seedlings are quite sure to bring plant of all colors com mon to the family, therefore, are not to be depended upon where It Is absi lulely necessary to have each color In Its prvtpiT place. Those who hsve old plants of gera nium, which have been kept over the winter In the house, ran utilize them In the summer by planting them out. Of course the effect will be most pleasing If the pinks and scarlets ami crimsons can be kept by themselves. Try combining them with such an nuals a white pblox, yellow ralllop sis, white nlcotlana. or, in the rase of pink sorts, lavender ageratum. If you tmve odd plants of Madam Sallerol geranium, break them apart and use the cuttings so secured, for border purposes. Each rutting will be alnioot sure to take root. Put tt em In the ground where they sre lo grow, about eight Inches apart, pinching the soli firmly about the base of each. In six wwks' time, they will have made a fair showing, and by midsummer they will have grown to gether In a most attractive row of green ind white. This la one of our best edging plants. Fruit Trees. It is not advisable to put axle grease on fruit trees in order lo pre vent rabbits and rodents from gnaw ing them. A little grease might not do any damage, lill too much might Injure the trees. Where the climate permits some green crop, such as oats, rye or wheat, will ti-mpt the rabbits. The tree can also be pro tected by wrapping them with old newspapers, thin boards or wire screens. Clean Seed. The man who gts the best vleld of oats In our neighborhood Is the one who sows, broadcast, eight or nine perks of good clean seod or a little more than six when he drills It In. IS HOME-MADE titinn. The Implement Is made of the handle of a short handled fork and two old files. The fib- are forged to make the hook and spud and rlv eted together aa shown tn the lllus trutlon. The end opposite the spud Is shaped to fit Into the handle where It Is firmly secured In order to stand the strain necessary In the work tc be done. Armed with such a tool and a good pair of gloves one can go "bout the canes, cut out the undesir able ones and got them out of the way without suffering the hardship, encountered when endeavoring to dn he work with. Jack knife. The . " rainy day g to your own forge, everv farmer ahnuM i... ' ""J , . . . "". "v ir not pro vided, to your blacksmith and have a hook made. Then, when the ratnj day I. over and you can get Into he berry patch, see hw wfJ. ."' does tbe dreaded job. " Destroy P.ach Borers. d.aTn?.'" bMt 0""royed by digging them out. While It Is a slow Procee. ther. u really no oth., WB BEST RATTLESNAKE REMEDY Strychnine Is the Only Positive Au eeie rsr a injection af the Poison. trychnlne Is probably the positive antidote for a big Injectic, of rattlesnake toxin, a bite er rath stroke such aa four-foot would Inflict on the fleshy pan the body, as tne cair or thigh. r such a bite, carrying aa It does ! a teaapoonful or more of venom Into the fleeb. all ordinary curs tn unavailing, llypodermlrally Injact; however. In sufficient quantities tVt If to kill the patient were be am suffering from the snake potato strychnine Is a eertaln counteract. The greatest danger la said to b n administering too little strychnine, i, a matter of fart but few eves skilled physicians have enough kaovt edge of tbe subject to be able to 14 with any assurance In administer strychnine In such rases. Tktt ml tlesnake poison and strychnine in exact opposite has been shows k experiments la which animals drluj of strychnine inoculations bate baa cured by Injections of the sash venoss. Popular Mechanics. Mecbani tn Mrs. Wtwe1ow totonj strap tit. erei rawm w uM roe uieuauusaa una iaa tuwtte Puigarla Believe in rrisges, tti ... ommr all with tka nr. a.Zj lions when the underskirt, always ej tbe best of white llaen. nay bs scd loped at the bottom and even tbea uj fringe effect la us4 la the ever tun for the gathering ef the assay IkretJ suggests to the wearer the auakert their aallens, aa la their peculiar raf dyed reminder of their blood, sat tu towers, and grslas, sad fruits, as broldered ea their gowns rap; presnj their Industry. I SJtel I -I ITU Compliment Well Returned. Tbe siory is told that Judge StsH and Edward Evarelt were oace tW prominent personages at a public 4 J car la Boston. The former as a val untary toast, gave: "Fame foUoei merit where Everett goes." The eJ Hainan thus dellrstely compllmes'sj at once arose, and replied with tkt equally felicitous Impromptu: "Tt natever neigtit judicial learning aaT attain In this country, there will i ays be one Story higher." BOYNTON FURNACES Moat i ncwtiM-Ai nt ffg4t for I Strvd ark! katingf . J. C. BAYIR fURNACE CO. (root end Market Ss. Portland. 0 8t:Nl FUR CATAIXKil E, l.NHLST UPON WESTERN 1 MANTLES l 4. CJIH I CO, kc. Mm rnaitnuwt Portland, On I Sharei $1 Each. Prospectm Fret SAFtTY WITH PROFII" OREGON STATE INYESTJIENT CC Kcdford. Orefoa. KILL YOUR MOLES, COPHEl AND OTHER RODENTS Whiter'. M..l.nt Torrh will 4 Iha Fully botMl at l. and C lark Fair v4 A. I', Ad.lma M T. WHITNEY, Chitwoad.0 Distinct traces of light hsvs H deteoted at the great depth of A ratkoms below the ocean suifseti Ir Jofca Murray's oceaso-grspM ainedlttaa nf ism u.i. races'. brightly colored organisms bsve v dredged up from aa even lr"j depth. In the form of rose foratalst-'! wun rose Bins shells. "You won't run any risk In me a thousand francs. I am writ!" novel that Is sure to so. You tt what aa Imagination I have." "j you'd better Imagine that 1 hat H you the mpsey, then." Without Alcohol A Strong Tonic A Blood Purifier VlthnuA'g A Pest Alterative VlthniH Atc A rvctr's Medicine VithnutAlgt A vet's Ssrespsrllla Vlthont Atc A ate eakiieh ear ,m we eeeie iers .Vr-l A...'. n,.. . Tktt! "ti a mis are itver puis. directly en the liver. Risks mof ' bit in censtipsritn, billoiw,j!, P'psls, ilct htsdsche. Asky VithjjutAlfJ A Bndv Builder Vlthout Alcjg y, snows a Bctur laisuve p . MiSi ki.i caejeU.RSW I w - . w mjw