OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1901 ..... - .... ... II - ....... ULi-.JMHtH I..MHIWJ .,HK J I "r""'ti'..'!.',J:.'7ir?g mmmh Areee tabic Prcparationfor As similating theroodandRegula ling the Stojnachs andDowels of : PromotesBigesHon,Checrful ness andRest.Contains neither ( h)ium,Morphinc nor Mineral. WOT NARCOTIC. Redpe otOldHtMVELPITCim Pumpkin $ttl . tlx.Stnna JMle Salle -ium Seed Jppemant -JM CarbmaltSeia Sugar . wiwtoyw- fdavw. Ancrfecf Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions ,r everisn uess and Loss OF SLEEP. facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. For Infants and Children. Tlie Kind You; Have Always Bought Bears Signature EXACT COPVOP WRAPPEH. 1 ,. " -mata tho . i M Use i For Over Thirty Years THE CINTHUft COMPANY. WIWTOBK CITY. E MY 5ECR.ET.;. When A rat assurance came to me That thy dear heart was mine, 1 wandered forth upon the lea Alone, lest all the world should ttt My secret to divine. .... ,. .- - ; . ; But, ah, the world has passed me by Nor read the aecret, dear; ;i The poor old world, so dim of eye, '; 8 dull of ti, 'twere rain to try To make my feelings clear To those who cannot know as I . Thy heart when lore draws near. William Wallace Wbitelock in New York Room Journal. V 3 I IN 1 II II. BY M. QUAD. S 3 Copyright. 1900, by C. B. Lewi.l was to aimlnlnter an an.-vatbetic. m:l It -was a success. Il,e pitched for-svpi :1 Into the room wltb a Jiiig drawn v..i. and I lighted the lamp and took lr ..ii, his wrist the "billy." which hp-,. I bought in town with my money to tv t as a "cracker" in case his sleep!':;; victim woke up before being pluiukY ed. Then 1 forced brandy between !. :t teeth, bathed his face with water. tit' J In the course of a quarter of an hour my midnight visitor bad so far rew ired his senses that I ventured to iv Inark: "Well, Jones-Jones, why didn't yon tell me that you were coming, that 1 might be on the lookout for you?" Jones-Jones sat up. He didn't reeug nize me, lie himself had a different look on his face. That dissipated but yet crafty look had disappeared, and u Its place was wonderment If not hon esty. It was my wicked man In tho ASTHMA' UME FMEE A. iii..iiie .wings Instant? Relief andi Permanent .'1 ' ' ' : Cure'. In All Cases l-i'-A KXT Ar'.Sv;l,.rjT-., ITHEBVOS''' RECEP'f Of POSTAL ' OstMesMMsTslMMetMM flesh, but not In the spirit. He got off I am somethlnz of a reformer not the floor and felt of the bump on his only In theory, but In practice, and bead and sat down on a chair, and it when I discovered the man up a tree I was a long nve minutes oerore ne ram. determined to try my hand at elevat- n my name is Brown-Brown, ami Ing his moral standard. 1 hold that an i exactly understand me sutm no man Is so bad that he can't be r tion. Am I In your room, or are you formed to a certain extent and I bold.ln mine 7" that any way to bring about a better ment of his moral character Is Justifia ble. I mean by that, to speak frankly and plainly, that, while some men can be reformed by sympathy and encour agement, others need a rap on the head with a baseball bat to arouse their dormant Integrity and ambition. I had extended sympathy and more or less financial aid to this -man up a tree. In a burst of confidence be bad confessed to me that be bad been a 1 believe It's my room," I replied, "but being as you arrived late and the landlord Is asleep you can stop until morning." "Very kind of you, sir extremely kind. As to this bump on m bead Is It a bump or not? If It's a bum;), how did I receive It?" "You hit your head on the door lu the darkness, 1 believe." "Ah!. Just so.' Very stupid of me. but It's only a trifle. Now. then. Mr CHAINED . - FOR TEN YEARS .-.BIrlNlft EVERY RELIEF. There is nothing like Asthmalene. . It brluRs Instant relief, eyea In toe worst cases.-: It cures when all else falls. i i The- Rev. C. F. WELLS, of Villa Bldge, 111., says; J'our trial bottle of AHthinalene received in good condition . 1 cannot tell you bow thankful I feel for the good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with putrid sore throat and Asthma for ten years. 1 de spaired, of ever being cured. I saw your advertise- . ment for the cure of this dreadful and tormentlnr disease. Asthma, and thought you hail overspokeu juuibcivw, uut resuiveil lu h a trial. astonishment, the trial aeted like a charm, a full size bottle." To mv Send ma Rev. Dr. Morris Wechsler, Rabbi of the Cong. Bnai Israel. ' New Xork, Jan. 3, 1001. Drs. Taft Bb-s." Mbdioinb Co., Gentlemen: Your Asthmalene is an excellent rem. edy for Asthma and Hay Kever, and Its composition alleviates all troubles which combine with Asthma. Its success Is astonishing and wonderful. After hav ing it carefully analyzed, we can state that Asthma lene contains no opium, morphine, chloform nor ether. Very truly yours, REV. IR. MORBIS WECHSLER. Trial bottle sent absolutely free on receipt of postal. Write at once, ad dressing DR. TAFT BROS.' MED ICINE CO., ;pEast i3rth St. New York City. swindler, a gambler, a confidence man i Ashmere, as to the business In hand Look Carefully To Your Kidneys Dr. Jenner's Kidney Pills Weight by Iavcbea. "Forty and a half," sung out the cut ter of a Chestnut street tailoring firm as he passed the tape across a custom er's chest. Thirty-eight was registered when the measure girded the custom er's waist, and then the cutter stepped back and sized up the patron's height as compared .wltb that of the salesman , who was recording the measurements. "Tour weight la 165 pounds," he 'said. .4 i . ' . ' j,'.:"One sixty -seven," spoke up the man who was being measured for "a coat. "How did you gues it?" "N6 guesswork about It I simply compared your height with that of the salesman here, who Is 5 feet 8 Inches tall. You are about two Inches taller, or, sny, 5 feet 10 Inches. With chest known femedy has been found W waist measurements and a man's neigni ngureu oui r can couth wiiuiu n pound or two of bis weight every time, as my close estimate of your avoirdu pois proves. Of course there are ex ceptions, notably the man with the very slim waist aud wide shoulders, who Is Invnrlubly much lighter In build than bis appearance and measurements Oregen City, Oregon Indicate. In that case I drop about ten pounds rrom my ngureu ana manage to come pretty near the mark." Philadel phia Ilecord. : "' and a great deal more.' He had been "laid away" In prison two or three times during his career, had sailed un der a dozen different names, and he might have admitted a murder or two bad I Dot cut him short I draw the line 'at murder. I can set out with a good deal of confidence In the task of reforming burglars, highway robbers, Incendiaries, perjurers, and so forth, but when It comes to murderers I hesi tate. Having become Interested in this man, I didn't want him to own up to anything worse than robbing a blind cause the kidney9 to work as nature intended they should. They build up the shrunken . , walls of the kidneys, as no to do before. As a cure for urinary troubles they have no equal. ,to, 25, 50 Cents ms .1 HUNTLEY, Druggist !3Me4WllWeWe''L'!J m A I Subtle 4 Hoe &3 5 Pyspqisiii ia unrecognized in Ijy Imir the I'iwes. It deceives the , unknowing fuiflerer. Its many v, viti 'iiititnis work nlong the weakest lines of tho system. To battle against only ouo of them is vain. ?' t )ur booklet explains its synip- tSi ' tonis. Our Dyspepsia Tnl)letgive comi.U'te and lasting relief. j 5 GILES1 ri o hi ! DyspopsiaTableis J i 10c, ?6C. ' S J . 'D AND 60C. W 0. G HUMTLEY, Drugfllst Oregon City, Orecon Don't Force Your Bowels with harsh minerals which always leave bad after-effects on the entire system, and where their use is persisted in, tend to completely wreck the stomach And bowels. ..USE.. Edgar s Cathartic Confections The only harmless, vegetable, bowel regV-ator, and liver vitalizer known. As pleasant to the taste as randy, and as positive as the harsh est mineral. No gripe or pain. KJ 10, 25, 50 cents. C. G. HUNTLEY, Druggist Oregon City, Oregon Thy Worked on Benches. The dignified dame was not really English, but she bad mastered the dia lect to some extent. "My nervew 'Erbert," she said, "wants to marry a schoolteacher! Fawncy! A person who works for a living! To be sure, now that I think of It, that Is not always a disgrace. You, my dear, write for the press now and then, I am told, but you don't 'ave to, you know. That Is different." "Yes," replied the young person to whom she was speaking, "but I may be said to have Inherited a. tendency to work. My father and grandfather both worked for a living, and they were not allowed even the luxury of a clmlr to sit on. They worked on benches." "Dear me!" exclaimed the dignified dame, greatly shocked. "What did they nh work at?" "Well, my father was a judge of the superior court, and my grandfather wiis one of tho Justices of the United States supreme court." Chicago Trib une. Worth the Difference. In S. L. Powers' story at tho Middle sex Iar association diuuer the lawyer tried the case for the complainant. Sue sued a middle aged gentleman for breach of pomlse. lie married an other girl. The jury retired, and the de fendant also went his way. The Jury returned, the defendant did not. The Jury found for the plaintiff In $800 damages. Tho lawyer met the middle aged gen tleman a few nilnutcg later In the lob by of an ndjaceut hotel. "Squire," said the latter, "how did tho Jury decide?" "Against you," was the answer. "I didn't think they would do that" OABTOTIIA. I, tie a M Kiwi to" Haw Always Bought JtgMtur jj HfrPITtHED FORWABB INTO TBI BOOM man or burning an orphan asylum. He. had come to me as a man who had at last seen the error, of bis ways and sighed to take -another track and be counted with the good and respecta ble.' He had given me the name of II. Jones-Jones. It struck me that there was an 'extra amount of Jones about Dim, but the name Is an' honest one, and 1 didn't find fault about It He was a man of about 45, with all the evidences of his career In bis face, but I didn't look for babylike Innocence In bis eyes. When he threw himself upon my mercy, as It were when he made a clean breast of his wicked ca reer and added that If any one would point out the path of honesty be would turn Into It and travel on without a limp, I agreed to take him In hand. He had whiskers with which the police were acquainted, and I sent him to a barber shop. He had clothes which gave him away as a dead game sport, and I bought him a modest suit of blue. Then I gave him money for a week's vacation from crime, and when the vacation was over we were to see what further could be done I took my week off at the same time and brought up amid the fresh buttermifc and dew kissed goldenrod of the country. On the second night of my stay, as I snt by my open window at midnight to finish the Inst of my cigar and wonder If my Jones-Jones had kept straight during the last 48 hours, I suddenly 1 caught sight of him on the ground be low. It was a farmhouse hotel at which 1 was stopping. 1 had a corner room, and at that corner of the house itood a large apple tree. I had ot lerved that a big limb branched out so dose to my window that I could have desceuded by It What you can de scend by you can also ascend by. 1 had no sooner caught sight of Jones lones at the foot of the tree at an hour when everybody was supposed to be In bed thnn 1 understood that he Intend ed to pay me a secret visit How he bad tracked me to my lair was of no consequence. Why he should Imagine that 1 had brought along any great imotint of bnodle on my week's outing I didn't stop to Cgnre. Indeed 1 am dot sure that he had tracked me. In looking for country board he might .11 ... 1.1.11. n ..l wnn. .....An a , 1 . . , r b i ve stumbled upon the place. He ln.,- . T!at S ,he,?","BRM? , , """KM have thought the open window "That a n' so bad J" he exclaimed, on ' r being told. "Squire there s that much bow u h()w Mr Joncg, difference between the two women. - 1. . nn annno. . n . . Host on Herald. begun (hot apple tree than I made ready to receive him with all due hospitality. There was no club in the room, but the water pitcher had been filled for The Rent Trouble, Mrs. De Style (looking from her pa- xrxr Tim l.l.,n? T tnl.l thnt rermrtnr not to mention my name In connection ie n'ght, ""f, "",'' algood T0"" .....i. r!i,w. r.u,r,ttn ntwi ret Armed with that I took my stand on he's done It I'll lus go down to that ?ne slde of t!,e wl,u!ow an.tl ,ted- newspaper office tomorrow and see about this. Mr. He Style Oh, I wouldn't pay any attention to It my dear. Mrs. De Style I wouldn't, but they have got my name spelled wrong. Philadelphia Press. Jones-Jones was not an Impetuous man. He Lad all night in which to climb and creep, and It was at least 15 minutes before he grasped my window till with his hands and drew his body Into the opening. 1 waited wltb pa tience until he bad reached a particu lar position and then brought the If you think you can advance me $r00, I am sure I can make a go of It ' . It took me a little while to catch on, but by and by I discovered that Joner- Jones had been knocked out acd Brown-Brown bad taked bis place. Jones-Jones was a crook'who wanted" 1 to reform; Brown-Brown was a poor i but honest man who wanted to go Into the making of. shirts. lie knew noth- 1 Ing whatever of Jones-Jones,, He pick ed up the conversation aa If be bad been talking about the business when the accident happened. He called me by another uauie than my own, and li was plain to me that be was also another man. 1 sounded blra about crime and state prison, but be solemnly assured me that he had never been ar rested. He was Brown Brown as far as bis name went, but as for bis past history be was rather hasty on the suit Ject I had turned Jones-Jonesi the croo'.; back Into Brown-Brown, the houest man. by a knock on the head. It wa rapid transit; reformation, and 1 looked upon the problem aa solved. Having been willing to assist a crook. I could not refuse an honest man. . When m week was up. we went back to tow n together, and ,1 gave Brown-Brown money enough to set up (n shlrtmal; Ing. He bad on the clothes I had bought Jones-Jones. He had the hair, the eyes, the mouth and the build of the crook, but there had beed a change Of souls. ' As far as the present weut tie was bright and talkative, but wlieti asked of the past he looked puzzled and could not figure It out. The doc tors agreed with me that It was the whack on the head that had made Brown-Browu of Jones-Jones and that the police ouglitrto be given full power to go arouud breaking water pitcher over crooks' cranlums; but alas, that was a twist of the business we hadn't the foresight to discover and prepare for. ' ; .' '" - My mau prospered wonderfully well. Peci said lie was a little eccentric. but tie w as honest and a hard worker. In oue year he had paid me back half my money and built up . a good busi ness. Oue day a detective entered tiit store to make a purchase.. known Jones-Jones as a crook. He knew that Jones-Jones had a crooked j finger on his right baud and a mole J on bis left cheek. When he discovered 1 that Brown-Brown hud these same I Identification marks, he began to look ' at him more closely, and by and by I be made up his mind that the old ! crook stood before him. He was so I sure of it that he set out to make an . arrest. Brown-Brown was an honest man, but in his surprise be started to make a bolt of it. As he rau out of his shop aud down the street, pursued by the detective, he encouutered a police man who tapped him ou the head with bis club r.iown-Browu went down like a log aud was carted off to the itatiou. 1 was present wheu his senses returned, and you cay luiagiue my feel lugs wheu lie ;.at up aud said: "Well, you've got u- ai last but I gave you a ruu for It You fellers ain't balf sharp." "You are ioues J iiii-s, the crook," said the se eant. "Of course I 11m. and the slickest crook lu tiie country. Is It that bank business u want me for this time?" Mr. Brown -Brown".- 1 began as I stepped foiT.'urd, but the crook- stopped me with: "Who iu liiatik is Browu-Brownf" Then I realized how it was. I bad smashed Jones-Jones, the crook, over Ihe head with a water pitcher and Changed hi:n into Brown-Brown, the honest shirt constructor. The police man had smashed Brown-Brown with bis club aud changed him back Into Jones-Jones, the crook. The taps on the bead had done the business. My tap was all right, and 1 had founded a new theory upon It and Invested $o00 In cash. But 1 hadn't foreseen that a second tap might come any day, as fome It did, and my theory bad been knocked Into a cocked bat, and I was f!250 out E-'tubi shed 1070 Incorporated 1899 FURS! FURS! FURS!! G. P. Rummelin & Sons Manufacturing Furriers I 126 Stark St., near Washington, PORTLAND, ORE. I We carry a complete line of Ladiest I Fur Coats, Capes. Collarettes, Boas J Muffs, Etc., in all the fashionable furs, Feather Boas, Etc. Robes and Rugs. I ; Send for Fall Catalogue I The Leading and Reliable Farriers of the Northwest FUTURE OF GOOD HORSES." PRESIDENT MCKINLEY SHOT food Prospects For Breeders ot Draft and Carriage Horses. - In harmony with progress generally the breeders In America have learned that horses must be raised for special purposes If the breeder would make bis business most profitable, say Mc Loughlin Bros. In The National Stock man. Of all the different typea and breeds of horses probably the most in demand are work horses and car riage horses for pleasure driving. As n rule, work horses are used for heavy draft, while carriage horses are Intend ed to pull a light load at a .moderately rapid rate of speed. The draft horse must In the first place have size and substance. He must have heavy bone to carry his He had 1 Ercat welSht. Along with size he must be a goou waiuei auu a tairiy easy trotter. However, the most serviceable gait for a draft horse Is the walk. With the renewal of industrial activ ity in this couutry the demand for draft horses has very largely Increased. For no other class of horses have the market prices advanced so rapidly as they have for draft horses lu all our American markets. Consequently there Is a larger demand for stallions among tarmers and breeders at the present time than lias ever been known before In this country. The demand has de veloped so rapidly and has become so out of proportion with the supply that we have not been able to find in any of the draft horse -breediug countries of the world oue-tenth enough stallions. . This condition of things leads us to believe that It will be Impossible to raise as many draft horses In America as there Is a demand for, and as there will be a demand for, for 10 or 15 years In the Immediate future. The present prosperous conditions have Increased the demand for pleas ure horses as well. Men who are suc cessful In their business, who are mak ing money, are much Inclined to Invest In fine carriages and horses. There Is probably no other means that contrib utes more to a man's pleasure and hap piness than driving or riding behind handsome, high acting, fine appearing, attractive horses. Although high class coach horses (Continued from page 1.) "God's contribution to the American people will be sparine the president's life," says John D. Milburn, president o! the r'an-American Exposition. Thursday, Sept.; 12 The, president'; condition contidues satisfactory. The bullet wounds in the stomach hpve healed. A microscopic examination of a few drops of blood taken from the lobe of the ear shows no trace of blood ois- oning or peritonitis. "There U not the least indication of blood -poisoning," says Dr. Mynter. According to a Cleveland directory canvasser, Leon Czolgosz's name is Czol gowski, and his parents hm Russian Poles. He is said to have confessed to a widespread anarcbiBt plot. A WORTHY SUCCESSOR. J "Something New Under tie Sun." All Doctors have tried to cure CA TARRH by the use of powders, acid gases inhalers and drus?s in paste form. The powders dry up the mucaous mem branes causing them to crack open and bleed, The powerful acids used in the inhalers have entirely eaten away the same membranes that their makers have aimed to cure, while pasles and oint ments cannot reach the disease. An old and experienced practitioner who has for many years made a close study and specially of the treatment of CATARRH, has at last perfected a Treatment which when faithfully used, not only relieves at once, but permanently cures CA TARRH, by removing the cause, stop- limn mo uiocutirgea, anu curing an in flammation. It is the only remedy known to science that actually reaches the afflicted parts. This wonderful remedy is known as "SNUFFLES thn GUARANTEED CATARRH CURE'' and is sold at the extremely low price of One Dollar, each package containing in ternal and external medicine sufficient for a full month's treatment and every thing necessary to its perfect use. "SNUFFLES" is the only perfect CA TARRH CURE ever made and is now recognized as the only safe and positive cure for that annoying and disgusting disease. It cures all inflimmation quickly and permtinently and is also wonderfully quick to relieve HAY FE. VER or COLD in the HEAD. CATARRH when neglected often leads to CONSUMPTION "SN UF FLES" will save you if you use it at once. ius no oruinary reruedv. hut In the Giddy Whirl. "He has no pride, ne actually rode ! sold for high prices during times of de- "F" weaimeui mcn ig positively pressiou on account of their scarcity, f'" iATARR1fi in ? j , ,1 lortn or stage it used according tnthA yet the demand for them has also in-. directiona which accompany each nack! creased, and prices have advanced. age. i)on-t de)ay but ee'nd jur u ' The farmers aud breeders who have and write full particulars as to your con good trotting bred road mares and who dition, and y m will receive special a I wlll breed them to high class coach vice from the discoverer of this wonder stallions are sure to derive a profit in ful remedy regarding your case without any event, because no matter whether ?.0JvTp?U!r.y0ntthe re8u'ar price of times coutluue prosperous or the re- pVtarrh ttpi? GUARANTEED verse there has been and always will cor,t r:,i , ' . , , be a demand for the kind of hlth act- t?;?', E !?ldJ"n addree' the -- , . , I -"""ioKira ur juau i on rece nt n Ing carriage horses they will raise. One Dollar. Addre rw v sn. H1 WIN B. GILES & COMPANY. 2330 and In a public merry-go-round! Said he ' The nTr-n.. sn!; hat, size Ts. weighs ' 2332 Market Street, Philadelphia. iiuu ueeu niiiuii jrmo iui in uyyvi- j, ounces; t!e nvevnge stiff derby hat of tnnlty." I fUe same size weighs 4Vj ounces; the "Cucss he must have thought his average stuw hat of the same slz turn had come." Cleveland Plain Deal- w-eicrhs 2U uuih e For Sde-Five-room house and barn four lots covered with choice fruit trees Price, reasonable. Apply at this office gtlcher down upon bis head. The Idea r.