Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, January 13, 1899, Image 3

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    fit. Jacobs Oil cures Rheumatism.
6t. Jacobs Oil cures Neuralgia.
St. Jacobs Oil cures Lumbago.
' St. Jacobs Oil cures Soiatica.
8t. Jacobs Oil cures Sprains.
Bt. Jacobs Oil cures Bruises.
St. Jacobs Oil cures Soreness.
St. Jacobs Oil oures Stiffness.
Bt. Jaoobs Oil cures Backache.
Bt. Jacobs Oil cures Muscular aches.
Patriotism.
"Aw, you know, you may celebrate
Christmas as best you know how,"
said the superoilious Englishman,
"but you cawn't oorne up to the old
English plum pudding you know.-"
"Sir," said the patriotic American,
with asperity, "our home made, or
still more the bakery-made mince pies
can produce as fine a line of nightmare
as any English plum pudding ever
boiled. "f Indianapolis Journal.
Rheumatism
Is one of the troubles peculiar to this sea
son, owing to the overworked condition of
the liver and kidneys, which are unable to
expel the Impurities from the blood.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is wonderfully suc
cessful In curing this disease. It neutral
izes the acid in the blood and permanently
cures the aches and pains which other
medicine fuils to relieve. Kemember
HOOd'S Manila
Is America's Greatest Medicine for rheumat'sr,
Hood's Pills cure sick headache. 25 cents.
Floated to the Roof. .
A rather ingenius method of re
placing the roof of a standpipe was re
sorted to recently by the water works
department at Napoleon, O. Some
time ago, in a violent wind storm, tho
roof was blown off, together with the
upper part of the ladder leading to the
top. Since then several plans for mak
ing the repairs have been consideied
but the following was decided upon as
the most feasible: The water was
withdrawn from the standpipe and a
raft was built inside. When the wa
ter was turned on the raft, laden with
workmen and their utensils, was grad
ually sent upward at the rate of 25 feet
per hour, it requiring five hours to
make the ascent. Hooks and pulleyB
were then attaohed to the pipe and ma'
terial was drawn up on the outside,
while the men performed their work,
using the raft for a platform.
If you want the best wind mill, pumps,
tanks. dIows. waeons. bells ot all sizes
boilers, engines, or general machinery, see
or write JOHN I'OOLE, foot of Morrison
treet, "ortlana, uregon.
Eveiyone who gets up an amateur
entertainment says that he will never
get up another.. He has a harder time
than the man who gets up a picnic that
is rained on. Atchison Globe.
When coming to San Francisco go to
Brooklyn Hotel. 208-212 Bush street.
American or European plan. Koom and
board $1.00 to $1.60 per day ; rooms 50 cents
to ii.w per aav: single meais zo cents.
Free coach. Chas. Montgomery.
A Yarmouth (England) man was
smoking a pipe when a spark dropped
into the tuck of his trousers and burned
a hole. He made a claim for loss un
der his fire insurance policy, and the
company paid the damage.
To Cure a Cold In One nay
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets,
All druggists refund money if it fuils to
cure. c.
Mot Ready for Sacrifice.
"The dootor would like to see you in
tide," said the maid to the caller in
the reoeption loom.
Not much," said the startled pa
tient. "He can't try an X-iay on me,
Philadelphia Times
Life insurance companies reject
about three-fourths of the applicants
who have been gymnasts, because it
has been found that most of them have
strained their hearts by excessive ex
eroise. "consulting a woman.
Mrs. Plnkham's Advice Inspires
Confidence and Hope.
Examination by a male physician Is
a, hard trial to a delicately organized
woman. ,
I She puts it off as long as she dare,
and is only driven to it. by fear of can
cer, polypus, or some dreadful ill.
Most frequently such a woman leaves
a physician s office
where she has un
dergone a critical
examination with
an impression, mora
or less, of discour
agement.
This condi
tion sf the
mind destroys
t . .-.a ine enecx or.
5"V);-'l advice; and
'ATmLiriif worse rather
than better. In consulting Mrs. Pink
ham no hesitation need be felt, the
atory is told to a woman and is wholly
confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's address
is Lynn, Mass., she offers sick women
her advice without charge.
Her intimate knowledge of women's
troubles makes her letter of advice a
and skill point the way to health.
" I suffered with ovarian trruble for
teven years, and no doctor knew what
was the matter with me. 1 had spells
; which would last for two days or more.
I thought I would try Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound. 1 have
taken seven bottles of it, and am en
tirely cured "Mrs John Foreman, 28
N Woodbcrry Ave., Baltimore, Md.
The above letter from Mrs. Foreman
U only one of thousands.
Wrtl-tf Alt frISf filS.
I 1 outfQ syrup, l uiei iouu. ,m
M3
mi)
Prepare for the Ice Crop.
In locating an underground Ice house
select a knoll In a dry place which rises
higher above the surrounding surface
than the Ice chamber is deep, so that
the bottom of the ice chamber will be
above the base of the hill. This ar
rangement Is shown by a sectional view
in the cut herewith In which a Is the
hill, b Ice house, c drain, d ventilator
and e trap.
It is necessary to maintain an ice
house as dry as practicable and to ex
clude all air currents from the ice. For
these ends the drain c is placed In the
bottom to convey away the drip and the
ventilator d at the top to carry off
vapor and damp air. The trap e in
drain prevents the entrance of air
through the bottom of house.. It Is giv
en special care in construction, the clay
being well rammed in about drain to
keep out air.
In construction the walls, consisting
of 2 by 6 Inches, set on mud sills 4 by 8
Inches, are boarded up Inside and out
AN UNDKBQROCXD 1CK HOUSE.
wlbh common lumber set close. The
space between Is packed full of saw
dust, tanbark or sand. Outside clay Is
rammed down tight against the walls
for a thickness of 16 to 20 inches. The
floor Is sloped a little toward the center
and loose boards are laid on the ground
with ends pointing to center. One-Inch
spaces are left between boards to form
channels to conduct waste wateT to
drain at center. The roof may have
gable ends or.be hipped. Rafters are
celled up below' with matched boards,
making a tight connection with Inside
sheathing of side walls. At peak of
roof a trap door ! formed, arranged to
be opened and closed from without;
over this trap door Is built the small
ventilator with oblique slats to freely
admit air, but keep out rain and sun.
Entrance to Ice chamber Is through a
trap door In roof; If vestibule Is built
over entrance It adds to efficiency of Ice
house. Farm and Home.
One-Mnn Croescnt Saw.
Most crosscut saws are made: with
two handles and are Intended to be
used by two men, but it Is frequently
desirable on the farm to have the saw
available for use by a single man.. Logs
to be sawed may be too large for the
bucksaw and a sharp, one-man crosscut
will saw almost If not fully as fast as a
bucksaw and without the back-breaking
effect. In any event, whether a
saw Is to be used by one or two men, It
Is an advantage to have one end of It
furnished with a two-handed handle.
Some small crosscuts are made with
such a handle at one end (Fig. 1), but If
not, the ordinary handle can be re
moved from any broad-bladed aaw and
a home-made handle Inserted (Fig. 2).
In use, the sawyer will of course hold
the mala stem with his left hand while
with his right he will grasp the lower
and forked part of the handle. He will
be surprised at his Increased command
over the working of the implement.
Ohio Farmer.
Taking Off Hide.
The National Provlsloner, speaking ,
of removing the skins from cattle and j
calves, gives the following hints, which ,
It will pay any farmer or stock raiser I
to take note of, for even though one '
may not kill an animal for eating pur
poses, no one Is so fortunate to never
lose one by accident or disease. In
skinning beef hides and calf skins keep
the back of the knife close to the hide
and draw It tightly with the left hand.
By following this suggestion the lia
bility to cut or score Is considerably
lessened. On the foreleg the knife
should go down to the armpit, so ca le.l,
and then forward to the point of the
brisket. On the bind leg the cut should
be made from the hoof of one down to
the back of the leg, senil-clrcularly
across one to the other, and on to the
other, and on the hoof.. The throat
should never be cut crosswise, and the
horn and tall bones should always be
removed. The operation of salting
Is equally important. To salt bides
thoroughly a water-bucket full of good
salt should be used to each sixty
pound hide, the quantity for large and
small hides being in proportion. After
this they should be rubbed and rolled
up. Independent of cuts and scores,
hides whlc are not taken off in the
Manner specified axe classed as No, 2a,
V
THK TWO-HAUDLED HANDLE.
and If dried on fenoes or exposed to
the sun or weather are only fit for the
glue-maker. A butcher's skinning
knife should always be used, and w
employe should be permitted to take oi
hides without one, as the loss from
one hole in a hide would buy several
such knives. These few rules are sim
ple enough, but their adoption meaM
a great deal to the country slaughterer.
Hillside Cultivation. . !
First take a level and tape line, go ,
80 feet from the top of hill, measure 30 ,
feet from top all round the hill, setting
blalico al vucu glutei luuu itiuc luo
level and see what kind of a slope you
have to deal with. If medium slope a
one-horse plow Is sufficient say a slope
of 2 or 3 feet but- for more would re
quire a deeper furrow. Kun twice to
each 30 feet of ditch. Throw dirt out,
leaving a ditch 2 feet wide, 1 foot deep
or a little over; on these banks sow or
plant blue grass or red clover to hold
the banks. Then plant two rows of
trees 0 feet from these ditches, prune
up to be bushy and thrifty, and then if
you wish you .can set grape vines along
the ditches about 2 feet off. Let rows
of trees be 15 feet apart each way, and
you have your orchard fixed so as to
turn yotir hogs in when you wish, to
pick up all the fallen fruit. By this
method you will make .both ends meet.
The hogs will become healthy and fat,
your trees will be free from borers and
many other Insects that raise In the
fallen fruit. The fruit will be much
larger and finer and free from rotten
spots, and the trees will be vlgorour
and healthy. Practical Farmer.
Ftate Care of Roads).
When the State aids the counties to
Improve the roads It simply taxes both
city and country for that purpose. A
road is really the property of the State,'
in one sense, as it Is free to the resi
dents of the cities and can be used by
any one. But the farmers should not
wait for State aid to improve the
roads, as they cannot afford to haul
their produce over roads that are al
most Impassable. The tax on each
farmer for road purposes is very small
compared with the benefits and advan
tages derived. Exchange.
Look to Details.
The time has come when the Ameri
can farmer must look to every detail,
both In production and in waste on the
farm, if he would keep abreast of his
enterprlslrrg neighbors. The day has
passed when there Is a good living in
the soil alike for the shiftless and the
energetic. Careless methods Which ob
tained on some farms fifty years ago
will not now stand the severe competi
tion of Improved machinery and intelli
gent management.
Changing a Spring' Location.
It often happens that a spring Is just
a triflle too low to permit water to be
brought from it to a house or barn by a
pipe. It Is sometimes possible in such
a case to follow the vein of water that
'supplies the spring back on to higher
SPRtXO'S LOCATION CHANGED.
ground and give it an outlet there, as
at x In the Illustration. Sufficient height
Is then afforded for carrying the water
to the building desired. This plan Is,
o! course, only possible where the wa
ter vein keeps near the surface. Or
ange Judd Farmer.
Horae Nntea, ( i
But few farm horses need shoes.
Wide tires save much horse power.
Axle grease pays 1,000 per cent, profit
Good blankets are profitable If wisely
used.
A sandy or muddy road doubles the
work.
A rise of one foot In ten doubles the
draft
Your horse needs water oftener than
you do.
The best drivers talk much to their
animals.
The whip costs more than It saves.
Tut It up.
Blinders are useless end Injurious.
Cut them off.
No horse should wear a shoe more
than four weeks.
Dark or damp stables cause low .spir
its and various diseases.
Quiet and patient drivers are worth
twice as much as any others.
Yelling and Jerking the bit ponfuse a
horse and advertise a blockhead.
The horse is man's Invaluable helper,
and should be treated as a friend.
You can get no more power from a
horse than you give blra In his food.
Your hqrse Intends to please you, but
does not always know your wishes.
If your horse's back la sore, use pure
cold water on It freely every time the
saddle Is removed.
Note nnd Comment,
In North and South Carolina cotton
culture Is giving way to that of to
bacco. Why continue to buy on credit and
give a lien on thecrop? Mortgages can
not be lifted In that way. ,
At the Lehl, Utah, beet sugar manu
factory Messrs. White and Haywood
are feeding 1,200 fine cattle dally with
100 tons of pulp and seven tons of hay.
This item Is for the purpose of indicat
ing the relative proportions of beet pulp
and hay as feed for cattle.
- The corn-growing sections of the
West are deeply Interested In the proj
ect to educate Europeans In the use of
American corn. Some State officials
have taken action to push the exhibit
of maize and its cooked products at th
I'axti Exposition.
THE EFFECT OF THE COLORS.
Mental Elevation or Depression Causef.
by . hsir Tones.
There are colors that are refreshing
and brondenlug, others that absorl
light and give a boxed-up appearance
to a room, others that make a roon:
with a bleak northern exposure or with
no exposure at all appear bright ani'i
cheerful; some that make a room ap
pear warm, some that make It cold.
If a celling is to be made higher leav
it light, that It may appear to recede;
Deepening the color used on the ceil
Ing would make It' lower an effect de
sirable if the room Is small and th:
celling very high. Various tones of yel
low are substitutes for sunlight.
The thermometer seems to fall six de
grees when you walk Into a blue room.
Yellow is an advancing color; there
fore a room fitted up in yellow will ap
pear smaller than It Is. On the other
hand, blue of a certain shade Introduc
ed generously Into a room will give an
idea of space. Red makes no difference
in regard to size. Green makes very lit
tle. ','..-
If a bright, sunny room gets Its light
from a space obtruded upon by russet
colored or yellow-painted houses, or
else looks out upon a stretch of green
grass, it should be decorated In a color
very different from the shade chosen
If the light shade comes from only an
uubroken expanse of sky.
If olive or red brown be used In con
Junction with mahogany furniture, the
result Is very different from what It
would be If blue were used. Blue
wrould develop the tawny orange lurk
ing in the mahogany.
Red brings out In a room whatever
hint of green lurks In the composition
of the other colors employed.
.Green needs sunlight to develop the
yellow In It, and makes It seem cheer
ful.
Ate During the Naval right.
It seems that Admiral Schley and
Captain Cook sat down to dinner while
tho Brooklyn was chasing the unfor
tunate but gallant Colon. There's
American assurance for you. At the
close of a tremendously Important bat
tie, wiiich settled a war and changed
the map of the world, the commanders
on the United States flagship, pursuing
at top speed the last of the enemy,
whose guns still belched defiance, sat
down to dinner, which, no doubt, was
served In style and with a strict re
gard for gastronomical eltquette.
"I will have a bit of the tomato soup,"
remarked the admiral. "Ah, that must
have been a five and oue-half-lnch
shell, eh, captain?"
"Sounds like It pass me the celery,'
replies Captain Cook.
With the cheese and black coffee and
cigars the enemy is overhauled and
driven ashore, the Spanish sailors dot
ting the sea like drowning rats and the
(aged Cervera tearing nls beard In the
igony of disaster. Then, after quaf
jfing a chartreuse, the American ad
imlral appears on deck and orders all
boats lowered and all efforts made to
save the lives of the saturated Span
lards.
There ought to be fairly good ma
terial In this Incident for a light opera,
There was "nothing half so naive or
amusing In "Pinafore." Kansas City
Star.
An Ocan Trolley Line.
An ocean trolley line, which reaches
nearly a quarter of a mile over the sen
conveying eitner passengers or mer
chandise. Is one of the, curious sights to
be seen at Bear Harbor, on the Pacific
coast, not far from San Francisco,
While the ostensible object of this
strange trolley Is the carrying of lum
ber from the rocky highland aboard the
big schooners which form the ocean ter
minus of the line, dozens of lumbermen
ride In a basket attached to the sus
pended cable on a wheel.
Of course, there Is no. electricity used
In connection with this novel, trolley.
The power of gravity does most of the
hard work. The lumber schooners come
from the Mendocino County ports. Un
til a year ago they were loaded by the
slow process of lighters plying to and
from the wharves. Hy the new trolley
system lumber In nny quantity can be
carried from any Island point over a
long and high railroad bridge to a sort
of cage, where the wooden cargoes nro
stacked, and thence to the deck of each
ship. The trolley line Is thrown from
the lumber cage to the vessels by means
of a rope shot from a mortar. New
York Evening Journal..
CravInK l'or March.
A write- lu the Woman's Signal
(Loudon) says: "I have been credibly
Informed that during a holiday at the
coast a servant girl consumed eight
pounds of starch, and she said the
habit was common. She also stated
that the craving for starch when ac
quired became so strong ns to be al
most Irresistible. 1 should be Inter
ested to know what starch contains to
excite such a craving. The girl I refer
to waj quite well aware of the bad
effects of the habit, and yet felt al
most unable to give It up.
Who Darns the Most Coal?
The consumption of coal per head of
population Is lowest in Austria, where
It Is only one-sixth ton per annum, and
highest In Great Britain, where each
person averages three and three-tenths
tons each year. In tho United States
the average is two and one-fourth tons
a year.
Bareheaded Spaniard.
There are parts of Spain where the
hat Is unknown except in pictures.
The men, when they need a covering,
tie up their heads aud the women use
flowers.
Charivari for the Jiabblts.
English farmers, vho know it Is
against the law to use .'rrets to drive
out rabbits, place In the burrow, a rub
ber hose with a tin horn on tlie end In
!
1
1
serted They they blow the born aud
bunny comes out in quick ordt".
I Under Two Flags.
He was a soldier of fortune and a
prisoner of war.
I "(Jotne,'' they said, "sign the pa
role!" But he only shook his head.
"Never!" he said, proudly, "but
I've no objections to signing the pay
roll." No, he wasn't in the war business
for sanitary reasons. N. Y. Journal.
- A Double Crop of Apples.
On a Lone Island farm is an apple tree which
bore two crops of fruit tho past year, and the
farmers are takini unusual interest in this
peculiarity of nature. Just as much interest
rias Dcen shown in Hostntter's stomach Bitters,
which has the peculiarity of enrine dvsnensla.
Indigestion, constipation and blood disorders
that other remedies fail to benefit. In chronic
cases it rarely fails, and it cures whenever a
cure is possible.
''I think that the prospect for peaoe
s very good," remarked one European.
Yes." answered the other, "unless
the czar and the kaiser get to quarrel-
ng ovei who deserves credit for bring
ing it about." Washington Star.
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURE 1
By local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion oi the ear. There is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness is caused Dy an in
flamed condition ot the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets In
flamed you have a rumbling sonnd or imper
fect hearing, and when it i entirely closed
deafness is the result, and unless the inflamma
tion can be taken out and this tube restored to
its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever j nine cases out ot ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deainess (caused by catarrh) that, can
not be cured by Hall s uatarrn cure, tteua tor
circulars, free.
r. J. tHcniii a uu., ioieuo,u.
Bold by Druggists, 75o
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Mr. Deadbioke "How are yon, old
man?" Mr. Eacout "Bad, very bad.
Came near leaving this earth. Why,
I've kept my room for over three
months." Mr. Deadbroke "Call that
bad? Why, man, I had to give up
mine the first time the landlady struck
for rent." Harlem Life.
TRY ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE,
A nowder to be shaken Into the shoes.
At this season your feet feel swollen, ner
vous and uncomfortable. If you have
smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen's
t oot-h-ase. it rests ana comiorts; makes
walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating
feet, blisters and callous Bpots. Believes
corns and bunions of all pain and is a cer
tain cure lor unubiains, sweating, damp
or frosted feet. We have over thirty thou
sand testimonials. Try it today. Sold by
all druggists and shoo ctorer, for 25c. Trial
pacW FEEE. Address, Allen S. Olm
sted, to Boy, N. Y.
"These are remarkably fine biscuits
of yours, my dear," said Mr. Norih
side, as he balanoed a specimen on the
tips of his fingers. Mrs. Northside
flushed with pride. "It is so good of
you to say so," she murmured. "Yes,
indeed," the wicked man went on; "I
have rarely Been any so heavy for their
size." PittBburg Chronicle-Telegvaph.
The Shortest Way.
The shortest way out of an attack of
neuralgia is to use St. Jaoobs Oil,
which affords not only a sure relief,
but a prompt cure. It soothes, subdues
and ends the suffering.
"What makes you say you think
there is going to be another war?" "I
didn't say I thought so," replied the
mild man. 1 only said I was afraid
so. I merely draw my conclusions by
observing people better informed than
myself. Magazine people used to wait
15 or 20 years before writing up a war.
The way they are rushing oopy on thie
one certainly looks to me as if they
saw more business ahead. "-Washington
Star.
UUI1 I UCbHIim
In seenring the UOLUMBIA AOKNOY
for lsSi one day's delay may result in your
competitor Retting it. we are the only bicycle
house having a delivery iiolnt in the North
west. Prompt dellverv of all orders assured,
Dealers who handle the OOLUM HI and
iv i r imwf one win nave a aouoie anvaw
aira over others who fit, nut.. Wa hnvn (in.
firoved the quality of our products, while our
ncreaeed output enables us to reduce our
prices, as follows:
Columbia Chainless 75 00 1 Hartfords $W 00
Columbia Models 67-58 ; 60 00 Vedettes, fltrletlv Up-to-Pato 2i 00
Columbia Models 45-49, '98 pattern, '99 Ira- We Job blevcle' sundries,
provenieuts , 40 00 1 Write fur terms and discounts.
POPE MANUFACTURING CO.,
Controlling Ortgon Washington, Montana and Idaho ' 132-81 Sixth St., PO rlllDd, Of
A SWORN STATEMENT.
I, C. R. Rollins "M. D.i f Grass Valley, Or., voluntarily make tho following statement:
After Having my tei-th extracted I have had live Mils made at iMervalsoi about nine months,
three ill I'oitiiind, one in Han Franoiseo and one in Spokane. With neither of the-ehave 1 been
able to eat a meal's victuals or even an apple or ripe peaeh. On December 111. 181IH, I bad my
sixth tet made by Dr. Hiryker, I. O. O. P. Temple, First and Alder, Portland, Or., and within
twenty minutes after the time they were put into my mouth I was able to eat a common hard
winter apple and a piece of dried venison, and
meal kIiico with the greatest comfort aud with
satisfactory lu every respect,
Kelerences: French Urns. Hank, The Dalles, Or.j Kherman Co. Bank
Holder, Sheriff of Hliernian Co.; Drs. A. 8. Nichols and Brother, Portland, Or
subscribed and sworn to beiore me this lath
(Kkal)
TEETH WITHOUT PLATES
llooin Crowned llrlflffP Made
jVulnlea fUllnfc- and extraction.
Dr. T. 11. White,
BUY THE GENUINE
SYRUP OF FIGS
... MANUFACTURED BT ...
CALIFORNIA Fid SYRUP CO.
nrKOTE THE NAME.
RUPTURE CURED.
We guarantee to tit every esse we undertake.
Donl put it off ; write for particulars at once,
li. WOOItAltit it Co., Kxpxrt Tru.l
t itter., 1US Second Blreet, Portland, Or.
A big yield of both
profit and satisfaction
will result if you plant
FERRYS Seeds
They an alway. the heat.
Do not a;iit nnr uimtl
tute buy uona but Perry,
holil hy all dHiikm. Writs Uit
tint l 1 Amiual-frt.
D.M.FERRY A CO.,Dtrolt,Mlch,
Pure Tea
in packages
at grocers'
Schillings
Venice 'Will Be Drained.
Venice without its waters would be
a far less piotureeque plnoe than it ac
tually is, says the London Chronicle.
And suoh a state of affairs, we are led
to believe, may eventually come about.
The regular increase in the delta of the
Po has been studidu by Prof. Marinel
li. Comparison of the Austrian map
of about 1823 with the records of sur
veys made in 1893 shows that the mean
annual increase during those years has
been about three-tenths of a square
mile; and from all known data it ap
pears that the total increase during sii
oenturies has been about 198 square
miles. The incease is continuing and
the Gulf of Venice is doomed in time
to disappear. No immediate alarm
need, however, be excited, for Prof.
Marinelli calculates that between 100
and 120 centuries will elapse before the
entire Northern Adriatic will have b
come dry land.
From Hetul to Foot. .
For all aoiie6, from head to foot, St.
Jacobs Oil has curative qualities to
reach the pains and aches of the human
family, and to relieve and cure them
promptly.
Insurance agent Pardon me, mad
am, but what is your a;e? Miss Ami
quate 1 have seen 23 summers. In
surance agent Yes. of courso; but how
many times did you see them? Chi
cago Daily News.
HOITT'S SCHOOL roil BOYS.
Now at Burlingnme, will remove to Its
beautiful new home ut Menlo Park. San
Mateo Cotintv, Cnl., nnd re-onen January
Kith, I8!. Address Ira O. Iloitt, Ph. U.,
Menlo Park, Oil. -
A new kind of cloth is being made
1 T I it 1 1
I in uyutiB iioiii uie iiuwu ui nuns, uiicki
and geese. Seven hundred and fifty
grains of featheis make rather more
than a square yard of light waterproof
cloth.
No household is complete without a bot
tle of the famous Jesse Moore Whiskey, It
is a pure and wholesome stimulant rec
ommended by all physicians. Dou't ne
glect this necessity.
Miss Mary Kingsley, tho daughter
of Charles Kingsley and the must fam
ous modem woman explorer, is Bald to
be contemplating another trip thiough
Central Alrica.
I believe Piso's Cure is the only medi
cine that will cure consumption. Anna
M. Ross, Wiiliamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, 1895.
Originally the custom of raising the
hat was. a sign of submission, imply
ing that the person uncovered plaoed
himself at the mercy of his foe.
TITS yennanmUy Cured. No Hunt ntrvonan!
N I after first day ue of tir. Kane's ureal
Nerve Kenton r. Send for i'KKK B4MO trial
jotUe and irratlsa. Dft. K. H, KUKK, Ltd., lUt
Irch JU'WC, Ihiladelpnla, fa.
The measurement of a degree of lati
tude In Spitzbergen is a Swedish pro
ject, Russian oo-oporation to be Invited.
a i
W
Columbia Model 40, u.
at this time, December lHlh, have eaten ever;
r
no trouble at all,
I hey are a pr
i ricct lit and .
:. li. KOI.UNH, M. D.
Wasco, Or.j Win.
nav of liectunher, mm.
JOHN OOll.llKK, Notary Public for Oregon
MACHINERY
For Mills, Mines, Shops and Farms! Steel Ixig.
glnfe-and HolKtlng Knitlne.i Ho. Clilsel
Tooth Haws, Albany Orcaae.etc.
TATUM &BOWEfl
27 to 35 First Street Portland, Or.
tU-3t Fremont Street, Han Francisco,
YOUR LIVER
Is it Wrong?
Get it Right
Keep it Right
Moore's Revealed Remedy wllldolt. Three
doses will wake you feel better. Get it from
your drnjrtrlst or any wholesale drug house, or
kom Stewart & Holmes Drug Co., Baattla,
CURE YOURSELF!
I'HKaV 1 . I " Ilia M (or unnatural
1 1 u i iliri. 1 oli'liarK, liillaijiiiiMloin,
mrtimw! Irrltatitma ur ulrermious
lo llfUmrt. of III II CO US llifllfibr.ntd.
frtv.Du aootu'oa, Pawlem, and not aitrla
'heEmnj Chem'om Do. ut isono.
0IN0lNTI,0.
CI.
P. N. U.
NO. .
WHEN writing to adv.rtls.r. pUas.
IT auauiia tuis j
papor.
Best
25)
r"J Mold by ItruvcUta,
per nt In plain urappor,
JT. U fl.no, t.r 3 buttle,, n.7.
M Circular .put on riHiuoat