i, T y THE ROMANCE OF IDAHO. Bow thu Htnt Wss Namnl tor a Pmtly l.ltllo Indian Ulrl. In the autumn nf sf5 I rsi,ll (n Twenty second street, New York. A gonial follow boanlur was gentleman of about 4- yesr. wtio wua putting some mining nux'k on the nmrket. llw name v. - Colo, niul lie eltiimed the distinction of having for Initinla Miree O 0. C. Cole of U'iiiR one of tlio Orst uuniiUtii of congress from tlie now slut, and of receiving the lurest niileHse ever jwid to a uuinlier of cmijjress over 10,(H0 his mile age being roniuteil Iroin MahotoSaii Krair Cisco, thence (arotind the llornlhy way of New York to Washington. He m a pioneer from Now York, ami for a time kept a trailing store at Tom Walla Walla, On evening tlmuatitfp name of tho new ntnte became a subject of comment, and Mr. Cole gave me the following account of how the unnie came to be adopted, and also the elected meaning, or rather the meaning which he and other concluded to give as the Indian word's translation. One bright morn ing about 10 o'clock, in company with aa other gentleman interested in the govern ment of tho territory, white ridiug over aome barren mountain tops, or rather hills, the road became so ronsh as to coitipel the slow act traveling. A?"fley jiIchMM on the name for the new state liecani a topic of conversa tion. While talijRfcwr. the various names that had been suggested they came to the top of a small plateau, on the farther edge of which stool an Indian hovel or cahia The utter loneliness of the st suggested to the travelers that they hail come upou the hiding plitee of some outlaw, of whom the country then lw.ted a great miniber. Just befoi-e they reached, but while in plain view from t!.e Cabin, au Indian woman came out and called out several times in a high spirited, far reaching voice the word Idaho, The tone was a combination of those of tha Swiss yodelex, the Spauish Indian and Louisiana Degress, and, as was supposed, a call to the squaw's husband. The sound of the voice as given by Mr. Cole, and he had been familiar with the Indians for some yeai-s, was Eli-dsh-hoo-oo-oo-a drop from the first E to the sec ond, a long a, almost as if ah-ali, and a ruusi cal, long-drawn-out dwelling upon the hoo, using the full force of the lungs in expiration and in crescendo. Tha squaw's call was answered by the sud den appearance of an Indian girl about 9 years of age. She was cleau and better look ing than most of ber race. The infereuc of both Sir. Colo and his companion was tha idaho was the girl's name, and the idea of adopting it as the name of the new state oc curred to both men at about the same time. Mr. Cole claiming to be the first to speak. All efforts to And the English of the word resulted in failure; and finally, in considora tion of the sex and surrouudiugs of the In dian whose name had helped solve the ditH culty in finding one for the state, that of Gen; of the Mountains was decided upon. The reai meaning of the woni Mr. Cole never knew As the Indians name theirchil.lren from pliys ical peculiarities or, circuuisumces occurring at their birth, and as' the l-tnld was born about daylight, the translation of Light on the Mountains was Urst deemed a g'wd one, but its fitness as a name for tho state had to ;jive way to the more appropriate oue of Gem of the Mountains, which was given to congress as the translation of the Indian word. I narrate the tale as I got it from Mr. Cole and add what, at tbe.time, I suggested to bin; that the slate erect a monument on the spot ' where the name was selected and as amonil nient, that Joaquin Miller, the poet of tin Sierras, write the inscriptions. Edward F Roche, M. D., in &isin Journal. Ifeiuls Ab-)lit Uobilia A good many sujx rsttiious ideas are prev alent in different localities with reference t the robin. In some parts of Scotland tin. song of this ii.terosting litile bird is held t" augur no good for the si-k person who hear it, and to those sui-rsiiUuuly inclined mui-li anxiety is sometimes caused w hen its not are heard near a louse where anyone hap pens to be ill. There is a legend connects! with ti e robin wbich I have somewhere sten It is ss; id tint far, fiu- away there is a land oi woe, dti ;i- -as. spirits of evil and fire. Day by day Iocs this little bird bear in Ins bill a drop of wat.-r to quench the flame, S Dear the burning stream does he fly that hi. feathers are scorched, and hence he is uanieil bronphuddu (burnt breasti. There is also a legend which attributes bis red breast to bU having tried to pluck a spike from the crown of thorns with which our Lord's bead was encircled. Scottish American. The Woman Does tha Conrtlnj. In the Ukraine, Russia, the maiden is the One that does all the courting. When h falls in love with a man she goes to his hou-i and tells him he state of her feelings. If b reciprocates all is well, and a formal marriayc is duly arranged. U, however, ne is unwui ing, she remains there, hoping to coax him into a better mind. The poor fellow cannot treat her with the least discourtesy or turn ber out, for her friends would be sure tc avenge the Insult. His best chance, there fore, if he is really determined that he won't is to leave 1 Home and stay away as lona as she is in it.' This is certainly a peculki. way of turning a man out of houseaml borne On the Isthmus of Darien either sex can cl the courting, with the natural result that al most everybody gets married. There is not quite the same chance where the girl has t bide the notions of a hesitating or bashfu wain. Exchange. . Hitting the null's r.ym at Kandum. Three years ago a prominent citizen of tl-i-city, and the owner of a block of building on Main street, lost a crowbar, and up to tbi morniug never had any trace of it. He ncci dentally stepped into a business place, am' everbearing a conversation about crowbtfr it reminded bim of his lost treasure, and foi fun he said to the proprietor: "Uncle I wish you would send home my cmwbor Isn't three years long enough I" "Upon nij word and honyr," said the proprietor, "i have put out that crowbar no less thai twenty times to bring home, and bavef.r gotten it each- time. Here, John, you go u to my house and bring Mr. F's crow! a; home, and don't let the grass grow uni!" your feet." No one has sufficient vivid im agination to picture to himself the surprise of the owner of the bar. He thinks it w n th biggest hit he ever made In his life -Danbury News. Energy and Lark. When my business partner came home from the war, in which he had gallantl) commanded a battery, he had neither breeches, home nor money. His wife cut up woolen dress she had worn for many years and made a pair of breeches. Gathering odds and ends from the ruins of Atlanta, he built a shanty, of which love made a home His father gave him a five dollar gold piice, of which ingenuity mode capital. In three years be had built 1,500 home, in eihl years a 10,000 home. He now has a I0O.0OO suburban home and is well worth over tl'.'.V 000. His life is an epitome of tho south in 1885 its 'swift enorgy, its cheerful heroism, ito shrewd knack of turning something from nothing, it stages of growth, and Its preM-nt prosperity. Henry W. Grady in The I.Yv York Ledger. The Perils of Travel. A short time ago a young P'.ttsburger who happened to he in' He York encountered the captain of a Cunanler with wbora he was well acquainted The captain dohbossss Hut ally world wide fame, and a brtver or bettor seaman doea not breathe. He hod been often invited to visit this city before for b ha not only friends of travel, but at least one schoolmate heie uu.l tlio young Plttsbnrger begged him to airompnny him on his rdurti home. But tbe old Boa dog. thanked Uim kindly, but added: "Nothing could Induce me to trust myself to a railway train over tbe Allegheny mountains. No, sirl it's too much of a rirk for me to trust my bones on tucb a Journey."-Pisburg Dispatch. DOOBLY GIFTED WOMEN. THEY ADD INTELLECTUALITY TO THE DOWER OF BEAUTY. Enid Vnmlrll'i Wide Kepnte as a Sculp tor Miss llnke Loves Music, Mrs. Cut tina the Stage, Mis Mo. by Literature and Mr. Jeffrey Is a Poet. Copyright, UtU, by American Press Associa tion. A just and prudent dame in most re spects Is Mother Nature. Kqiiity and truth ant her watchwords in her dealings rrM-iSr--iii s"vA MISS ENID TAS'OKt.L. with ber children. The laws of compensa tion influence ber every operation, and ber favors are meted out with a nicety of bal ance in me apportionment, as ueiierai rule, that would do credit even to the baud folded goddess herself. The commonest and, alasl the most pa thetic exemplification of this fact is the nnurent irreconcilability in the case or a single indivi lu.il of beauty of person and breadth of bruin power. If one is fair to look upon, the gods have been gracious .enough forsooth let pro portionate wit be withheld aud bestowed upou some less well favored creature. In tellectunlly endowed In-yond his neighbor then grace of feature must needs be the portion of a fellow being of an turenor ca pacity. So nature ordains in most in stances, and so the aictuni must oe ac cepted. Great intellectual vigor and classic regularity of feature are for tne most pan incompatible. Thought plows furrows and hues and destroys grace aud tender ness of contour. Mentai force and activity in auy great deirree is wont toclaim optical recognition in more or less physiognomic distortion. A face strictly in drawing ami adhering In out line to the standard of the Greeks is seldom a face of purpose or power. Brains for the most part have a peualty to pay in an alwtinence from beauty. V3 . ' - -: VTiV w miss crp.uv nlKE. Mme. de Stael's pueuomennl brilliancy was inadequate to dissipate the shadow ou her life ct by her morbid yearning for beauty and the love that is its accompani ment. George Eliot, too, the master mind of tbe age among women, felt her life robbed of half its meaning through lack of physical charm. There are occasions, however, when Dame Xature contradicts herself and is as capricious as the rest of her sex. Then her masterpieces are accomplished. It was doubtless in one of ber whimsical moods that she planned such a woman as Amelia Rives Chauler, who has been dowered with considerably more than hershareof coveted attributes beauty, talent, money, position and magnetism whohasbeen more talked about and written a'oout and pictorial!; deliuea'ed than any other half dozen young American women. At the home of her girlhood, Castle Hill, she is now the center of a brilliant company of social aud liter ary ligbu. A strong thing from her pen, now only in manuscript, is a drama, "Henry II," which will shortly appear. Another notable young woman is Eliza beth Bislaud, now Mrs. Wetmore. Her graphic and clever sketches of her flying trip around the world, her verses, Btorie MM. ALFHED CUTTIVO. and essayB combine to show her versatil Miss Enid YnndeU, of iouisvilfe, Is one of the noblest exemplars of the lavish ness of nature's favors when an exception is needed to prove tbe rule or general equal itv. She is a fair trirl of Just twenty-two, gracious and sweet In ber manners and one of the, belles of the suite. She was the queen of one of the recent magnificent Sat ellites' balls in Louisville. Miss Yandell has a Kcnius for sculpture that is giving her a name and a fame that few women attain to. At the age of three ber taste for the plaxtic art was developed to such an extent that she modeled an original sketch of Kve and the serpent. She accomplished a four years' course in modeling In two years, and is making rapid strides toward eicelloiice. Many years of her young life have been devoted to ber studies abroad under the best mas ters. Louis Hebihso was her instructor for some time. A gratifying distinction was conferred npon Miss Yandell when die was selected from many competitors to do the sculp tural work upon the roof garden of tlm woman's building at t be World's fair. The young artist is now busy upon a 6 foot, caryatid for the support of an upper railing npon the edifice. The architect of this building is also a young woman, Miss Hay lleti, of Boston. All her pretty stationery bears In tiny silver letters the legend, "Knid Yandell, Sculptor." She has executed nianjr historic ml claaalcal groups. s. : -fi..--5vJ(:J Va.' .1.. " C '..-aw? 1 . W At 'J I r'r V in vf: a tma tiS Ck;f- w .... MM,MMMl,M.MaMMMaMMIIM.SMISSMISSSSSlllMSIMSSSSMSSSM . ,. 1 1 " Miss Currv Duke i the beaut iful dnnv ir of Gcueral Basil V. Duke, of Con.l- kar erata fame, and niece or the noted Goicnil John Morgan. She is the Incarnation of music a latter day adit ion of St. CecUbi, Whose soul is all a-ttine with divino h:r monies. The violin Is her Instrument, aid the rare old Stradlvavius that she lojes seems instinct, with rhythmical emotions in the embrace of this slender child of genius. Miss Duke has been a favcrdd pupil of the ifreat Joachuu, in ueriin, isr several years. She is exquisitely pretty, with an appeal ing childishness of expression, great lus trous brown eyes and skin like polished ivory. She has lieen steeped in admiration aud adulation from her very babyhood, and yet is unspoiled, "unspotted from the world," and almost BiHillinateu uy niagio influence of her art, i Favored two fold by the goos in as niga a degree as those who have gone before is Mrs. Alfred Cutting, the regally beautiful wife of a wealthy Cinciniiatitin, and a woman of marvelous social jHivver. Im pelled by the fori of a bistriouic ability, which she felt to lie latent in her, she has followed the lend of her great ambi tion and devoted herself to the stage throwing conventionality to tha winds." MIS9 V1CTOHU STUAKT MOSBY. She was formerly Miss Catherine Cogswill, of Minneapolis, a reigning helleand beauty, and her public career is a matter of no small interest to those who have watched the various phases of her life. Endowed with graces mental and phys ical, and with a romantic career thrown Into the bargain, is a lovely daughter of General John S. Mosby, the "guerrilla chieftain" of the war. Miss Victoria Stuart Moslivis beautiful, erratic, gifted, charming. She has a fear less pic-turesqueiie.ss in dress an almost masculine taste for out of door sports. She Is an artist of ability and an author of no small reputation, Hereoiitributionsadoru the pages of many leading pittitications. She is a brilliant and original conver sationist. Her features are as clear cut as a cameo, and her hair is like a gold brown aureole. Miss Mosbv has been before the public of late us the heroiueof a sensational af fair, the hero lieiug bur lover, who was accused of beiug one and the same with Shoelmx .Miller, an ex-convict. Miss Mos by is firmly couvineed of the innocence of her fiance, whom she met first at the house of a Poli-h nobleman in Washington. She has written some excellent stories on hyp notism. One of the south's sweetest poets, and one of its most far famed lieauties, is Mrs. iff r-. MRS. HOSA VKIITSRR JEKMIKV. Rosa Vertner Jeffrey, of Kentucky, whose social and literary career has lieen a thing of marked brilliancy for years. Kited and admired all her life, surrounded by luxury aud refinement, always the center of a cul tivated coterie, Mrs. Jetlrey has led au ex istence almost idyllic. She is marvelou-ly beautiful, with clearly chiseled features, eyes like stars, complexion tuarblelike in tint and texture and abundant hair that falls about her wide brow in a wealth of natural curls now silvered. She lias pub lished a book of tender rhythmical poems. Mrs. Jeffrey Is one of the most notable representatives of genius anil Is-auty com bined in all the southland. Such women as these, the dooby dowered, are nature's luxuries ber holiday editions. D.usy Frrziiuon. Science Applied to Agriculture. A wriTer who believes in the department of agriculture and in the value of Im proved methods of farming says: "A fine example of what science has done for agriculture is found in the mat ter of resting the soil by rotation of cro. It took the world a long time to And out that a change of crop, when properly made, rests the soil as well as fallowing; a long time to learn that an Increase of live stock ou a farm, under certain condi tions, increases Its fertility; a long time to learn that artificial drainage warms and lightens cold and heavy soils, ail vancing the harvest by weeks and bringing the subsoil to the support of the impoverished ,n,inii i.v which, as some one has said. .. t ' ,.,,rl.. 1 i.a AlfV -t.-r rtm CUieiauil 4i '"''J .iu..t ..j we have Rone to the subsoil, nud we have a Concord under Concord, a .Middlesex un der Middlesex and a basement story of Massachusetts more valuable than the superstructure.' These things were not learned by accident, but were demonstrat ed by the application of scientific princi plea." The Xlibte anil Newspnpi-rs. A clergyman of South Norwiillc, Conn., recently preached n sermon in which he compared the newspaper with tlio Bible. The following passage Is peculiarly strik ing: "Tho Bible's criminal news does not differ much from that which we may read to-morrow. It contains no display bond lines, yet it records in I he same realistic way a murder, such as that of Abel, or n suicide like that of Samson, or Abims lcch, or Saul, or Saul's rirmor brnrur, or Aliithopliel. Narratives of thefts and rob beries are scattered through its pat'es, ac counts of family quarrels mid separations for cause." Chicago Herald. English Pronunciation 100 Years Ago. It is curious to note that according to Thomas Dil worthy's "Guide to the Eng lish Tongue," which was accepted as a standard In pronunciation by sditc Eng lish society of a century ago, the vowel sounds In file are foil, bile mid boll were pronounced alike, as also were those In tour and tower, are and air, dew and do. Chicago Herald. Rough on Or. Ifntnies, A little girl of Boston who recently wrote a composition about Or Holmes remarked that "he was for severul years prorosroroj monotony nt the college. "-Now York Xl nun . ( A LlTIXG BEATlt. PECULIAR OUTCOME OF THE ENVI RONMENTS OF OUR GREAT CITIES. Victim of Paralysis Driiuglng Their Feet Along the Pavement--Patients Who Are as Helpless as New Horn Infants Sad Cuso of a Joitrnultst On those HUimy mornings, when the atmosphere is cool nml bracing, one sees lici'o nud there on the st roots a intiu crawl ing nloitg aided by a crutch or a cane, lie Is usually bout forward, his progress is slow, dillicult and painful. His feet drug with n slintllo ou Wiu siiruico of tho pavement. His hair U gniy, nlthougli ills countciiiinco may not indicate more than middle aire, There nro evidences of pain in his features. There lire- wrinkles and contract Inns that tire the cicatrices of wounds incurred iu llcrce llfo struggles. Tho eyes express a commingling of weak ness and despair, His shoulders droop, and his entire figure lias n bagglncss sug Rcstivo of a collapse, On his shrunken lips nro hints of a pleading helplessness. When lio speaks It is with hesitation and a nmfllod tone. His utterances come with ditllcully; they nro low, choked, broken. His speech hiilfs at short Inter vals us if at a loss fur the proper word. Often lie (jaiinot Hud it, nud frequently an Unwanted unit strange term, wholly with out meaning:, will thrust Itself lu the hiatus. Possibly one arm dangles lit his ide. loose ami limuasmno. Possibly ono leg Is dragged along as if it were a foreign body. Perhaps one shlo or the other of his mouth is drawn up with a lino that prends out, fun shaped Into a series of ynr like shrinkages, His glance, like Ills it, i. wiuiiiung ana uncertain, uver lis fnco Is spread all expression Unit is a OlUUUiiuvf-il'ihi'Rility nml nope, lie an object with qualities so peculiar, so ndividunlizcd,- that one easily recognizes !itu5s the victim of some one of tho nu merous forms of paralysis. These specimens taking the morning sir, assisted by cane or crutch and shut tling along the sidewalk, are getting to be a frequent exhibition. Whether or not characteristic of oilier points, they are retting to bo an iiieieusiug feature of Chi uigo. The men who no longet crawl out to fitch the glow and warmth of rtie sum mer sun are nerveless as new born chil dren. Their limlw are inert as masses of gelatine. They are powerless to move their muscles, and have to lie lifted, turned, taken tip and down like billies. They irmst be fed, and tho wuuts of unttire cared for as If they were puling infants in the nurse's arms. This new disease is a peculiar outcome of the environment of our great cities. The atmosphere of this region is Dued with a malaria which exhausts, prostrates, paralyzes those whose overworked bodies are forced to inhale it. Its victims are not the old who have reached tho allotted span of their life, nor those enfeebled by age or heredity, but the men. with active brains, intense eneri:, boundless ambi tion and restless etfort. It is in the unsure of a rot which affects not the green, tho immature, but the ripened fruit. It ntt.iclis the men who labor by day and dream of work by night; it is a sting whish pierces not the drones, but the workers in the luiinau hives. The idler slowly di-.integrates and dls-appe'irs- He p is.e from a lethargic life into death with as little consciousness and sutrerin us iittond the natural demise of a molliik. He is an implement that rusts from dl-ttse: the tireless brain worker Is a machine, driven at a high rate of speed, with no stoppages for repairs, which cur ries a tremendous pressure, and some duy ex Mode and is blown into fragments. Ivor a quarter of a century ago there entno a young m in from nn eastern slate, who in tune located iu Chicago, lie was ilucly educated, ambitious, industrious, nergetic nud ready and willing to devote ,'jim-eW: U any honorable employment. tlcsi.u secnreil a situation as principal cf one of the public sohools. Purl her on ho gavi up teaching and connected himself wlln journalism. He was for several years a valued atlacho of this journal, during which time he showed himself capable, indefatigable, prompt, id tho possessor of a high oric. of Intel lect. Of a religious nature, ho later ac cepted an offer to take charge of a proml nfut denominational weekly Issued In this illy, and became itschlef writer and man agerial assistant, and for many years 'illod his place with credit to himself mid the periodical with which he was con nected. juch was launder Stone, principal of a public school, reporter on The Chicago Times mid afterward one of the powers hut controlled the groat Methodist jour nal, Tho Northwestern Christian Advo cate. The face and figure of no man In Chicago were better known than tlno of Lcumler Stone during all these years. A few mouths ago, Uiiviiig just passed Into a ripe middle age and In the very height of his popularity and usefulness, he felt one day a numbness In one of his arms. It extended slowly till the whole arm was Involved, and then it crept Into the other arm, and soon and on, a little at a time, tdl It had permeated and pos sessed his entire limbs and torso. His head nlono escaped. The lust time I saw him, all below his neck was a deal muss to far as motion is concerned. Like one of Dante's damned, ho was Imprisoned In Ice to his chin. And yet the savage destiny that bus thus Impris oned him did not have tho mercy to do prive tho inclosed mass of sensation. Along its nerves travel Incessant poignant pains, which arc la-yond reach and beyond remedy. Strangely enough, In this gro tesque, unparnllcled Inll'ctlon his head and face remain untouched. Ills bruin Is s i leur as in his palmiest Intellectual day-", und he reads with his old avidity and thinks and reasons wll h his old time clearness. "Polluto" In Chicago Times. i 'si To what extent piiiihlavlsm makes bold to beard the autocrat of all tho Kusslus is shown by a biMik upon "The Illplomutcs of-Hussiii During the Nineteenth Cen tury." written by the former secretary of le jatiou, "Putlshtsbef. The author under takes to prove, thotkgh only between the lines, that the Imperial house of Holsteiu Gottorp, which is the riignliig house of Kussla, Is, to Mils day, clinging to lis obso lete German traditions, and unnbto to Identify itself with the grand historic goal of the Slavo-Hussian empire. And the then minister of education, Del.hinof, recommended the boot tho libraries of upper niul middle schools as most com mendable reniliiig for the better educated youth of the land. No wonder. Indeed, thut Deljuuof was forced to go. Chicago News. lllnlotic Ji.ltc. Napier's famous dispatch from India an nounced his vi"tory In one word, "Pw-eovl,'' wlm-li Is. by in u-rprctatloii, "I have Kclnde." Vei much o the suine klinl was Gen. do liourmont's miigo to tho l-Voin-h wur min ister In ISIKJ, when the Usy of Algiers es cnied him slier Is-lrg takeu. "i'ordldl" l)icin-"l have lost a Di y " it Is said that Drako, when the ships of tho Armada turned their snls, sent to Cllznliolli the word "Can-tlmrlde''-tliut is, "The Hpniilsh Kly." This last is probabl a fuble. -Tumplo Our fnrned It All. Lady-And what does your father do Lit tU, Girl Oh, papa I a doctor. Lady Indeed I I suppose be practices grout deal, does he notf . Little Girl Oh, noi he doesn't practice any more. He knows how now. Harper's Young People, MY BOOKS, My books beloved, ye take me backward Over the rhuaru deep of years, Vhon 'neiitu the glow of youth's sweet sun rise Life oue long day of iS appears. With you aualn llfoel fresh hearted, As wheu the leaves their shadows seut To dance upon the page I iwndered, And to the thought their uiuslo lent, In tho old garden still I'm lingering. With friiKTsnt blossoms nil srouud, Or ou the homo plassa slttiu Hear distant cow bull's tinkling sound. While reading from some favorite author The charming tale or ismmu sweet. All sights and sounds harmonkins blending, All keeping time with rhythmic feet. -Phubo A, Holder In Woman's Journal. Mr. Holland at the Clover Club, Few visitors to the Clover olul) dinners, when called upon to speak, have the nerve to si and up against, the fusillade of wit and side remarks without losing their com posure, Bui at a dinner tha cleverest met their mutch In George Holland, the actor. Sir, Holland was culled upon by theohalr to say something. No sooner had he risen to his feet than the fun la-gan. All sorts of funny remarks were hurled at him, hut without having the slightest rffeat, Thu nieinlwrs were amazed at hl evident In- dilVeruneo, but they determined tiot to Im batlled, ami redoubled their efforts to bretiK in upon the siKNiker, Again they were un successful. The sneaker continued the even tenor of his way until through with his remarks, when he took his seat with not even a hair milled. The next day a man who had been an Interested witness approached Mr. Holland and asked him bow he managed to keep his nerve, "They didn't appear to rattle you very much last night," he said. "How did you work Itf" The old actor bent forwurd with his hand to his ear. "You'll have to talk louder," he said. "I'm as deaf asapostl" Philadelphia ltec- ord. America Leads In Artlatle Furnltun, It may Interest housewives to know that It is not the elegant thing to speak of a piece of furniture as imported, or coining from the other side, as one speaks proudly of a gown or bonuet. People of means are buying the furniture made from American designs lu their own country at Just three times the expense of the imported article. American designs .are acknowledged the most artistic of the period, and yet there Is neither an American school of design fot this particular branch or any marked char- i.,lu l.u w-Ml 11. lu ilUHiumlshed. The American designer originates Ills Idea, formulates a rough utile oui line oi it, bunds it over to his French and Ger man draftsmen, who work It- out with l.a .!.. ,ml nniitulskliii skill which the designer is lu too much of a hurry tn spend his precious time over. This design Is pxecllieil, aim wnen coiiipu-u-u is stioi i i, u -..itmtikwioii-who aoiiriH'iat.es the dif ference in t he durability and beauty of the home product, ami willingly !) me au vauced price. New York Sun. Satan hiim.cif would he cnjolrd into the belief that he was Gabriel, if he were to die, niul certain men had the writing nf his epitaph. Tl9 GeleLratad French Gur, wK.r? "APHRODITINE" JOT IS ftH.D O A POSITIVE GUARANTEE tornroftur form omny ttttmlrru( thu Kt'UvmUveof jrnnioi uuiterm-, ll.'lhtT ftrt.iUK fnftsi t h.tfti'ti t BEFCRE u oul Htimulrtnu, AFTER T'tacc(rCT)lu:ii(or through joiitjiiui liKllurr tioii. owr iinfuljA-iHn, iVi , ut-h a jUiMof Unto rower, WiiUffi:Uii in, lhahi itf down I'aluilntli bnvk, Svm.rml WcHkin wt, llyntvna, Nftnont n t tltu, N H tiirn.il KitilKNioiiM, L tporrhirn, Ills RiucMt, Wi-rtk Mcmorv, l.onof I'ovvir iim! Im,K t4H''y, w.Mf h U iwtWrtvl nftrn It lto vremauirt fi t ! un t ItfHiiitv. Price $l.(H a Ihi, fiboici li r I '. H.nt 1T ma 1 on rwelM of irlcw A !tl l'KN 4.1 'AICANTFK III JftVMl fnr vtrv i i-Onr !tr h''ivml, t'rfftunl tlio mniipv l( I rriii innt r-:m in tint efTot-tr,. We ha tliounrHlt rf ttiiiimitU fnnno'd nml young, of txtli noxi fi, wliufmvo Iwrii Ttorniannitly rurt-a by thu.tu( Aphroiitilae. CIn ularfrc. AJtlrva TH APHRO MEDICINE CO. WtMluru UraucU. Box 1!7 1'ORTLai.o. 0a -SOLD HY H. A. BELKNAP & SONS, Druggists, ntlNKVIM.K, OKROON, SIIILOHS CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Oreat Coiuh Cnre Is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druRitista are suthorlied to sell It on pos itive guarantee, a teat that no otherenre can successfully stand. That it may become nown, the Proprietors, at an enormous sense, are piscina s sample Bottle Free Into every home In the United Mates and Csnsds. If you have a Cmurh, Hore Throat, or Bron chitis, use It, for It will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or WhoopinftCotiKh, use It promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that Insidious disease Consumption, use It. Auk youi Dnujitist for HHILOH'S CURB, Price 10 cts., ISO cts. sndll.00. IfyourLuns-s are sore or Bscs: lomo, use Hhlloh's Porous plsntnr. Price Mcts. For sale by all Drug flits and Dealers. kksU4 e.I-4ll asssiasslASBM Agency for OAVIATt, nsnioN patents! OOPYRIOMTB, to. Fnr Information and free Hanilbook writ to Mt;NN ;o.. mil Hiuiadwat. nsw ynasT. Olili-Hfc Imreiia for aouiirlng patents In America, Kvnrv piitent Uiken out by in l lironidlt. nufnrs Iba pulillu by a notliw given free of chains lu the cicntifir American TiAFKBiit rttrpiilftilnn of iiny srlnntlflo piwrln tha worl, KplomiUIlr IIIiihI rnLcd. No inlfiltlumit nmti rih'.nl.l hti nlMioilt It. W It, ft.'I.OO a dun f I "t i nionihR. Atldrma MlINN '0 Vvut.iuiiKiiH, ftfji linwlway, Norn fork. ED N. WHITE, IHslii Street, rrlnevllle, Or., -PBOPKIKTOR OF TH K Popular Resort for All WHO WIHH- A ood :lar, A Nice Ilef resiling Itrlnlc, A Usmi of llllllards, or , A Nor.lnl lilHina of Cards, Clillfi ROOMS FOR CAJVIES. Come esrly, 1st. snd often. W 5v Iff O.J I c 'Mm -'vrm" CITY MARKET, rirst Door North of Postiilhoe, PRINEVILLE, OR. Palmers (flood, Props., KKKP A CHOlliK LINK OK Beef, Mutton and Pork, Spring Chickens, Fruit and All Kinds of Produce. Cash prlvea paid fur all Itlnda of FARM PRODUCE, BUTTER AND EGGS. LINNW.WOODS' SALOON, ' Main Street, I'rluavlllo. Or, KEKI'S (IN IIANII TI1K rltOII'RHf Wines, Liquors & Cigars. FANCY MIXED DRINKS rrapsml by sn eiperlonred hsrk er. A fin Billiard Tabii aud Elegant Club Roomi For the srnimmnilNtton of rii.inmnni, Bprtl slU'Utluu to tlllluu or.lvrs by uislU THE CHINESE BAZAR. Quong. Hing & Co., Proprietors. CnrripH a fu lino of SII0KS iniportoil timet from thu KiikI. T1i liCHt-iluvtirud T1CAH in iMirtcd from China. UAXPIKH in t'lullfdH varictu'H. Fmgraiit i in fx rt-d CKiAKS. Ainu a lino lino of ChintHO nml JupHiiow OikkIk. PRINEVILLE BOOT AND SHOE SHOP. I. L. KETCHUM, Proprietor. All kiniln of J$ootn ami SIhh-h iniulo to onltT, nml h m'riJ lit j.',iiiifc antml. Notio but the lK't 1ik I tin d in new work. Ki'pamiiH vi-ntljr done nt ri'iiKoimiile prices. Onlcrs locfivud by until promptly attended to. Shop on Main utrwt, l'riueville. Or. c. c. Dyc.A.!rji3srG-, -DKAI.EH IN- Ahlt : KIPS : OF : FUHfilTUflE, BEDROOOM SETS, Lounges, Chairs, Mirrors, Paints, Oils. Putty and Class, ALSO V Alili V KINDS V OF V LUJVIBE V FOR V SALE. The Oregon Land Co., WITH ITS Home Office at Sabm, Or., IN T1IK OKAY BUILDING, AND BRANCH OFFICE IN PORTLAND, Makes s sixrls'tvof m ill fruit farms: also 1ms (or sale iirnln and stork farms and city ami Hiilmrliaii property. Send for H. A. BELKNAP &. SONS, SucceHBora to J. W. HOWARD -DHAI.KK8 IN- DRUGS AND CHEMICALS, East Side of Main Street, Prlnevllle, Or. Standard Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnishes, Dye Stuffs ; and Soaps, Toilet Articles and Perfumery, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Bird Seed and Cages. : A general variety of Pni(.'lll"t' Sunilrien, Stationary, Books, CiKrs, Tobacco and f' l'tire Wines and I.l'itiors for rncdioiil use. TEMPLETON & SON, WH0LK8AI-K AND KETAIL- Druggists Prlnevllle, DEALERS IN Perfumery, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Patent Medicines, Toilet and Sharing Soaps, Goods. Glass, Putty, Paints, Oils, Etc. Also a Fine Line of Gold and ordors for goocla promptly filled. All pounded at all bouri C. S. SMITH AT THE- Gary House Bar -DKA1.H IN Cutter Whisky, L HKHT ItUANDH OK Wine, Brandy and Beer. -AIJl- Key West and Imported Cigars Neat and Comfortable Club Room. No .lnivarud to niaks olllloniiTl tiolufort aide. New Meat Market, l'HIM;vilJ:, OH. SAM C. CLINE, Proprietor. CHOICE BEEF, Mutton, Veal and Pork CONSTANTLY ON HANI. THE HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH - 1'AIIt HR- All Kinds of Country Produce Sold at a Liberal Commission. W ftilU-U s tsr. uf vmr iUniitc HAMC. CI.INa piiiiiplili'tH, jiriro lists etc. Oregon. Fancy Silver Watches and Jewelry. Physicians' prescriptions' carefully '1 , 1