A DREAM GARDEN. Where now are youth's superb domains? A garden 'neath a darkening sky, A Tangled garden bleak and dry, s all that barren age returns. Where are the roses and the boughs That once hung low with fruity gold? The Tines are sere, the vines are old, The trees in dusky torpor drowse. Where are the glorious Btinset gleams That spread their long rays of delight, Mingling the hopes of day and night? They shine across a waste of dreams. 0 in that garden of the past , Iiloomed flowers more than earthly fair, IJeauty and Strength and Love bloomed there, And Trust too quickly giv'n to last, Yet in that garden still doth ring The voices of a day long dead, I hear the very words they said, Borne on the gentle breeze of Spring. That life is vain then, who shall say, If in a dream he lives again With every joy that crowned him when The sword of youth kept pain at bay? And while the sense of natural things Of times that smile, of times that weep, Visits my pillow as I sleep, Again my Garden smiles and sings, l'ortlaud Transcript. - THE MUMMY NECKLACE. Ti i HE. mummy necklace was a quaint, rough thing, more quaint than beautiful, yet with a certain plcturosijueneHS, ami an undeniable fascination, alternate beads of cornel Ian and gold, and two tiny hearts bang ing from the three central beads. My father gave It me one day, know ing I had a funcy for these out-of-the-way Jewels. I do not know Its history, but was told It had been taken off the neck of a mummy. From the moment It was given me Its curious fascination overcame me. I wore It day and night. I fancied It would bring me luck. I certainly felt tiny soft pinches on my ueck made by the beads. This I wondered at for u time, but afterward grew too accus tomed to them to wonder. There were curious marks on the beads; they were chipped off or Indented. Here and there were dark stains. From the moment I began to wear the necklace my health failed. I grew weaker and weaker, and at last fell seriously 111. Naturally I did not dream of connecting my Illness In any way with the Influence of my mummy neck lace.? On the contrary, I clung to it more and more, believing It to be a tal isman. I was lying on my sofa one day, when a friend, who had observed my neck lace then for the first time, said, "Why do you wear that? It Isn't pretty. Let ine look at It." She held It a moment and then shiv ered. "0, It's a horrible thing Don't wear It. It will bring you dreadful Ill-luck. I believe those are the marks of teeth and the stains of blood!" I said, "It bewitches me. I can't bear to part with It, and I wear It day and night." Another friend of mine took a dislike to it. She was a believer In magic of all sorts, and was persuaded that the neck lace had made me 111 and was prevent ing my recovery. "Yes," she said, "It has an Influence -that I believe but for evil." At last she persuaded me to let her take It to a clairvoyant. A certain cob bler In a suburb of Loudon was the clairvoyant we chose. He and I had had Btrange experiences some time be fore this, but, as Itudyard Kipling says, "that Is another story." I parted with the necklace reluctant ly. My friend promised to arrange an Interview with the cobbler the next day, If possible. That night I fastened my pearl neck lace on, missing the feeling of the mummy chain, I lay awake all night. I was not al lowed a sleeping draft, and I bad coughed till I was exhausted, but not Blcopy. Towards dawn my nurse shut the door between her room aud mine. I re member observing the light coming through the empty keyhole of her door, and each side of my dark blinds. The rain beat loudly ou the windows. I lay listening to the weary sound. Suddenly my wrist was seized and violently shaken; the bangles I wore, hung with talismans, rattled and Jin gled together. Another moment and my throat was selssed by tightly clutch ing, strong hands. 1 Bald to myself: "This Is death, and It Is terrible." Still the clutch tightened. My pearl necklace was shaken. Even then I thought; "The pearls will be scattered." Then the thought came swift and horrible: "He has come for his necklace," (lie.) The next flash of thought was, "This Is a struggle of thousands of years ago being re-enacted. Death Is terrible. If only I could call for Tielp! If only I could speak!" But the fingers clutched my throat too tightly. Aud then I opeued my eyes and saw a great gray formless thing. It lay stretched out on my bed, and through It I saw the light shining through the empty keyhole. Kven then, through my terror, I thought; "Shall I be believed when I tell them to-morrow I Yes, It must be true, because I bear the rain beating on the window paue all the time." And all the time the clutching and the struggling never ceased upon my throat. 1 seemed to be so near to death that struggling on my part was useless. It was at that supreme mo ment I realiied most distinctly the borror of the great, gray, transparent thing, Al my soul went out Into t cry for help to someone stronger than tne ' thing; and then It moved, It lifted, melted away into a gray raistdlsap- peared. Then I sat up In bed; lit a candle, which I never dared put out again; ob served the hour by my watch between 4 and 5; and lay back, stricken, ex hausted, trembling .longing for some thing human to come and draw up the blinds, and let in even the wet, dismal daylight, rather than lie alone with the memory of my midnight horror. Two days after this my friend who had taken the necklace to the clairvoy ant came, bringing It back with her In a sealed envelope, begging me not to touch It. ' i She gave me an account of her lnter-l view before I told her my experience. : 'J be clairvoyant, in his trance, had become unusually excited when she placed the necklace In his hands. Hej paceu auoui me room, men nung nim-t self on the floor, saying, "Dying, dying! see autumn leaves everywhere tha Is death. O, tell her never to touch 1 again. It Is an accursed thing. ,It be longed to an Egyptian king thousands of years ago. Ulood and warfare fol: lowed his footsteps. He wore it. It has never been on a woman's neck be fore. He knew she wore It, and when he missed It from' her neck he was angry. He wants his necklace again. She must not wear It. It will be death to her. But even now she may be saved If she never wears ft or even touches It again." 1 left off wearing that necklace and finally parted with It, for ill-luck was my lot as long as It was In my posses sion. That Is the true story of the mummy necklace as far as I am concerned. I have never seen my terrible visitor again. Will -ho come again some day and ask what I have done with hia necklace? Lady's Realm. ijA Flying Top Free! The Latest Fad With Every Dollar Purchases at HARDING'S DRUG STORE, where all goods are sold at reasonable Prices.. GRANITE WARE SALE Tea Kettles No. 7, 59 cts ; No. 8, C9 cts. Coffee Pots 27, 30, 33. 38, 49 cents Tea Pots 19, 23, 29. 37 cents Pudding Pans 9, 12. 14. 15, 17. 20, 23c Preserve Kettle 12, 15, 18. 23, 27, 30,35c Handled Sauce Pans 10, 13, 17. 23, 28, 83, 89c , . ' Oovored Sauca Pans 23, 29, 37c Bread Pans 23, 29, 35c Dippers 17c Soap Dishes 12o Covered Buckets 17, 23u. Rice Boilers Pie and Jelly Plates 8o Chamber Pails 5c. Water Pails 39c Kitchen Spoons 7 cents. C. G APPLEGATH, a mni MKAO CMTTC WITH S. SlLVKnrilLB. A. FHASIL, POMMCftLV SKINCR AN PITTI WITH MSHM. PIILB, CHIOS. APPLEGATH & PRASIL i FASHIONABLE FURRIERS Sealskin Garments a Specialty 143 THIRD STREET,' PORTLAND, ORE. ar.Moor.uNa and KtMimtu AT mODCRATC PRICCS All WORK OUAkANTKO ihe above are regular sizes in Granite Ware and the prices are very low. The Oranite Ware combine has already advanced prices this year with the prospect ui a mnuer raiBe. l,, a. PATTERSON a. CO., Sixth and Main Bts, Every Woman Loves It. London has one street seventy feet long, being the shortest street In the city. The new cable which has been laid across the Atlantic weighs 050 pounds to the mile. This Is the biggest of all the cables. At Swedish weddings, among ' the middle and lower classes, the bride groom carries a whip. This Is an em blem of bis authority la the domestic circle. Only seventyyears have elapsed since the first railway in the world was fin ished. During that comparatively brief period four hundred thousand miles has been constructed. The Swiss society Itambertia has laid out an Alpine garden at Montreaux, at an elevation of six thousand feet, where the characteristic trees and flow ers of the country are to be cultivated. Steel rails now figure as the cheapest finished product in wrought iron or steel. A good lesson on the finances of modern Industry Is also afforded by them. To establish a steel-rail works, an expenditure of $3,000,000 Is required before a single rail can be turned out. The steel is made to conform to an ac curate chemical composition the most accurate In the ordinary range of tech nical operations. In Arizona a railroad company is th builder of a dam to form a reservoir for water for the Biipply of the locomo tives. The dam Is curious In being formed partly of steel plates. A ma sonry foundation runs across the bot tom of the gap, and masonry abutments are built on each side, and the center aud main portion Is a steel frame faced with steel plates. The plates are bent to give them stiffness. The steel por tion is 190 feet long and forty feet high, equal to the front of a block of low city houses. The plates are three eighths of an Inch thick. TIMING OF A RAILWAY TRAIN. Thero Ara 'everal Wax of Ascertain ing the Fpeed Mad. Not one person In a huudred who travels has any Idea of the speed of a train, and even a large percentage of the regular trainmen cannot tell with any degree of accuracy. Engineers use their driving wheel as a gauge. They know Its clrctimniereuce, and by counting Its revolutions within a cer tain time can tell very accurately the speed at which they are running. A favorite method of timing among passengers Is to count the telegraph poles. As a rule these poles are planted thirty to the mile, but In prairie coun tries, where only a single wire is used, the number diminishes to twenty-five, so that rule will not always work. The most accurate method, and the most in use by experienced railroad men, Is to count the number of rail Joiuta the train passes over In twenty seconds. The rails on nearly all roads are thirty feet In length, and the number passed over In tweuty seconds is the speed per hour a train Is running. For Instance, If a passenger can count thirty clicks on a rail Joint in twenty seconds, the train Is running at a speed of thirty mles an hour. Actu ally, this method falls a little short, as In the example given above the speed would be nearer thirty-one than thirty miles, but It Is near enough for all prac tical purposes. 'Women's Skulls the Cheaper. A medical student Is authority for the statement that women's skulls com mand a much lower price than those of men, "It Is possible," he says, "to ob tain the skull of a woman for $1.50, w Lite that of a man cannot be had for less than ?2. The reason why? Well, a woman's skull, as a rule, Is consider ably smaller than a man's. It is said to be Imperfectly developed; It Is an Inferior specimen of the article and altogether less useful to science; hence iu tower market value," f SOLD BY ALL And likes to have it in her home. " Patent Flour " is popular with housewives who strive to please their husbands by giving them the BEST bread and pastry, and that is only made by " Patent Flour," manufactured by the Ore gon City Mills. GROCERS Warm Welcome for Slim Pocketbooks.... There's a general gathering here of choice bargains in all lines of Urocenes which cannot fail to at tract the attention of tastv and economical housewives. They're Iresh and the choicest brands ob tainable, and the prices are right, too. lhose who wish to save money will take the hint. Our Fresh Home-Made Bread is used by everyone who ever tnea it. HEINZ & CO., Bakers and Grocers Opposite PostofHce, - Oregon City H, STRAIGHT, Dalr In- Groceries and Provisions, Also Full line of Hill Feed, Lime, Cement ui t& Pl&K 20Days'ShoeSale All oi our Fall and Winter Stock To make room for Spring Stock Our Men's $5.00 lines now , $3 00 ;; : 450- - ' 00 " " 3 15 300 " " 2 50 " " 2-75 " " 2 25 " " 2.50 ,,,, 2 00 Big Redaction on Ladles' Fall and Winter Shoes. See Prices in our Window. KRAUSSE BROS. Look at Your Houses If you haven't got time, call on G. REDDAWAY. He will do you an honest job at a reasonable price. A full stock of Paints and Oils kept on hand. Call and see him before buying your order. Paper Hanging and Kalsomining done to perfection. All work guaranteed. GEO. REDDAWAY Conf"t,o"" ftSESBTL, Sola Agent In Clackamas County for OUR NATIVE HERBS ? Bicycle Repair Shop Bicycles, Sewing Machines, Guns, Etc, Repaired and Cleaned in a first-class manner at very reasonable prices. , A full stock of extras and repairs for Bicycles kept Sole agent for Clackamas county fcr Chase Tough-Tread Tires Bicycles for Rent.... More machinery and a new motor have recently been added to my stock of tools, and I am now prepared to execute work promptly. Satisfaction guaranteed and Prices within the Reach ol All. H. W. JACKSON Opposite Huntley's Drag Store Oregon City OTTO SCHUMANN MANUFACTURER OF' flonuments and Headstones Estimates furnished on all kinds of Marble, Granite and Building Drawings made by description. No. 204 THIRD STREET, NEAR TAYLOR, 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 ilo work better and more reasonable. t''N Oh, My Headaches! ft 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 e . , you will go and see , ; A. N. WRIGHT - - THE IOWA .TEWELEli 393 norrlson St., Portland, Oregon Who has Dr. A. A. Barr, late of Minneapolis, a .Scientific Optician, in charge oi the optical department, and you can consult him and have your eyea examined free of charge. TRY it may be your trouble. J. HE1MRII KESSLER, 17!. D. Looi Here, Yon Ma? Your looks tell on you. Can keep in ecret a while. Before Iti too late. J co and tee or write to thla old doc-1 tor. He has been treating such ) cases lor over so veare and oerfectlv reliable. Furniehe hi own medi-i cine ana tent no tale. of the Old si. Louli Medical and J Surgical Dispensary, ty Yamhill Street, Portland, Oregon, positively uninicei lu remove TAPEWORM la any stag e without loss of time from business. IjriTMil'I?CurdbyooldGermn remedy. ThisJ In DU ISA IIOJB. remedy was sent to Dr. Kessler by al nana in Benin, it Baa never railed, and we a us ran tee it.. flF TI CfATITlA T71rrm Pinwr. ate. mrH nn hml rn.HI.ll .M I K r , . ' . . ' I g vuu vuuiiu long aaectea. PBTV ATP DlMK' This doctor guarantee to cure any) m imjuii vase 01 ovpniiis, oouorrnea, uieei. strictures i acureo., no ainerenc how long standing. Spermatorrhea, ff Loss of Manhood, or Nightly Emmisslons, cured permant-' iy. The habit of Self Abuse effectually cured In a short; m ubi, YflTTM WPaT Your error d folli of youth can be, ( I UUfl U fflfjll remedied, and this old doctor will gira you wholesome advice and cure yon make you perfectly stron and healthy. You will be amaied at his success in curing Spermatorrhea. Seminal Louts. Niirhtlv Hmmlulnn. J ' other effecta. KIDNEY AND URINARY COMPLAINTS, i painful, difficult, too frequent, milky or bloody urine, un. . hkiuiki uiKnarrn. rareiuuv iresiea ina Dermatic v nird Piles, Rheumatism and neuralgia treated by our new remedies luu i-uicB guaranteed, ratients treated in any part of the country by his home . system. Write full Pkrtieulars enclose ten tc itimm and ' we will answer you promptly, hundreds treated at home . wno are uuaoie to come to the city. READ THIS Take a clear bottle at bedtime and minate in th hnftl. J v H.iuc iuu iwk mi u IB iu. muminr. 11 it f miir. n u ) has a oloudy settling in it, you have some kidney or bladder (7 disease, and should be attended to before von vet an Inrur. a i jjisease as hundreds Ule every year from Brighta JDls- ui auuucys. Address Of Call DR. KESSLER, 2d and Yamhill MP lllo DlPABT for Fast Mail 1:00 p.m. pokana Flyer 1:10 . m. 1:00 p.m. 1:00 B. a. Xx. Sunday Baturaay 10:00 p. u. 0:00 a.m. Ex. Sunday T.00 a. m. Tuea., Thur. and oat. 0:00 a. m. Tuas., Thar. udSat. It. Rlparla i:v a. m. Dai U Sx .Saturday TIME SCHEDULES From Part and. Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Worth, Omaha, Kansas City, St Louis, Chicago, and East. Walla Walla, Spo kane, Minneapo lis, St. Paul, Du- lnth. Milwaukee. Chicago and tast: Ocean Steaatthlpt Proas Portland. Ball every fire days, Colambla River Oltsaitrt. To Astoria and Way Landings. Willamette liver. Oregon City, Mew barg.Salam A Way Landings. vXlllamerte and Yam hill liver. Oregon City, Day. ton, A Way Landings. Willamette River. Portland to Corral, lis A Way Landing. Snali RIT. Rlparla to Lewliton Arrivi MOM Fast Mall. 6:45 p. a Bpokant Flyer 1:30 a. m 4:00 p. 4.00 p.m. Ix. Sunday 4:80 p. m. Ex. Sunday 1:30 p. m. Mon.. Wed. and Fn. 4:10 o.m. Tuea., Thur. and Sat. Lv.I wiiton a:a. sa. . Dally Ix. Friday I. DONALDSON, Agent, Oregon City. W. H. HURLBURT. Sanarai Faaiasf i Af ibU PacUaad, Of. EAST AND SOUTH VIA The Shasta Route or THI SOUTHERN PACIF1U (JO. flonth. 100 r.N. e Mr. m. T:4nA.le. Express Train Leave Portland Daily. Lv Lv Ar Portland Oregon City Ban Franolsoo At Lv Lv North. 40A.B S:00. a ineaooveirains stop a ail nation betweep Portland and Salem, Turner, Marion, Jeter on, Albany, Tangent, Sheddi, Halsey, Harris, burg. Junction City, Irving, Bugena, CreswslL Cottage Grove, Uralns. and all Mstiona froBl Eoseburg to Ashland, Inclusive. EOSIBURG MAIL SAILT. I:S0A.1. ,Lv Portland Arl 4 :). :27i.il. Lv Oregon City Lv S.Mr.il S:S0 r. at. Ar Roseburg Lv I T: 3 DINING CARS ON OODBN ROOT, rOUMAX lUrrtT 8LMMPMM AMD SECOND-CLASS SLEEPIN8 CARS Attached to all Through Train. West Sid Division, Between PORTLAND nnd COBTALLIt AUTBAIB BtILTHIClHI01DiV.l At Albany and Corvalils eenneotwlth trail ol Oregon Central A eastern R. R. IXriltl tSAllt PAILY(IZaimn-DAY.I 4:MP. H. ILv Portland Aril villa McMlan villa Lv S:MA.i? Independeae Lv 1 4:00 A S 7.MP.M. S: P. U. Ar Ar Rata and ticket to eastern point and up io Japan, china, HooLi?La and AUSTRALIA, can Ve obtained tnm B. B. BOTD, Agent, Oregon Cite R. KOIHLIR. C H. MAKKRAM. Manager, Asst. O. F. A P. Alan Portland, Or. ParUaii or. YOU OWE. It to yourself, yonr family, your friend and a all yon benefit to carefnllv and considerately l2 MatlraU tha mtrll. v VI IT nam T ' . - i . " . un, ap a ramedr n.i won wno neea a cure There i no exnara menllng. no guess work, no danger, no lo ol time. It 1 perfectly hamless, and may alwavt u, BtaseB, ana will ear jw wnu an inner remeaim nave railed anal van have tried ell catch penny humbug as. frandsoalv to grow older avd worse. Do not not neglect to give it a trial, fcr Vita-Or comet VSU W mil BY UU 1H0J ITIIPIaVI lira tit iai aa. .A Eastern star to the wise men. Oa every narks c-1 the genuine will be found the- rM Ink Mn turoTheo.Noel. Price 01.00 by malL MRS. M. M. UCROV, Agent, Viola. Oi.