Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, March 03, 1899, Image 6

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THE SONG THAT WAS LOST.
There wan a poet born whii had deep In
his heart a Bong;
He sprang from the soil-ho plowed the
fields in spring;
liut he conned the songs of the ancient
bards he studied well and Iour,
And ever he sang to himself the song
that God gave him to sing!
And he loved the mother who bore, him,
and as they toiled away ' 1 v
He thought of the joy she would have to
hear him sing his song some day.
In secret moments of the night his heaven-(
ly song He wrote
Letter by letter, word by word, and,
likewise, line by )ine; j.
And he sang it unto th$ beasts of the field;
he caught the soiig bird's note
And held it fast, and in his eyes was the
light that is divine ; ...
The song that he had been given to sing
he poured from his. heart, and then
He ran to sing it to her whose love sur
passed the praise of men, '
' ...
He sang the song the song sublime that
had burst from the .depths of his
heart;
She dumbly heard Jilm sing until the
last note died away; -
"Ah, but," she sadly sighed, " 'twill bring
you nothing in the mart,
For men have little gold to give In trade
for songs to-day!" . ,
He gazed into her face and saw but cold,
sharp wrinkles therV-
His song became a sob he turned, and
plowed on iq despair,' .
Cleveland Leader. , : 1 .' , : ,( ..'., ,i
THE ARTIST'S DREAM.
mwo
"f 1 Wn nnnla u-lth Kir o l..l
" " ' " '.I UkIL a. oiUmIV
thought,
Two hearts that beat as one."
Ralph Thorndyke was possessed of
a ureumy, poetic nature, far beyond the
ordinary. He owned a pretty photo
graphic studio, and his business was
congenial to his artistic temperament;
there was so much lu It to cultivate
love of the beautiful
He had reached tlae age of 27, "heart
whole and fancy free," or apparently
bo to his friends. To-day Is his birth.
day, and he Is thinking Intently of a
realistic dream of the night Just passed.
Just a year ago a vision came to him;
a face not beautiful, but strong and
earnest and sweet. She appeared to him
in a portrait which he seemed to be
looking at. The little brown hair was
in natural waves over a smooth fore
head, and the calm, steadfast eyes
were of a deeper hue.
Now, a year later, the same face had
again appeared, and Italph Is thinking
of the messuge that came to him. "Pa
tience, one more year, and 1 will come
to you." He finally awoke from his
reverie and started for his studio; on
the way he picked up a package from
the sidewalk. Soon reaching his cozy
little office, he opened It, to find two
photographs by Barony In a folding
raine; one was a draped figure, the
'it band raised to the foreheadMhe
'voflle, the other, ahltne same
''n eyes which haunted hihi
'"he brown bull', with golduu
'"h lights; the fair com
' Into a wild rose
cheek. The photo
i water color,
soon made
'ytook his'
Vevelop,
k hla
'our-
id
I
1
When the ladle were .about to go tie
' said: "I would like to have jqji, ladles
visit my sanctum sanctorum," to which
they gave a glad aasenf. , ,;
when they entered thetoqjp-Jfarl'
gave a violent Btart, for, facing the
trance, was her own figure in life sijse;
under the portrait the words, "Looking
Into the future." She Mushed then
turned pale, and her eyes met Ralph's
with something like recognition. Mrs.
Clareniont saw' .that tere4.w.assome
thlng in the afr and retired gracefully
from the' office with a remark about
some errand that must be attended to
immediately. --TVif .M?
. Ralph advanced toward Marion, and;
taking her; hand, said: "I was the for
tunate finder of your photos and have
had this portrait for, iny dajly cpnipan
ion a year;.' May.X hope 'In the future
to possess the original? We have, , in
reality .'known each other two years
and need not measure time , in the cop:
Ventional way;' I feel 'that I ' pofesess
your'soul's mate. Is it not .tr$!t"
' Marlon gave him a glance, -lull ',VT
faith and trust, saying: "Even so, my
heart ls yours." It is needless to add
that'; Marlon never went into another
trance. What could it 'be?;, Did her
soul leave its earthly surroundings 1ft
seek its mate? She believes that it did;
and found it, too. Boston Post. . ,' . ; -
RECENT
INVENTIONS,
be - thoroughly
Tobacco pipes can
cleaned by a new device consisting of
a pump to be attached to the bowl of
the pipe to draw water in, through the
stem and forcibly discbarge it to dis
lodge the impurities.
The skin can be quickly removed
from potatoes by a new, cleaner formed
of a tubular net of sharp cords hav
ing a number of knots on the Inner sur
face, the tubers being placed in the
not and shaken rapidly.
A handy cup for eggs boiled In the
shell has slots near the edge for the
insertion of a tableknlfe to remove the
top of the shell, the cup having a re
movable lining so as to bold eggs of
different sizes.
For use in curling the hair a newly
designed instrument has the ends of
the tongs flattened, to be heated and
press the hair after It has been damp
ened and wound on curl papers or
crimping pins. ,
An Australian has designed a new
diving dress in which steel rings are
woven into the cloth or sewed between
two thicknesses, for the purpose of re
sisting the pressure of the water at
great depths.
A German Inventor has patented a
clock for attachment to telephone in
struments, which has levers to be Bet
for the number of minutes' conversa
tion desired, the connection with the
other instrument being broken when
the time expires.
Shoe laces are to W madirWUhtfcore
of hemp or other strong cord Inclosed
In, a loosely woven casing, the core ex
tending into a tongue of coiled wire or
86ft brass at either end, thus forming
string which will not wear out easily.
JAMES COULDN'T IMAGINE.
A Borj that a New York Club Woman
Telia About Herself.
V'HerA is a good story which a club
womauXtells about herself:
, "At one time," sho says, "we had a
iotpred butler, who stayed with us for
years, audvwho admired my husband
Immensely. "He thought that Dr. H
was a iimrvelif manly beauty, as well
as the embodiment of all the virtues,
dniuetitie, professional, and otherwise.
Qf course, I quite agreed with the but
Vr ou this polut, but the fact is I some
inos pined to have him pass his en
hmlasiie compliments around to the
jpuily, and not bestow them all on the
ctor. So one morning, . when Dr.
had just left the breakfast table,
nd was even then to be seen, an lm
oslug picture, as he stood on the front
tops drawing on bis gloves, I remark
1 to James:
" 'Dr. U Is a handsome man, isn't
r - '
"'Yes, ma'am. 'Deed an he is,
la'am!' with gratifying enthusiasm.
"Then, hoping to get a rise from
ajmes, I added with an absent-minded
if, as If I scarcely knew what I Bald,
ut was Just uttering my inmost
)oughts:
l" 'How in the world do you suppose
at such a handsome man as Dr. IJ
jr happened to marry such a hoiiiely
mum as I am?" T
Well, James Just stopped short and
led his eyes and shook his head lis if
gave It up. Then he ejaculated:
'Heaven knows, ma'am 1' "-v'ew
rk Sun. i
A LAKE PILOT'S ' LEO.
U Prevention of Oonautnpt'on
Plr William Broadbent, who Is one of
.e most eminent authorities onj con
.miption iu Great Britain, 1b prescrlb
ig fresh air as the best of proven
tves, day and night, summer anj wln
or. He says everybody ought to! sleep
rlth the window open and the bedroom
night to be as fresh In the morning as
a lien it Is entered at night He be
loves that if we all slept with open
vlndows the mortality from eonsmnp
lon would be reduced by oue-half from
.his alone.
Llve'y Dojre Ahead.
jShe I can't understand why none of
Eit) neighbors have called on us. We've
boon here three months now and not a
soul has come to welcome us to the
neighborhood.
He Oh, well, never mind. As soon as
Vy find out that I'm a railroad man
id can get passes for my friends
tey'll not permit you to get lonesome.
An Impreailon. '
"Are those people holding an Invest!
'tlon?" said the tourist
'Well, they are supposed to be, But
me of them behave as if they iwere
yinn to let to of it" Washligtoa
nr.
Hew It Folved the jiystery of vthe
Wreck of the Fnsun 'E.jFeck. ,
"We are never amazed "yhen vessels
go aground aud are wreckecT'on: Lak:
Krle during the galesil)ati'e common
on that treacherous ifcatein; fpj;, &b'Tt
pect such things t.ben' eWA 8. lake Kij
per, "but when onc'-jlsf grounded on a
clear day and wrecked on a gourse as
clear as the day an4 ln;ljfthaB$g;tf a
pilot, that knows-thrground -like a Ijoot
we nararaPy; ypnde ;a little and want
to know the' whys , and,,whjrefqres.
Such was the cae ;of . the .pTOfjeller
iSflsan E. Peck that wfeht aWpii&near
Bar Point and waJTfost with a $23,000
cargo. f
' The;: captain of, tii'e" tWtfn.,a(f
alledaccecislnlQr htihdteas ,i(-A))ic4
between Point Pelee ah'd Bari Point Q.n6
iii liirkinds o, weather, and this time
h?, had a wheelman rwh6 was known
from oiife-' etido'f ' the lakfe Wthe ot&er as
one of (he;.most expert 'navigators iii
tlie. lake, business. He had'been lying
Up a lqrig tnie for the .very good rea
son that ;o wing, tp, an accident to one
of llls egs thaf iegrhad' to be amp
tated .to save h!s.life. ,The lost, mem
ber wa replaced by an artificial, leg
and then the pilot was. ready to take
his post at the wheel again.' ,' His first
service :aftei;;njs misfortune was this
trip pf the Susan E; Peck, and he ran
her aground. . ' ' , . :
'"The puzzle to eygrybpdy was how
It was possible for the propeller, han
dled by a man of such skill and expe
rience, on a straight course only forty
miles long and with every sailing con
dition favorable, to leave her course.
The pilot was the most puzzled and -
astonished person of all. He soon got
another vessel, and this one he ran In j
sucn an erratic manner tnat he was
compelled to give her up and his use
fulness as a pilot was gone. He and
others went to investigating to see if
they could discover what was wrong
with his seamanship. After a while
they discovered what they believed was
the trouble. In the pilot's artificial leg
a great deal of steel had been used lu
the Joints and other places. Sitting
close to the binnacle, as he did whllo
steering, this steel deranged the com
pass so that it threw the wheelman
way off his reckoning and led to the
wrong piloting that had wrecked the
Susan E. Peck and endangered the oth
er vessel that the wheelman navigated
subsequently. This was what they ar
gued, and to demonstrate the correct
ness of the theory the pilot took charge
of a vessel without wearing his false
leg. Everything worked to a charm,
The mystery of the Susan E. Peck M-as
solved and the pilot was restored to his
old place In the confidence of Lake Erie
skippers and vessel owners." Cleve
land Plain Dealer.
LAW AS INTERPRETED.
'.A woman who undertook to get on a
mixed train at a distance from the de
pet while the train was being made up,
without any Invitation to get on It at
that place, Is held, In Jones vs. New
Xork Central & H. R. R. Co. (N. Y.),
U L. R. A. 490, to have no right of
action for Injuries sustained by the
sudden jolting of the car as. she was
getting on.
The rule that a drawee bank Is bound
tp know the signature of Its depositor
Is applied In First National Bank of
Belmont vs. First National Bank of
Barnesvllle (O.), 41 L. R. A. 584, with
the effect of denying the right of a
bank which has paid a forged check to
obtain repayment from the party to
whom It paid the money.
A contract for a rebate on purchases,
on condition that the purchaser deals
exclusively with the seller for a cer
trtln time, Is held, in Dennehy & Co.
vs. McNulta (C. C. App., 7th C.) 41
L. R. A. 009, to be unenforceable with
out proof of the performance of the
condition, even if that was Invalid as
tending to a monopoly, since that was
the sole consideration, and If that fail
ed the contract failed.
The payee of a check which Is stolen
from him and put in circulation by
fprgery Is held, In Shepard & M. L. Co.
vs. Eldrldge (Mass.), 41 L. R. A. 017, to
be eBtopped from collecting It If with
knowledge of the facts he misled the
drawer to his prejudice and thereby
placed him In a worse position than he
would otherwise have been In with
reference to the assertion or protection
U his rights.
W orktnit Hours Abroad.
A Turkish working-day lasts from
siuirlso to suuBet, with certain Inter
vals for rt treshmeut and rest. In Ser
vile, the pr uclple of Individual conveni
ens rule i every case. Eleven hours'
wv'rk Is the average day's labor In Bel
it ra; butjbrewers' men work from ten
to; seventeen hours; bricklayers, six
teeu; cabinetmakers of Brussels aud
Ghent often work seventeen hours a
Upy with oue-half hour for noon; and In
lining districts women are often kept
j i truck loading and similar heavy la
UP for fourteen hours. The normal
.(ji kdayithroughout Saxony Is thirteen
tars. In Baden the medium duration
day labor. Is from ten to twelve
Utiirs, but in some cases It often ex
cetils this, sometimes rising to seven-
teen hours In some trades. In many
Baden factories Sunday, work is the
fl
1 She Dislikes Formalities.
; A good story is told of the Princess
Maud of Wales. After a long season of
attending the Inauguration of wings of
hospitals, liomes, exhibitions, bazars,
nc, she 4 reported to havea!d to her
father aiuf mother: "What a blessing it
must havi been to have been born a
priucess iu the days when they bad
nothing Iq open and shut," a sentiment
with whicji the Prince and Princess of
Wale no 'doubt Iu their inmost hearts
gretd.
Foo!
Liter.
St Jacobs Oil enrea Rheumatism. '
' St. Jacobs Oil cures' Neuralgia;
'' 8 1. Jacobs Oil cures Lumbago.
St. Jacobs Oil cure .Sciatica.... . V
6t. Jacobs Oil cures Sprains. " '. '
St Jacobs Oil oiires. Bruises.' ' :.
St. Jacobs Oil otires. Soreness.
' fittilacnba Oil mirou Stiff
8I3-' Jao61w.'0iX!W? M'ola'i aches'.;
. : ''Amongnovelists; the palnT'for' the
greatest- qjiantjtyf writing, so far as
ee amount iSiCocerned.'Ts generally,
'coii0eJed'tc.OliMeiDi.(ik"erls!; " ,
o ij '.. ;... . ' .4.. -jw
,-vi's.;- .
.'''V:-.,,,-.' ' !.?-' ... ' :..
;,vi'.
II '. 'SSJB
;:-'
I But jfprfeQrariiaror ''sleep.'-;
icssness,' ana, tnat unnat
ural weakness and weari-
! and musclea reliable tonic
is needed, .like Hood s bar
arjarillaj wji'ich' gives
sweet, refreshing sleep and
overcomes that .tired feel-1
ing. : It has "the endorse-
ment of "millions as the
best medicine money can.
buy. Take only Hood's.
C. Q. APPLEGATH,
MKAO CUTTta-
I. WITN ftlLVCIIPIBLD.
A. PRA8IL,
pommmiv oiaisniii rrma
triTN MHAb PllkO. OHIO,
APPtEGATH & PRASIL
Fashionable furriers :':f " :
'
Sealskin Garments
a Specialty
RtM-OD(i.lN.IINB MPItAlNa
, , AT MODCHATC PRICta
,1
4 j7lH--'MTer ,
143 J HJ R D JatR E ET,
portlandHorbt.
-.jt.jt
I OTTO - SCHUMANN
. . MAN UFACTUREB. OF '
Moniments ami: Heaqstones
A woman would never think of sing
ing In a street car, but men apparently
have no hesitation in giving vent to
their feelings in merry whistling in
such a public place.
CATARRH CANNOT BE CUBED
wim local applications, as they cannot reach
the seat o( the disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutionaldisease, and in order to cure it
you must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca
tarrh Cure Is taken internally, and actsdlrectly
on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Ca
tarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was
prescribed by one of the best physicians In this
country for years, and isa regular prescription.
It is composed of the best tonics known, com
bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di
rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients Iswhatpro.
duces soch wonderful results In curing oatarrh.
Send for testimonials, free. ,w
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprt., Toledo, 0.
Bold by druggists, price 75c.
Halls Family Fills are the beet
,Est!mati,iHrt)islied,on all kinds of MaxbleOranite and Building
'- Work, s;, Drawings m
Portland, Oregon
Silver Medal Awarded at
Portland Mechanics' Fair
I have a plant of pneumatic tools, the first in the Northwest, and
am now in a position to do work better and more reasonable
es!
Well, no doubt.it is caused by
imperfect eyesight, as about seven
times in ten that is the trouble. It costs you nothing to find out, if
- -. you will go and see . -
A. N. WMGIIT - - THE IOWA JEWELER
393 riorrison St.. Portland, Oregon
Who has Dr. A. A. Barr, late of Minneapolis, a Scientific Optician, in charge of
the optical department, and you can consult him and have your eyes
examined free of charge. TRY it may be your trouble.
A West African king is the ownor of
an umbrella which measures Bis yards
in diameter and affords shade for a
table with 80 diners.
MRS. LUCY GOODWIN
Suffered four years with female tron
bles. She now writes to Mrs. Pinkham
of her complete recovery. Read her
letter;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: I wish you to
publish what Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, Sanative Wash
and Liver Pills
have done for
me.
I suffered
for four years
with womb
trouble. My
doctor said I
had falling of
the womb. I
also suffered
wita nervous
prostration, faint,
all-gone feeling's, palpita
tion of the heart, bearing-down sensa
tion and painful menstruation. I could
not stand but a few minutes at a time.
When I commenced taking your med
icine I could not sit up half a day, but
before I had used half bottle I was
up and helped about my work.
I have taken three bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and
used one package of Sanative Wash.
and am cured of all my troubles. I feel
like a new woman. I can do all kinds
of housework and feel stronger than I
ever did In my life. I now weigh 1 31 X
pounds. Before using your medicine I
weighed only 108 pounds.
Surely it Is the grandest medicine for
weak woman that ever was. and my
advice to all who are suffering from
any female trouble is to try it at once
and be well. Your medicine has
proven a blessing to me. and I cannot
praise It enough. Mrs. LuctGoodwik,
Holly, W. Va.
J. HEIMRII KESSLER, 171. D.
Look Here, Yonnii Man!1
Your looks teU oa you. Can keep It
' wuue. ocior us too late.
go aud see or write to this old doc
tor. H hafl hn Im.(1k ..!.
cases for over year and perfectly
icimoic rurnunei ma own meal
cine and tells no tale. '
of the Old St. Louis Medical and
Surgical Dispensary, 330H Yamhill
Street, Portland, Oregon, positively
guarantees to remove
TAPEWORM
f la any stage without loss of Urn from business.
CnriTlfiiptC!l Cured by an old German remedy. This
I flflLUJHAllUillrtmtdv was sent to Dr. Keufer bv
1 sriaud ia Berlin. It has nerer failed, and we guarantee it. J
dLU uOHhS 1 fT t d"' curca 00 difference now
PUTVifF Diseases. This doctor guarantees to cure any
InlTnlD case of SvDhiHs. Onunrrhra f.lt fitrloturaa
l cured, no difference how long standing. iiDermatorrkea.
Lou of Manhood, or Nightly Gmmissions, cured pennant-'
tune Abuse effectually cured in a. short
YfllTWIl Wrif Your tmn n1 ,0"le 0' youth can bej
1 UUflU mliri remedied, and this old doctor will give youl
j wholesome adyice and cure yon make you perfectly strong J
and healthy. You will be amazed mt his succeaa In rurln
k Spermatorrhea. Seminal Louri. Nicrhtlv Hmmiulnn. !( J
oiner enects. j,
KIDNEY AND, URINARY COMPLAINTS.
? painful, difficult, too frequent, milky or bloody urine, vtn.i
, natural diachara-es. rarefullv treated and rmintl. cr.H
r Piles, Rheumatism and neuralgia treated by our new remedies 1
ratients treated In any part of the country bv his home
'Stem. - Write fuU Particulars enclose ten sc sUmni and 1
. svetem.
we will answer you promptly, hundreds treated at homel
l woo are union 10 come 10 me Uty.
READ THIS
Take a clear bottle at bedtime and uilnate In th hnttt. J
set aside and look at It in tha mnrnlnv If 1. ia -n
has a cloudy settling m It, you have some kidney or b ladder
disease, and should be attended to before yon get an lucur. 9
able Disease as hundreds Die every year from Bright! Dii-1
Address Of Call DR. KESSLER. 2d and Yamhill
Uivest first and Investigate
MACHINERY
LM!jl!tWlnt'i jh?P' Farms; Bteel Log
ging and Hoisting Englnet; Hoe Chisel
Tooth Saws, Albany Grease, etc.
TATUM&BOWEN
27 to 85 First Street Portland. Or.
U-36 Fremont Street, San Francisco.
D?
INCH
fEMAUE
IPItl
IS
Relief at Last
Praised by thousands of
satisfied ladles as safe, al
ways reliable and without
ant-oual. Auk drufrgist for
Pr. Cartel's French Female
Pills In metal box with
rntnAh 71 -r r.n tl In ttlna
White and Red. Insist on bavin (he genuine.
"Relief for Women," mailed FREK in plain waled
letter with testimonials and parttoulara. Addrens,
FRENCH 0RU6CO., 381 and 383 Psari St., m!
BUY THE GENUINE
SYRUP OF FIGS
... KANTTTACTUllKD BT ...
CALIFORNIA FIQ SYRUP CO.
trWOTI THE NAME.
UUKiS WHtHC All HOt fillS.
Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cat I
In lime. 8old by dniirrtns.
muz:
nio
Dipabt TIME SCHEDULES Arriti
roa ' Fran Port and. raoa
Fast Salt Lake, Denver, Fast
Mail Ft.W'orth, Omaha, Idail. 1
:00 p.m. Kansas City, 8t 6:i5p. m.
Louis, Chicago,
and East.
Spokane Walla Walla, Bpo- Bpokan
Flyer kane, Minneapo- Flyer
1:10 p.m. lis, St. Paul, Du- 8:30 a. at
lnth, Milwaukee,
Chicago and East '
S.-Ota.m. Ocean Steamships 4:00 p.m.
Froai Portland.
Sail every fire days.
t.OOp.m. Celanbla River 4:00 p.m.
ti. Sunday Iteamera. Xz. Sunday
Saturday
W.uo p. m. To Astoria and Way
Landings.
:00 a.m. WlllaaieH River. 4:90 p.m.
Ex. Sunday Is. Sunday
Oregon City, New.
berg, Salem dt Way
lAudlnga.
7:00 a. m. Willamette end Yam- t:p.m.
Tues.. Tour. kill Rivera. Hon.. Wed.
end Sat, aad Frl.
Oregon City, Day
ton, A Way Land
ings. :00 a.m. Willamette River. 4:Wp.m.
Tues., Thar. Tues., Thar,
and oak Portland te Corral- and Sat.
lis Way Land
lags. Lr. Rlparla Snake Rlvtr. Lv.Lewtstoa
1:4.1 a m. t:4a. m.
Daily Rlparia to Lewlston Dally
Bx.Batnrday . Ex. Friday
t. K. D0NALD6ON, Agent, Oregon City.
W. H. HURLBURT,
CJenarai rauesjer Agent, fortland. Or.
' EAST ND SOUTH x
VU i
The 8ha8ta Rout
or THS
SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO.
Rnnth.
00 r.U.
:12 p.m.
7:46 a.a.
Express Trains Leave Fortland Daily.
Lt
Ar
Portland
Oregon City
Baa Franolsoo
Ar
Lv
Lt
North,
t:MA.a
l:4SA.I
or.
Tha above trains stop at all stations betweep
Portland and Salem, Turner, Manon, Jeffer.
son, Albany, Tans.nt, Shedds, Haltey, Harris,
kurg, Junction City, Irving, lugene. Cresweil.
Cottage Orove, Drains, and all MaUena troa
F.oseburg to Ashland, lnoluslve.
EOSSBURO MAIL DAILY.
:H0A,lt. , Lr Portland Arid-MB
i a7i.il. Lt Oregon City It l:NM
:S0 r. a. Ar Roseburg Lt I T: 3
DINING CARS ON OQDIN RODT1.
PULLMAN BVFFST BLIMPMMt
AND
SECOND-CLASS SLEEPIN8 CARS
Attached to all Through Trains.
Wee Side Division,
Between POBTLAND aad CORTALLII
ataiLTaaiv BaiLTiixcimuRDiT.)
At Albany and Corvalils aonneetwlth trail
of Oregon Central (astern R, R.-
XralttTKlM BillTlUClMSOXDAT.I
t-Mf. M. Lt Portland Arll-wii.
t:MA W
4:NA.fi
!f-J. Ar McMlnnvllls Lv
:80 P. M. I Ar Independence Lv
Xatn and tickets to eastera polnta aad)
Buropa also JAPAN. CHINA, HoSoLIILfl
tad AUSTRALIA, can Ve obleed "rom
C E. BOID, Agent, Oregoa CIS
B. EOIHLIR, C. H. MARKHAM,
Manager, Aatt. 6. F. 4 P. Ageaa
PorUaad,Or. ParUandVOr.
YOU OWE.
It to yonraelf. yonr family, your friends and ta
all you benefit to earefulfy and considerate?? laS
vU.U the ..ru. of Vlf ORR i l
for those who need a cure. There la no expert
time, ft lt perfectly harmless, and may always
be relied on. It is the .jueen of eureL a H
reaches the nidu, ef all dlSeaVes, and will eori
yoa when all other remedies haw W&iflla,
j9B .. " catch-penny hnmbugtuj
frauds only to grow older and worse. Do not
E.Ik"! V FZ " Vita-Ore coiet
tp the sick endth. afflicted Ilk. the vising of the
Eastern star te the wise men. Oa eT.rVk.1
ot the ajnutn. will b. found th.'rtd 1LXSS&
lure of Theo. Noel. Price 1.00 by mall
MRS. M. M. LiCROY, Agent, Viola. Oa.
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