Are 2400 Disorders incident to the human frame, of -which a majority are caused or pro moted by impure blood. The remedy is simple. Take Hood's Sarsaparllla. That this medicine ' radically and effectively purifies the blood is known to every druggist, known to hundreds of thousands of people "who themselves or by their "friends have experienced its curative powers. The worst cases of scrofula, the most agonizing sufferings from, salt rheum and other virulent blood dis eases, are conquered by it, while those cured of boils, pimples, dys peptic and bilious symptoms and that tired feeling are numbered by millions. Hood's Sarsaparilla TO lo you good. Begin to take it today. As It Seemed to Her. " " Mr. Ciubman I never was a jury man but once, and then the iurx was out all night. r- ' Mrs. Clubman How. you must hart Parke I know your wife didn"t Hkt it because you brought me home un expectedly to dinner last night. Lane Nonsense! Why, you hadn't been gone five minutes before she re marked that she was glad it was nc one else but you." Harper's Bazar. Srtur th CuopH auaaf War Off tltm CaJd. Laxattr' Broroiuiri1rie Tablets cure a cold in ODaday. .Jocure, AO ray. rrtMUoeiia. Supremely Restful. "I wonder if there's any lazier occu parion than fishing." "Well, yes looking at people fish Jag." Brooklyn Life, Better Late Than Never. "You may recall me, sir, as the mar who eloped with your daughter about a year ago. "Well, sir.'what can I do for you? "I may be a little bit tardy, but 1 have come to offer you my congratu lations." Harper s jiaiar. There are a treat Tnfty remedies fcHt tbere is on CI Kl for a toor roiaLilexin; ihat is Garfield i Tea. wb:cn cares br puntTirtf tbv " b.ood. thus TeraOTing the cause. A Reminiscence. "One time." remarked Wragson Tatters. "I got Into a soft snap." "Did yer, honest?" inquired Perry Patetick. -what was it?" "A poor ole watchdog dat hadnt no teeth left." Philadelphia Press. BOWS THIS! TTe o?Vr One Hundred Dollars Eaward for Sase of Catarrh tjiMt can nc; be cured by UaJ'i 3trrV Cur- F. J. CHENEY CO.. Ptpml, Toledo. X We the unders-.fmed. hve known F.J. Cheney lor Im pas. iara. be.iev him per lee Uj bouo'ibk m ail bus: n ss transaciioni and ta-anciaT- able tocarrr out any obiijAaon inaia by teir nrm. wwtiTsrii. - Who eale Ururfets,Tole3 ' Walking, r.tvKA A Matzn. Vno1ece Dru iAs Toiedo- O. EJ2 Catarrh Cure is t ten -n: rnally. acunf irec :t on the blood and m cons surfaoea ot the bjai m. Pri e tec per bo Ue. &o.d by ai. drug:. 1st, Testimoni---!a free, hi'l a i'lmij r-thbeat. G?ad of It Mamma Why are you so quiet, Robbie? Robbie (aged six) I was dess think in' how- glad I am Christmas doesn't come in the summertime. Mamma Why? Robbie "Cause I -rear sch teeny weeny short socJls in the summer time. A NEW ACCOUNT BOOK Of Particular Interest to ThreshermcJi and Farmers. Bossell & Co.. of Portland, Ora., the largest dealers in machinery on the Pacific Coast, have just issued at con siderable expenae a neat and very com plete account book ior tip-to-date thresheimen. etc. The- books are ior free distribution, and all people who want tbem ebon!d write immediately to P.nstell & Co., Portland, Ore. Choice of Letters. I think I shall adopt letters as a profession." oDserred the party with the bulging brow. "Typewriting or sign painting?" In quired the aardonic peraon. Balti more American. - .- - TOT KNOW WHAT TOU ARK TAKING When Ton tafce Grore's Tatelrs Thill Tonic, because the formula it plainly prime! on every - bottle sbowiiHr that it la imT'iT Iron mofi Qif aioe in a tasteless form. "o Cure, No Fay. aoc Kitchen Necessities. "Cook, do we need any necessities for the kitchen?" "Yes'zn. I'd like a Roman chair, one of tbem Venishun lanterns an' some more pillars fer th' cozy corner." In dianapolis Journal. THE OFFSPRING OF HEREDITARY BLOOD TAINT. Scrofula i but a modified form of Elood Poison and Consumption. The parent who is tainted by either will see in the cm in tne same disease manifesting i t s e H jya the form of swollen glands of the neck and throat, catarrh, weak eye, offensive sores and abscesses and of tentimes white spell ing sure signs of Scrofula. There may be no external si ens for a long time, for the disease develops slowly In some cases, but the poison is in the oiooo. ana win creak out at the nrst lavor sble opportunity. S. S. S. cures this wast ing, destructive disease by first purifying and building up the blood and stimulating and invigorating the whole system. J. M. Seal, i ts Public Square. NHrilIe.Tno.. mym : Tn years ago my daughter fell aod cut her forehead. From thia wound the glands on the side of her face became swollen and biiT-sted. Bume of the best doctors here aod elsewhere attended her without any benefit. We decided to try a. Be S.. and a few bottles cored her en tirely." ... makes new and pure blood to nourish and strengthen the body, I and is a positive and safe cure for Scrofula. It overcomes all forms of blood poison. whether inherited or acquired, and no remedy so thoroughly and effectively cleanses the blood. If you have any blood trouble, or your child has inherited some blood taint, take 8. S. S. and tret the blood in good condition and prevent the disease doing further damage. Send for our free book, and write our physicians about vour case. We make no cnarge wnatever ior meaicai aa vice. ;.. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. A. L.irtrS ftnrrir A, 1 1 1 t . At. Couch fcyrup. TasU t.ood. TJs I in time, tt'-ln rr criwrn' GALUSHA A. OROW, OLDEST MAN IN CONGRESS. Ml -At liu y- . ,-r & i j ! !iy 1 nte -XSf " iff" 1 li,rrTM r I, hiWiflilirlrTl .V ( v. . Congressman Galusha A. Grow, the oldest niemtwr of Congress, celebrated a rolden jubilee the other day. It la just fifty years a:o since he first became a member of the national legislative body. In the last half century he has been elected and re-elected to Congrreaa twelve times, bein defeated once in 1832 when a gerrymander threw him into a new and strange district. previous to that he had served six terms, three aa a Free Soil lemocrat and three as a Re publican. At one of these elections previous to his one defeat he rweived every rote cast in his district, there being; no opposition. He was Si-eaker of the House during the first two years of the Civil War. When he entered Congre&a in 1S51 he was the youngest member. In his third and fifth terms he was chairman of the Important committee on territories. In 18i4 he was chosen one of the two mombers-at-large for the State, and has since been re-elected with increasing pluralities, once with a plurality of 2l7.44t5, the la r pest ever given a candidate for anv office in any State. Mr. Grow was born in 1S23 in Susquehanna County, Pa. His father died when he was 3, and his primary educatim was received at winter school after the farm labor of the summer was done with. Law-r he was enabled to attend Amherst College, and graduated from that institution in 1S44. His dome is at Glenwood. From 1ST1 to 1STG he was presideut of the International and Great Northern Railroad. SETTLER'S CABIN STILL STANDS Built of Loan In 1!45, It Sbelterm To da? It. "irt Occapaat, A quarter of a block from the Piatt County Courthouse in Mouticello, I1L, In the center of a bustling city of 5.000 people stands a quaint old log cabin. It was built when there were but three houses In the town and la to-day the borne of a woman who moved into It while wolves and bears were plentiful In the wilderness around. The cabin was built In 1S45. Aunt Anna Honsa Iman lives In it and It has been her home since 1S47. All the furniture Is the same as when she moved In. There Is a bed with cords In place of a spring tnattresx. an open fire place with andirons and a crane for cooking, all just as the settlers had HOME OF MRS. IIOSSELMA.N IN them when Illinois was still a frontier State. Mrs. Honselman Is as remarkable as her borne. Xinety-8ve years old. she still does all the work of the house. She prepares the meals for herself, two sons and a grandson and seems as well and strong as the average woman ot 50. Her two sons have a fruit farm just outside of Montlcello and could provide a much better home for their mother than the cabin, but she wants to stay where she has lived so long and so they all live there. In the style of fifty-five years ago. Rich business blocks have grown up around the cabin. LIMIT TO SIZE OF SHIPS. e Load the Kxtreme Carrrlas Ca pacity of Veaaela Will lie Reached. Naval constructors and shipbuilders now agree that as to size and carrying capacity the limit of the ocean b team ship Is still a long way off. Tbey pre dict that steamers l.OuO feet In length will be built In the near future. The Hamburg-American line has ordered a vessel to be launched In 10U3 which will be 750 feet In length, forty-six feet longer than the Oceanic, and 70 feet beam, or eight feet wider, while the vessel building for the North Ger man Lloyd at Stettin Is 752 feet In length and is Inofilcially reported to have a correspondingly great beam. The old theory of two decades ago that the long steamer was in danger of be ing broken In two In a heavy seaway la now untenable. mprovements In marine architecture and science make the modern steamship's hull strong enough to resist any shock the sea may give it. Coincident with this evolution In the size and capacity of the modern Atlan tic passenger steamship speed has been Increased- And the Intense rivalry for public patronage has spurred the great companies concerned In the traffic to endeavor to excel In this respect. Each of the chief corporations . engaged In trade strives to secure tbe record for the quickest passage from port to port. for its achievement Is considered as an Immense advertisement for the line holding It. A writer In Cassler's Ma gnzlne represents that some of these Atlantic grey hounds are ron nt an act ual loss to the companies owning them. but It Is borne for the suke of the ad vertlHlug which their record as fast sailers secures. The difference between the record holding Deutsciilund and any one of the other four fastest vessels owned by other companies amounts to only a few hours In the ocean puHsage. but It b:m. a commercial- value in the traus-Atlantie trade cf nillli:-leiit mag nilude to cause each one to strain everything to exceed It. As a result of this keeu competition the following highest dally runs have been obtained In knote: Oceanic. W4; St. Paul, 640 Lucania, 562: Kaiser Wlhbelin der Gross. 5S0, and Deutschland. 5M. But to maintain this soed It cost the St. Paul, with only half the displacement of the Deutschlaud. 3K tons of coal daily, and the latter, which Is the larg- est coal consumer In the Atlantic trade, i 570 tons. The Oceanic made her record of 524 knots with a coal consumption of 4S0 tons. San I-'ranclsco Chronicle Simple Country Living;. A man may enjoy bounding health, and know very little about the cause of bis happiness: ami alas: a man may suffer all the woes of dyspepsia, and have no certain knowledge as to the cause of his misery. "I'm a confirmed dyspeptic: that's the reason I look so old." said Mr. Col lander, gazing almost enviously at the MOXTICELI.O. BLILT IN 1S13. red-bronze face of his former chum at college, who hail dropped down from the country Into Mr. Collander's city office.. "What you need Is simple country food, man." said his old friend, clap ping bim heartly on the shoulder. "Come anil visit my wife and me on the farm for a while, and we'll set you up. It's rich city living that's too much for you. Now take breakfast, for In stance. All I have Is two good cups of coffee, a couple of fresh doughnuts, a bit of steak with a baked potato, some fresh biscuit or muffins, and either griddle-cakes or a piece of pie to top off with. What do you have?" The city man looked at his red-cbeek- ed friend, wbo stood waiting for the confirmation of his Idea. 'A cup of hot water and two slices of dry toast." he responded, soln'rly. "But If you think a simple diet like yours would help me, I will make one more attempt to be a healthy man." Lawyers Barred trom These Countries When Yucatan was first colonized by the Spaniards Charles V., In the ordin ance which accompanied the appoint ment of the first Governor, explicitly stated that no lawyers were to be per mitted to land from Spain or anywhere else. This law was dated l."i:il. Three years later an eipiallv stringent pro vision was made against lawyers be coming Inhabitants of tbe new colonics of Peru anil Chile. The object of these laws was frankly stated as the preser vation of the new countries from the strife aud trouble which would certain ly follow their advent. Up to 1871 there were statutes In force which pro hibited lawyers from sitting In the British House of Commons, but they had long become obsolete and were re pealed In that year. The Man with One Million. "Do you subscribe to the assertion that a man with $1,000,000 can do what ever he chooses?" "No," answered Senator Sorghum, "I do not. These days a man with $l,000,r 000 wants to lie low and keep out of trouble or tbe first thing he knows two or three men with a billion apiece will lake bis money away from Mm." Washington Star. Precaution. "What are you doing for that baby?" "I'm simply avoiding all the advice my friends have given me." Harper's Bazar. KiilKhtlv Warfare of Old. Medieval knlghtg often took a volun tary oath that they would never spare the life of an enemy. There probably never was a woman who could puss a neighbor's wash hanging on the line without staring at It. Nature supplies a uiau with charac ter, he must furulsh his own reputation. Tenure In Office. Dr. Prinzing of Germany declares that marriage prolongs life. This gives some smart bachelor an opportunity to rise and remark that marriage makes life seem long to a man. Bos ton Globe. Pissing of Yellowstone Park. It is said that the geysers which have made ttiis park famous, are gradually de clining. Ttits brings to mind the fact, that decline is the law of the world. Health is the most precious possession in the world, nnd too great rare cannot be given to it. In the Miring- you pholild renew your strength, revitalize your blood and uerves with the best of alt medicines, Hostetter's Stomach Hitters. It also cures stomach disorders. Try it. Late Realization. "I now realize," said the pig, as they loaded him into the wagon, bound for the butcher's, "I now realize that overeating tends to Bhorten life." Indianapolis Press. Tables Turned. "The first time I tried to smoke a cigarette It .made me awfully sick." "You are getting even now." "I don't see how." "Why now they make everybody else sick when you smoke them. The i iving. 1F11B TOmT TEUS WONDERFUL CURE IN A STUBBORN CASE OF RHEUMATISM. Th Evidence Is Furnl.had by tan Sec retary of the Koard of Trade of Wellaborg, New York, and ' Catnitot Be Uoubted. i The popular secretary of the Wells- ; burg. N. Y., board of trade is Mr. W. j J. Dalton. and his statement to a re i porter regarding one of the most im- i portant events of hi3 life carries with it the greatest weight. It is unusual for person to be afflicted from childhood i with rheumatism out it is even I wonderful that there is a remedy so i exactly suited to the tratment of this stublvn disease that one hundred ' doses were sufficient to eradicate ! 11 In a case of twenty years' stand Ing. The proof that such a remedy is within the reach of ail rheumatic ' sufferers is found in Mr. Daltona own I words. He says: "I had been troubled with rheuma , tism all my life, even when a boy. It attacked me In the legs, arms and ( shoulders. The pain In the latter was particularly severe. I. of course. took medicine for it. but did not ; obtain permanent relief. One day about three years ago while reading ' a newspaper. 1 saw an advertisement of Dr. Williams- Pink Pills for Pale People and determined to give them trial. I had taken but three boxes of the pills when the trouble, which had been my affliction from child hood, entirely disappeared. "About a year later I had another attack of rheumatism which was brought on by working In a damp place. I remembered well what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People had done for me, so I Immediately purchased some. Strangely enough, just three boxes again cured me. and I have been entirely free from rheu matism ever since. I have told a num ber of people about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and they have taken them with most bene ficial results." I Signed 1 W. J. DALTON. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price. BO cents . box. or six boxes for J2.50. by Dr. Williams Medicine Co.. Schenectady. New York. Be sure you get the genuine: substitutes never cured anybody. Look for the full name on every package. Jarring Mrs. Von B. Mrs. Von Blumer My children have been to school now two terms and have made scarcely any progress. Mrs. Witherby How sad! And it's such a good school, too! Detroit Free Press. But It Is Worry All Around. As a rule a woman's dress worries other women more than it pleases the man who has to pay for it. Kansas City Times. T Bat Fieacrlptloa for Malaria rhll! and Fever la a bottleof Grove's Tastelen Chill Tonic- KUalmplr Iron and quinine In a taateleai form. No l ore. No fay. Price 30c. Mixed. Officer of Gaa Company But don't you know we can't afTord to give you good gas at any such price as that? Consumer What are you giving us now. hot air? Chicago Tribune. Condensed. "Of course." said he great star's manager, "it will cost something extra to display the title of the play on your electric light sign." "Oh. I don't know." replied the pro prietor of the theater, "we ain't spend In' no more'n we have to. We've ar ranged to shorten it to read '2 Gents of Verona." " Philadelphia Press. The remarkable n of OarfleM Tea. the ureal H KKU cure lor Coo ativatlun and Sirk Ilca-lache. U due toils healthful anion on ail the digests oreans. Entitled to Half Rates. Beggar Please give a poor old blind man a dime! Citizen Why. you can see out of one eye. "Well, then give me a nickel." Chicago News. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Strange Obstinacy. "It's funny how things work. re- maked the fluent man. "I have tried everything for Insomnia without the least relief. And the other evening 1 merely mentioned a few of the ex pedients I had tried, and every man in the room was faBt asleep before I had got half through." Boston Transcript. Two Big Pains aeem to be the heritage of the human family everywhere, tris: Rheumatism and Neuralgia but there W one aure and prompt cure for both, viz: St. Jacobs Oil WOMEN OF THE Regard Peruna as Their Shield Catarrhal Mrs. Bilva A. I-orkwood ,t ta Candidate for the Presidency. Mrs. Belva A Lockwood, late candi date for the Presidency. Mis. Belva A. Lockwood, the eml-' nent barrister, of Washington, D. C, ! is the only woman who has ever j been a candidate for the presidency j ox me unnea Estates, one is me Desi known woman in America. As the pioneer of her sex in the legal pro fession she has gathered fame and fortune. In a letter to the Peruna MeJiclne Company she says: 'I have used your Ptrjna both for myself and my mother. Airs. Hannah J. Bennett, now in her 88(h year, and I find It an inval uable remedy for cold, catarrh, hay fever ar.d kindred diseases; also a good ton!c for feeble and old people, or those run down, and with nerves unstrung." Vours truly, Belva A. Lockwood. Peruna cures catarrh by removing the cause, inflamed mucous mem branes. Dr. Hartman. the compounder of Peruna. once said, in a lecture to women: "A great number of women consult me every year. I often have occasion to say to these patients: 'I fear you have catarrh, madam.' Becoming Personal. Mr. Saphed Aw do you believe thawt monkeys talk. Miss Smawt? Miss Smart I know they talk I have heard them. Ohio State Jour nal. The Limit. J "You have no more sense than the law allows." he sneered. j Then he added, as a bitter after thought "and a prohibition law, at that." Whereupon the party to whom the remarks were addressed began frac turing a few statutes. Baltimore American. tie Koautlfnl t A clear. r:ean complf xion is the foundation of mil i-utr. t'a -a-cl i anrtr Cathartic make ami ke.p ihe sk n m 'it and xelrety. All dru g;:a 10". iv. To be Expected. "You fellows." complained the king of beasts, "don't seem to be properly impressed when 1 start to describe my adventures." "Ah:" replied the diplomatic hyena, "your stories are wonderful, but then we know you are a lion." Philadel phia Press. Wild and Woolly. There are 25 young lady clerks on he rolls of the Montana legislature. Hy learning a few songs, the Montana legislature -might exploit itself as a musical comedy. Washington Star. TO CI KK A OLD IN ONE DAI Take Laxative Kmmfl Quinine Tableta. All Iruevist rclu'd themcuev if it fails toenre. " w. drove's signature liou each box 2..C. The Secret of It. Ann Eliz.i There poes Mary Ma louey. She's .h' stylishest dressed girl of any of us. Maria Jane An' small wonder. Her missus is th' same size 's her, 'n em ploys th' best moduist in th' city Philadelphia Bulletin. I do not believe Pico's Cure for Con sumption hu au equal for couirhs ami cold,--John K. Hiiyli, Triniiv tarings. Iud., Pel. l.i. Rather Unkind. Gusher My wife has promised to wait for me at the gate of heaven if she is the first to go. Flasher Tut. tut. You shouldn't be so revengefu; as to make her wait through eternity simply because she made you wait while she fixed up sometimes. Li f e. BEST FOR THE BOWELS If ?rm hare n't a rcttutar, healthy morrmrnt of the bowttla eery day. you re sick, or will be. Kt'p your bowula o,Kn. and be well. Force. In Hit sbape of violent phytic or pill poison. Is dangerous. The tn.K.tiifKt. eislct. nio-,1 irti'ci waj uf keeping ta K w aim cit r ud clean 4a to Lake CANDY CATHARTIC TftADf MAM ft niOtSTTtVCO F1 Mutant, palatable. Potent. Taste Gocwl TViOfVX', Never Sicken. Weaken, or t. ripe. 10c. 6tk: Write for free .ample, and booklet on health. Address KWIta Krawe; I ow putty, th !, ImItnI, Haw Yark. SUla KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN MACHINERY, FARM Bee Line Buggies $65.00 AND UP. HENNEY, $90.00 and up. Iron cornors on IwnHi-s of nil our Henney and Bee Line liugyies. Heml ior I'ataloK, MITCHELL, LEWIS & STAVER CO. First and Taylor Sts. Portland, Oregon. Northwest POULTRY News, Vmi keen poultry t-end liM. 1W a moa. trial 1. 1 tbt Or l'aM'ir 'onth y, Sta. It, l..ril. 1 r. THIs where tOKft bent poultry in N.W. Hani jilt free. UNITED STATES Against Coughs, Colds, Grip and Diseases. They will generally reply, 'Oh, no, I never had catarrh. My nose is per fectly clear, and my breath is not bad. I am not troubled with coughing or spitting, or any other disagreeable symptom of catarrh.' 'But, my dear madam, you may have catarrh all the same. Catarrh Is not always located in the head. You may have catarrh of the lungs, or stom ach, or liver, or kid neys and especially you may have catarrh of the pelvic organs." The doctor went on to say: "I have been preaching this doc trine for the last forty years, but there are a vast multitude of Mra. T. J. Ballard, Eureka springs. Ark., Hired f a n? vere ca-e of catarrh ijy re n ia. women who have never heard It yet. Catarrh may attack any organ of the body. Women are especially liable to catarrh of the pelvic organs. There are one hundred cases of catarrh of the pelvic organs to one of catarrh of the head. Most people think, be cause they have not catarrh of the head, they have not catarrh at all. This Is a great mistake, and is the cause of many cases of sickness and death." Mrs. T. Pelton. 562 St. Anthony ave nue, St. Paul, Minn., writes: "Peruna lias done wonders for me. It has cured my headache and palpitation of the heart; has built up my whole syBtem. I cheer fnlty recommend Peruna to all suf ferers afflicted with catarrh. My moth er is never without Peruna. When one is tired and Mrs. T. Pelton. generally out of sorts, if Peruna taken it Immediately removes that tired feeling." factory results from the use of Peru- an. write at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President of the Hartman Sanitarium, Colum bus, Ohio. Accommodating Old Man. He I asked you father's consent by telephone . , She What was his answer? I He He said: "I don't know who you are. but It's all right," Harvard Lampton. In the Affirmative. The body of tne latest mysterious disappearance having been found at the bottom of a creek, we pause long enough to ask whether the mysterious disappearance ought not to stop dis appearing. Philadelphia Inquirer. Beginning of the End. They say the object in wanting those Danish West India islands Is to look after the eastern end of the Nicaragua canal. But in this thing it is not the end tnat is wanted, but a beginning. Philadelphia Times. tTITO Permanently Ourro. No fit 01 KIIO ft.r H.-s .U". iitrf lr. klia';reat NTT Rmutt. Sen.1 for PK EK S'l.OO trial Im.iii H.u.1 tj ma in. L a-H.it hiiM.Lid .ul Atvh3t..PtiUaJtllua.Pa In the New South. A federal gunboat has been ordered to Memphis for the special delectation of the old Johnny rebs during their approaching annual reunion. How "things has changed" since 1S61-5! Louisville Times. Disproved. Women Still Wagging Their Jaws. Gum-chewing is said to have in creased at a fearful rate among the women of Kansas. Before long the spirit of the men will be wholly broken. New York Press. Too True. -How do you Nodd How do you like your country home? Todd It's a great place. The only drawback is that I can't sell it. Harper's Bazaar. For Catalogues J. WALSH OREGON. PORTLAND FERRY'S .WrE Yon I f T Vnow what rl you're planting: when you plant Ferry Seeds. If you bur cheap eeeda you can't be sure. Take no chances gel Ferry's. lcalers every where aeU them. nua for 1901 Seed Annual mailed free. D. M. FERRY CO., Dstrolt, Mich. CUTLER'S CARBOUTE of IODINE A guaranteed Cure ior Catarrh and rTiM,"i IMPLEMENTS, Etc. TKt RUSStll. rOHMU'NO TRACTION atai bi RussiLi. 1 cu. SMia The "Russell" Compound ENGINE It here to stay. It is the Most Economical and Powerful Engine built. Write us for full particulars. RUSSELL & CO., PORTLAND and SPOKANZ. POULTRY NETTING. Buy from th manufacturer. lrlce lu lull rolls 2 feet witle, 1-4) feet long ll.rtA I ' " 2 .47 " " :l.:to ' - " " " 4.12 " " " " " 1.9i AU Kinds of Wire and Iron Work. PORTLAND WIRE A IRON WORKS 1V Front St., fortland. Oregon. iCJ MANTLES, SV ; i GRA TES Ipilipi! and rgij Address OCCUPY A HIGHER PLANE. AKVicaltur.il Laborers In KnirlandBet ter Off than Centurjr Ago. The agricultural laborers of to-day are certainly better clad, more luxur iously fed, have far more leisure, are better educated and are rapidly becom ing better housed than their forefath ers a century ago says the Nineteenth Century. And if these are the main constituents of happiness then they are happier. Ou the other band, their grandfathers and great-grandfathers were much more gay and light-hearted than the modern; they enjoyed their lives much more than their descendants do; they had Incomparably more laughter, more amusement, more real delight In the labor of their bands; there was more love among tbem and l.as hate. The agricultural laborer had a bud drunken time between twenty and thirty years ago and he has been growing out of that. A village sot Is now a very rare bird as rare as he was 100 years ago. Then the laborer could not afford a drunken ."ebauch lie had not the wherewithal. Ills master, the farmer, did drink, and some times deeply In the days when he was prospering. And for a few years after the rise of the laborer's wages some twenty-five years ago the laborer was the publican's friend. But hard drinking has been steadily declining and the habitual drunkard Is looked upon as a coarse brute to be avoided. As to other vices, things are pretty much ns they were: I am afraid rather worse than better. Perhaps the saddest characteristic of the men of the present, as compared with the men of the past. Is that the men of the past were certainly more self-dependent I do not mean Indepen dent In the sense in which that word Is used now more resourceful, more kindly, courteous and contented with their lot than their descendants are. I think I know something about the English peasantry of a century or two gone by. I think I know just a little about the agricultural laborer nowa days. I bear him a genuine love and feel with him a cordial sympathy, and there Is no knowing any men or any class of men whom we do not love and sympathize with. But as to the agri cultural laborer of the future I am sometimes inclined to doubt seriously whether before another century has ended there will be any such thing as an agricultural laborer to know. THOMAS K EARNS. The Latent Silver Kins to Enter the United fetate Senate. Though he represents a comparative ly unimportant State, Thomas Kearns, the new Senator from Utah, will be one of the most conspicuous figures in the upper house of the Fifty-seventh Con press. His great wealth is responsible for his election to the Senate. Like bis colleague, Clark, of Montana, he has wrested a fabulous fortune from the mines of the West, after tasting the bit ter cup of toil and privation for many years. Born in New Y'ork in 1S"2 he went to Nebraska as a young man and worked on a farm. He dug potatoes and drove a freight wagon. It occurred to him that in the Black Hills of Dakota he SENATOR THOMAS KF.AR.N1. might Hud a fortune aud thither he went. But he failed to strike It rich aud went to Utah in 1W3. In the fa mous Ontario mine In' Tark City he went to work with pick and shovel. From the savinjrs out of his weekly waives he accumulated euoujrh to buy himself a copartnership, with several others. In a claim near the Ontario mine. They met with success. Other claims on adjoining land was purchased and the whole combined Into the Silver King mine, lis product of silver, gold, copper and lead last year amounted to an even f l.OOO.tVO. of which one-fourth went to Senator Kearns. He is now worth about $r,0(!0.000. Kearns is exceed n jly geeuroiis. Not long ago he gave ?."HUHH1 for the estab lishment of an orphanage in Salt Lake City and he also gave flO.OOO toward the building of a new Catholic ca thedral In the same city. He is now building a marble palace In Salt Lake City, which will be one of the tiuest In the country. In marked contrast to the dugout which was h!s first Nebraska home and the humble cabin which shel tered him during his early career in Utah. Arizona's I'ino Foreest. Arizona is supposed to he almost an unbroken desert, but in reality It has the largest unbroken pine forest In the United States, covering au area of over 8.0OO square miles. This timber Is usually found at an altitude of be tween 5,500 anil 7,500 feet. The total quantity of pine timber tit for sawing purposes within the boundaries of the territory amounts to 10,000,000.000 feet, which cau supply the needs of a popu lous state for more than a century. Tim Mttleatiy New Crop of Hair. Timothy J. Muloahy, an engineer )n a Cleveland tannery, had been bald for years. Suddenly a little furze began to sprout on his head and a few weeks later his cranium was covered with a thick but short growth of hair. A doc tor investigated the matter and learned that he had been working under a re volving belt. Ills hair had been sprout ed by electricity. Metric System in ltusaia. The Kussiau government has decid ed to adopt the metric standard of weights and measures, and the Minis try of Finance Is now engaged in con sidering the time and maimer of intro ducing this reform. When a mau smiles when his tooth aches, he is reminded of the Spartan boy whose vitals were eaten out by a fox. The thing that a woman does around a house that annoys a uiau most is to dust. Y oAKA i 1 - Why a Woman im AbSo to Holt Sick Woman When Doctor Fall How gladly would men fly to wo man's aid did they but understand a woman's feeling-s, trials, sensibilities, and peculiar organic disturbances. Those thing's are known only to women, and the aid a man would give is not at his command. To treat a case properly it is neces sary to know all about it, and full information, many times, cannot be given by a woman to her .mily phy sician. She cannot bring1 herself to tell everything, and the physician is Mas. O.. H. Curriu. at a. constant disadvantage. Th!a fa why, for the past twenty-five years, thousands of women have been confiding- their troubles to ns, and our advice has brought happiness and health to countless women in the TJ-S. Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, 111., whose portrait we publish, advises all suffering women to use Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, aa it cured her of inflammation of the ovaries and womb ; she, therefore, speaks from knowledge, and her experience ought to give others confidence. Address Mrs. Pinkham's Laboratory, Lynn, Mass. Would Not Submit. Johnny Doesn't Uncle Henry like plum pudding? Mamma Yes; but the doctor won'l let him eat it. Johnny If I was as big as him, I'd like to see any doctor keep me from eating It. Puck. Too Much Imagination. The gentleman whose claim to a whole Florida island, based upon s Spanish grant, has been adversely considered by the supreme coui t. may be consoled by the fact that the-.e are numerous people who have found sad defects in their titles to Spanish realty, principally, however. In the matter of castles in Spain. Baltimore Herald. Compensation. "Yea, said .je author, get started writing a novel considerable sleep over it." "when I I do lose "Oh! well," exclaimed the critic who had a neat way of disguising a bitter dose of sarcasm under the ugar-coating of apparent flattery, "what is your ioss is your reader s gain." Standard. Thia aignature is on every box of tbe genuine Laxative Bromo-Qninine Tablets the remedy that cstrra n im one dmy What he had Heard. Tommy I'm glad I don't live cut in North Dakota. Arthui- Why? Tommy I have heard that they have thrahsing machines out there. Somerville Journal. Even There! "Miss Vinagree, they don't haze the freshies at Vassar College, do they?" "Don't they, though? They made me buy pound after pound of almond buttercups and stand and watch them while they ate them." Chicago Tri bune. HEALD'S BUSINESS COLLEGE. A Prosperous and Popular San Francisco Institution. Among- the Institutions Identified with th growth and dfvt-lopmcnt of Sao Francisco, lira Id's Buslnt'sa Collet holds a conspicuous place. Both as tnjsincus euterprls aud un educational l.intltutlofi. It has bet n ever slnt-s Its ortuQinitiou, uearly forty years a to, ex tremely popular and emineutly successful. It ts lu the clam of those solid and substantial In- ' stitutloiis lu wbh-b a city takes pride. Citizens point to It as one of the old reliable and thor oughly progresnive estaMlshnients, an Institu tion with a uvllnUe purpose and aa uuguets tlt'iied status. In couneftlnn with commercial r duration the name of llculd's is a household word on the i'acinc Coast and throiiKtiotit tbe country at larpe. In its own field of effort It la as widely known as Stanford or Berkeley, for It enrolls students from tbe four quarters of tbe globe. In ls!tt every county in California but four had students In Heaid'a Ilustlness College. The four not represented were Del Norte, las-n, Ora tips and Veutunt. Tbe register of die iu liege shows that In ltXX students were enrolled from t In fo Mowing States and Trritorles outside of Cal ifornia ; in many oases there were several rep resentatives from eaeb: Nev;.da. low:-, Wash ington, Orecon, Mont una, Colorado. I'tab, Idaho, Arlsoua, Kansas, Missouri, IVunsy Ivuiiia, Nt wr Jersey. Vermont. irgiuia and New Mi-iliv. lu liXH) students came directly to tbe s bool from Mexico, Canada, Jitp.ii), tbe Hawaiian Inlands, Yukon Territory, iSii-erla anu Central America. Enrollments were also made from Kngluud and Sweden. its large body of alumni constitute a most formidable promot , . for. e, and the steady growth of the coll, can be attributed lirgeay to the commndtug vot.-e of these tbo isautis of graduates, who know whereof tbey speak. For full Information write to im- ...-, for the 80-pase catalogue and coi.etre journnls. Address K. 1'. lleuld. trvsldeuf, 2 Poat treet ban Francis, o. Cat. A Disgusted Passenger. "No, 8ir," saiu a passeager on a steamship to the captain, "I am not sea sick, but 1 am disgusted with the motion of the vessel." Ohio State Journal. Could Be Done. "You wish to Bit for a dozen front view photographs, you say ?" "Oi do. Aa say,' "Well?" "Can't yei fix the pictures some way o the r-rip in toe back of me coat won't show?" Indianapolis Sua. His Philosophy. ghe I wish I could be as contented as you. He Oh ! I ain't contented only 1 don't think it's worth while to worry i about it." Puck. Piled clothing Dl-r OMLLLUW S.' DRY BV ' r- the vv Hardest ) STORM. Take No Substitutes. Free Catalogues Showing Fuiu Link or Gamhinti .-. d Hats. A.J. Tower. Co. ponton . m.5 . F. N. C. -No. 13 IV Ol. WHKX wrltlnr t dTrtUr mention thii papr i km- r I .. X- ar