Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, January 17, 1908, Image 8

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    OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1908.
THE HOUSEHOLD PAGE.
CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE LADIES SOLIC
ITED FOR THIS DEPARTMENT. TELL YOURVAL
LIABLE RECEIPTS, HOW YOU MAKE FANCY AR
TICLES AND ABOUT THE DESIGNS AND CARE
OF YOUR "ROSE GARDEN."
"GOOD THINGS TO EAT."
Yellow Cake. ,
Two cups of soft A sugar.
Two-thirds cup of butter.
One cup of sweet milk.
Five eggs, whites beaten separate.
Three cups of flour.
Two teaspoons of baking powder.
Flavor with one teaspoonful of va
nilla. Bake in three layers.
For filling use thick whipped cream
flavored with vanilla.
Marbled Cake.
One teacupful butter.
Two teacupfuls powdered sugar.
Three teacupfuls flour.
Four eggs.
One teacupful sweet milk.
One-half teaspoonful soda.
One teaspoonful cream tartar sifted
with flour.
When cake Is mixed take out about
a teacupful of the batter and stir into
mis a great spoonrui of grated choeo-
laie, wei with a scant tablespoonful of j One cup steamed aud sieved squash,
milk. Fill your mold about an inch j About six cups flour,
deep with the yellow batter and drop Scald the milk and add the butter,
upon 4hls, In two or three places a sugar and salt. When lukewarm add
spoonful of the dark mixture. Give 1 the yeast, squash and flour. Cover
to the brown spots a slight stir with land let rise overnight. In the morn
the tip of your spoon, spreading It In j ing knead, shape into biscuit and let
broken circles upon the lighter sur-1 rise until well puffed. Bake in a hot
face. Pour in more yellow batter, oven for 20 minutes.
men drop in the brown in the same
manner as before, proceeding in this
order until all is used up. When cut.
the cake will be found to be hand
somely variegated.
Gold Cake.
One pound of sugar.
One-half pound of butter.
One pound of flour.
Yolks of ten eggs, well beaten.
Grated rind of one orange and juice
of two lemons.
One teaspoonful of soda dissolved
in hot water.
Cream the butter and sugar, and
stir in the yolks. Beat very hard for
five minutes before putting in the
flour. The soda next., and lastly the
lemon .juice, in which the grated or
' ange peel should have been steeped
and strained out in a piece of thin
muslin. leaving the flavoring and col
oring matter in the juice. Flavor the
icing also with lemon.
Sugar Cookies.
Three eggs.
Two cups of sugar.
One cup of butter.
One cup of sour cream.
One teaspoon of soda.
Flavor with nutmeg.
Use flour enough to make a batter
as thin as can be rolled. Mould and
bake in a hot oven; watch closely to
prevent scorching.
Chocolate Caramels.
One pint brown sugar.
... One gill of milk.
One-half pint of molasses.
One-half cake unsweetened " choco
late. One generous teaspoonful of butter.
One tablespoonful extract of va
nilla. sloVhre unm the ngredien s are dis "
sSar'sffr6
tsoit a:i except tne vanilla over a
ward, as it is liable to burn.
Ti( Wl
dropping a little in cold water, and
If it haraens quickly remove at once ,
'
'
The Right
kind of
Coffee
Is hard to find. We believe we
have a line of Coffees that for
richness of aroma and delicacy
of flavor cannot be surpassed.
j
I
i
VW J4-Vi Vft lVo-vf 1 1
i
J 1
'
Grocery Order
Include a pound of Seeley's
Special Blend Coffee. We in
vite you to do this because we
feel sure you will be so pleased
with the Coffee that you will
thank us for the suggestion.
THE BIO STORE
9th and Main Sts., Oregon City
from the fire, add the flavoring extract
and tvonr intn hiiter.l t!n
ZnVVZ i I' . ! lu.S' .Ah
'cool, mark the caramels
In squares
i with a buttered knife
Johnnycake.
Two teaspoonfuls sugar.
One tablespoon butter.
Two well-beaten eggs.
Stir all together; add one cup sweet
Imllk, three teaspoons (level) baking
powder and three-fourths cup corn
! meal, then all flour to make It quite
stiff. Bake in a square tin In a quick
ioven. If directions are followed this
'never falls to make a light, delicious
cake. Unlike most johnny-cakes, this
is also good cold, but Is best when
eaten hot.
Squash Biscuit.
One pint milk.
One-fourth cup butter.
One-fourth cup sugar.
One level teaspoon salt.
One-half veast mke Hl-wnlve,!
in
one-fourth cup lukewarm water.
Shoo Fly Pie.
Two cups of sugar.
One cup of lard.
Four and one-half cups of molasses.
One cup of boiling water.
One tablespoonful of soda.
Take the molasses, water and soda,
mix together and put In the pie first,
then take the sugar, lard and flour.
miY toeefhpr for rriimhc nnil nut nn
top of pie. Bake without upper crust, j
Apple Pudding.
An apple pudding is a delight to
children. Pare, core and quarter as
manv fart nnnlea a trill fill w,Y.thlr.lo
of a pudding dish. Sprinkle with sugar i thls ,k nd afe the '"'"l t"Ks for
and flavoring, dot with butter and alI1lnK that ease of manner so de
moisten with a little cold water. Fill ' slrable ln lat,,r Hfe. The children
the dish with a nice cake batter and ! shoulJ be tak' Into another room,
bake in a moderate oven one hour i Lvery chl1'' ls Klven a nut, to w hich
j a string Is tied. Each one Is required
Baked Chicken With Parsnips. ! f md lhe olher t nd- wnic- of course,
Wash, scrape and quarter parsnips, ! ls held b another child. The strings
parboil for 20 minutes. Prepare a i are W0UI,lJ ln ' out around the
I young chicken, place in a dripping i
pan and lay the parsnips around it; 1 l"" ""i. mus causing a great
add salt, pepper and a piece of butter. I , al of running to and fro. and creat
Put enough water in the pan to pre- j amusement for the little people.
vent burning. Bake until both chick
en and parsnips are tender. Serve
chicken on a separate platter. Make
a gravy in pan and pour over the
parsnips before serving.
To Deodorize the Goose. i
In preparing a goose for the oven, !
a thorough bath in hot soapsuds is !
not only expedient, but necessary.
The skin nf -ma' u Bn Tr.t.t.,i wi I
Joily that heroic measures are neces-j tjers
: sary to obtain good results. Indeed, J
; many particular housekeepers take I Kitchen Weights and Measures.
; soapsud3 and a small scrubbing brush j Four teaspoonfuls of liquid make
i kept for that purpose to ail fowls, j one tablespoonful.
claiming that the skin is more or less
expSCd to a" 80rU of d'JSt "ene,rat-
S-, "rUn It
; in that thprn t a marL-fxl Ahffarwna '
. r ............ ........ w....
in fhp rfimnkivinn nf flnv fni-l hefV.rrt
tescbi n? 0?
good rlnsing after the goaplng proceH
must follow.
French Toast.
Beat one egg in a shallow dish, add
a teaspoonful of sugar, a pinch of salt
and one cup of milk. Soak six slices
of stale bread in the custard. Drain
and brown them on each side on a
well-buttered griddle. Spread them ;
with Jelly or marmalade,
them lightly on a dish.
and pile ;
Scalloped Fish.
Two cups flaked fish.
One-half cup mashed potato.
Two level tablespoons melted
but-
ter.
Two hard-boiled egg3.
i i wo cups wnne sauce, sail ana pep
per.
i Mix the nsh and potato with a fork
and beat until light. Season to taste.
Mash the yolks of the egga fine and
mix them with the melted butter, then
add the white sauce gradually and
the egg whites rubbed through a
sieve. Put the fish and sauce into a
buttered baking dish in alternate lay
ers, having sauce on top. Cover with
a generous layer of buttered bread or
cracker crumb.s and bake in a moder
ate oven for 20 minutes.
Medicinal Value of Vegetables.
If people would study the various
vegetables, fruits, etc., as to the med
icinal qualities in remedying ailments,
there would be less demand for the
doctor's services. It would not be
difficult to remember that fruits and j
! vegetables (tomatoes) are good
for
' the liver. Lettuce and celery are
B"od nerve tonics. Beans, peas, len-
; tils, etc., produce heat and strength
and are a good substitute for meat in
winter. Onions and radishes are pre-
ventives of colds. Eggs are easier to
digest when slightly boiled than when
raw. Macaroni and vermicelli, on ac
count of their closeness of grain, are
not as easily digested as light bread.
Potatoes, when mealy, are easily di
gested; when close and watery are
hard to digest
Bananas, on account
of the nitrogen they contain, are easy
to digest, says Woman's Life. Suffer
ers from dyspepsia should take tur
nips, spinach, cresses, salads, celery,
lettuce and dandelions. A person suf
fering from chronic rheumatism
should avoid dried fish.
Perfumes.
- It ls a well-known fact that workers
among lavender beds seldom take in-
fectlous ailments, and those engaged
In the perfumery trade are singularly
free from them. A good perfume, In
the oltl days, was considered an excel
lent disinfectant. The doctors then
used to carry walking sticks with nil
j ver or gold knobs. These opened
, with a lid, disclosing a tlnv vinai
grette box, which the physicians held
to the nose when entering rooms con
taining patients 111 with any Infec
tions diseases.
The Kitchen Floor.
Crease stains on a kitchen floor are
difficult to remove by ordinary means,
but they will generally come out with
n .... !..!.... .........t. I ll
wiuiiuh n hmh. u imo appit-
rnough. use a second, or
even a third. Sometimes the solution,
if the wood Is very white, will leave
a yellowish stain. To avoid this, mix
some lime with the solution until a
thick paste Is formed. Iet the naste
remain on the floor at least 12 hours. I
It Is better to use a weak solution of I
sal soda and fuller's earth on very
nice floors.
Children's Games.
No one makes a greater mistake In
planning a children's party than the
hostess who alms at the elaborate.
Parties which Involve a great deal of
expense and considerable labor sel
dom prove as successful ns those sim
ple gatherings when the conventional
forms are almost entirely Ignored. If
the hostess possess a fertile mind and
Is forearmed with a number of games,
there Is no question about the enjoy
ment of the children, however simple
aud unpretentious the arrangements
may be. The games, however, should
be planned beforehand, ail those de
manding any mental effort whatever
being barred out.
A nut party always Is successful,
and is quite an Improvement upon the
ordinary parties, which often eud In
failures when the games are too com
mon or well known. At the nut party
a large table covered with peanuts is
placed on one side of the room. An
other table bearlug a row of plates
stands at the other end of the room.
Each plate should bear the name of a
child written in large letters on white
cardboard. Each little guest is fur
nished with a knife and Is told to
carry' the peanuts, one by one, on the
knife from the first table to his plate.
The child carrying the greatest mini'
',lT of ,mi,s
In 10 minutes wins the
first prize. A booby nrUo in the
shape of a peanut doll may be given.
Before refreshments are served It
Is a good plan for each child to secure
a partner, since little formalities of
among me cushions and be-
For the Complexion.
Water cress contains much Iron,
and this is real bhxd medicine. Peo
ple who desire good complexions
should eat It abundantly, because it is
a destroyer of pimples ami a cleanser
of,the t'ntlres , 'u'm- 'r cress
w 11 also neutralize chalk in the blood,
which limy matter li the great cause
of ll)e aging and the stiffening of the
Four tablespoonfuls of liquid, one
r Qter t
A tablespoonful of liqul
liquid, half an
UUIILX.
A pint of liquid weighs a pound.
A quart of sifted flour, one pound.
Four kitchen cupfuls of flour, one
pound.
Three kitchen cupfuls of corn meal,
one pound.
One cup of butter, half a pound.
j A solid pint of chopped meat, one
! pmnd.
Ten eggs, one pound.
A dash of DPnner. an eichth of a
teasnoonful
A pint of brown sugar, 13 ounces.
Two cupfuls and a ha'f of powdered
sugar, one pound.
Latest In Anniversaries.
The silver separation Is a cynical
imitation of the sliver wedding. A
well-known woman recently celebrat
ed her silver separation, and her hus
band sent her a valuable present, "In
memory of the many happy years we
have lived apart."
Oil Pickles.
Slice 100 small or medium-sized cu
cumbers without peeling. Lay In salt
three hours under weight (salt to
taste), drain, add 3 pints of small
white onions, sliced, a piece of alum
the size of a nutmeg, dissolved In hot
water, 3 ounces of white mustard
seed, 3 ounces of white ground pepper,
1 ounce of celery seed and 1 pint of
olive oil. Mix all thoroughly and cover
with cold cider vinegar.
Instead of a Ring.
The Japanese lover, Instead of an
engagement ring 'may give his future
nrme a piece or ueauiuui suk to ue
worn as a sasn.
Origin of High Heelsy
High heels, it Is said, owe their
origin to Persia, where they were in
troduced to raise the feet from the
burning sands.
Gives President Full Power.
A bill providing for government of
the Panama Canal zone, for construe-
tion of the canal and kindred, purposes
was Introduced by Representative
Mann, of Illinois. It provides that the
canal zone shell be governed "by such
persons as the President shall from
time to time appoint," and gives the
President sweeping powers. The
President ls given further authority
to, devise and Interpret laws which
shall govern the zone.
The Isthmian Canal Commission
j shall cease to exist after July 1, 1908,
and the new government, as provided
in the bill, shall come into absolute
power.
: Fall of a Bachelor
: :
There was general astonishment in
our little circle of friends when we
learned of the coining marriage of
Valentine Snneerre. What! lie, that
hardened old bachelor; that Parisian
skeptic, who scoffed at every sugges
tion of matrimony; that Jolly high
liver, who had sworn a "'hundred timed
that he would "never be caught!"
Yes, Valentine was going to enter the
great fraternity, and whom was he to
marry? A widow. More than that, a
provincial.
Wo could not understand It. So.
the first time I met him. I took bliu
by the arm and demanded nu expla
nation, "l have but little time," he said,
"and have a great many things to do.
I have just come from the mayor's,
and am going to the printer's for the
Invitations, if you cure to come with
me that far "
"How did It come about?" I asked
him, and we started down the boule
vard, arm In arm.
"The story Is quite brief," Valen
tine said, "aud very commonplace;
but since you Insist upon knowing It,
here it Is."
In the month of February I went to
Nice for the carnival. I have a horror
of traveling by night, so I ttiok the
8:55 train In the morning, which
should land me at five minutes after
midnight. I would pass a day In Mar
seilles, where my good friends, the
Kombauds, of the Hue St. Ferreol, ex
pected me to breakfast. The follow
ing day I would leave for Nice, where
I would arrive alumt 2 o'clock In the
afternoon.
At the Lyons depot there was a
great crowd, but. thanks to an oblig
ing station master, 1 was able to find
a place in a compartment. I was alone
with another traveler decorated, of
severe bearing, with an official air
whose only baggage was a portfolio.
CerLvinly hu would not go far with
tharequlpment. and soon 1 should be
alone alone, the one thing that
makes a railroad Journey supportable
Everybody was settled; the train
was about to start. Suddenly, there
were sounds of a dispute at the door.
"No. monsieur, no," said ft fresh
feminine voice, with an almost Imper
ceptible southern accent; "I ordered a
sleeping berth; I must have a sleep
ing berth."
"Hut, madame, we have none."
"You should have paid attention to
my letter."
"We received no letter, nindame.'
"Have them put on another coach,
then."
"Impossible. We have reached the
regulation number. Now, make haste;
the train Is gidng to start."
"But I must have a place."
"And I offer you two In that coach "
"In there!"
"Yes, madame."
A little brown head was thrust In
the doorway, ami then withdrawn
quickly, as though frightened.
"Two gentlemen are there."
"Well, madame, I cannot give you a
coach all to yourself."
"Very we'll. I shall not go."
"As you please, the train is going
to start. I have given the signal."
"Stop, stop! I absolutely must go.
And there Is this carriage only? Weil,
they will give me a sleeping berth at
the first station?"
"Yes, madariie, yes."
"You will telegraph?"
"Yes, yes. madame."
"You promise me?"
"Certainly."
"You are sure?"
"Yes! Yes! Yes!"
The door opened; In plunged the
little brown head, surrounded by a
halo of packages and rugs; a shrill
whistle cut the air; we were off.
The official gentleman gallantly
seated himself near me, so as to leave
one whole side free, to the new arrival.
Without so much as a glance towards
us, all flurried and rosy with haste,
she arranged her packages in the rack
and about herself, awlth the haste com
mon to persons who have long hours
to pass In a car. Out of the corner of
my eye, I followed her little maneu
ers, and I ascertained with pleasure
that she was charming. I say with
pleasure; for, however proper onw's
intentions may be, It Is always more
agreeable to travel with a pretty wo
man than with an old man in spec
tacles. The cold was Intense; the country,
covered with snow, lighted by a pale
sun, seemed to fly rapidly by the two
sides of the coach, The fair traveler,
enveloped to the chin In her rugs,
ga.ed -obstinately from the window to
the left. The official gentleman drew
from his portfolio some large papers,
yellow, green and blue, with printed
headings, which he settled himself to
read attentively. As for myself, com
fortably Installed with my feet upon
a hot-water bottle, I attacked the pile
of newspapers, bought at the station,
to pass the time.
At 11:21 Laroche. The train stop
ped. The official gentleman arranged
his papers, rose, bowed, and got out.
Barely had he stepped down, when he
was received by the station master,
who called hlrn "Monsieur linspec
teur." The lady traveller came to the door.
"Station-master!" she called,
"Madame?"
"You have been telegraphed from
Paris for a sleeping-berth?"
"Yes, madame; I have forwarded
the dispatch."
"What, forwarded it! Am I not to
be given that sleeping-berth Immedi
ately?" "Impossible, madame; we have no
coaches here. You can be given one
at Lyons."
"At Lyons! At what hour?"
"Flve-forty-flve, madame."
"The whole day, then! I cannot re
main in this coach until that hour.
It's Impossible. I will not."
"Take care, madame; the train Is
starting." And the train drew out.
She flung herself in her corner, fur
ious, without throwing a single glance
ln my direction. I plunged into the
perusal of my tenth newspaper.
I gave more attention to reading It
than the nine first. I recommenced
the Hiimo line twenty times, I bellow
even that I held It upside down. One
does not llud one's self alone with n
pretty woman during a long Journey
without experiencing some, emotion.
I should have liked very much to en
gage In conversation with her, but the
pretext, the opening subject, where
was It to be found? Considering th
temperature, the threadbare pretext
of windows to open or dose, was not
to be thought of. What, then, was to
bo done?
My neighbor, I had discovered Im
mediately, with the scent of an dd
Parisian, was a woman of the world,
and of the best. To speak to her In
that way, roughly, without knowing
her, would have made me appear In
her eyes u the lowest of commercial
travelers. The only way to solve the
difficulty was for me to find soiuethlng
strikingly oi'.glual to say to her, Hut
what? I cudgeled my brain In vain.
I was still searching for a pretext
for opening a conversation, when the
train stopped.
"Tonnerre! Twenty live minutes
for refreshments!" cried the porter,
opening the door.
My neighbor arose, relieved herself
of her rugs, which she left In the
couch with her three little bags, and
descended. It was luion, and her hun
ger evidently began to make Itself felt,
She went In the direction of the buf
fet, to the left, on the olher side of
the track. 1 followed her. I could
then admire, at my ease, the elegant
figure, well outlined In a long seal (kin
cloak. I also marked the pretty,
black ringlets at the nape of her neck,
her gray Telt hat, and her tiny little
feet.
At the entrance to the hall stood
the steward. Bedecked with a velvet
skullcap, he Indicated with his hand
and a napkla a long table to be
stormed. I entered with the tide of
unkonfpt, ungloved, Hurried travelers,
and hastily swallowed the succession
of dishes served to me; the lady trav
eler took some broth at a separate ta
I got up among the first and went j
out to smoke a cigarette on the plat
form. The twenty flve minute would
soon be passed. The travelers, in
groups, came out of the eating-room
and returned to their coaches.
I also reinstalled myself In mine
My lady traveler had not yet returned.
I saw her In the little station Issik
stall on the other side of the trad,
looking at the hooka displayed. Though
1 saw her from the back, I recognized
her easily by her pretty style, her seal
skin cloak, and her gray hut. Her
hair seetn'd to in" to be u little light
er, but that was owing to the distance,
no doubt.
Every laid y had reentered the
coath": the porter shut the doors
tumulttiously. "She Is going to be ;
left." I thought, and threw open the
window. ' j
"Madame Madame!" cried. I'
was too far off; she did not hear me; :
the whistle blew; what was to be
done? i
An Idea flashed Into my bruin quirk !
as lightning. She was going to stay '
there, 'In that horrible cold, without
baggage. She should huve at leant j
her small belongingsthe sior little
woman I made an armful of the three
bags and the rugs, and, throwing It nil
to a man in uniform, who was near the 1
coach upon the road, 1 cried: "To'
that lady yonder!"
The man in uniform took the things
and went toward the lady of the book
stall. At the same moment, at the
oppoHlte Hide of thu conch the side j
of the platform the door opened and I
my lady traveler, perturbed, hustled !
by a grumbling conductor, plunged In- j
to the coach, and the train went ofTM
Horror! I had mistaken the travel
erthe woman of the book-stall wa
not the one; the same cloak, the Hume
hat, same style, but not she. I had
played a pretty trick.
She was barely In the coach when
she cried out: "My packages they
have stolen my packages" And for
the first tlmo she looked at me with
what a look Heavens! that Iisik I
shall never forget It.
"No. madame," I said to her, "your
bundles are not Htoleri? they have been
left at Tonnerre."
"At Tonnerre? How?"
I explained all to her. The second
glance she shot at mu I think I shall
remember longer than the other.
"I am disconsolate, madame," 1 '
stammered; '"absolutely disconsolate, i
Hut tin motive was good; 1 thought I
you were going to miss the train, tnat
you would bo cold. I did not want you
to be cold. I beg you will pardon me.
Fear nothing' for your things; they are
In sufe hands a man In uniform. At
the next station you will telegraph I
will telegraph we will telegraph;
they will send them to you right away.
You shall have them, I swear to you,
even If 1 should have to return myself
to Tonnerre to get them."
"Enough, sir," she said; "I know
what I have to do," and she returned
to her corner, twisting her gloves with
anger. -11111, poor little thing, she had
not. thought of the cold. She no longer
had her warm rugt.
At the end of ten minutes she began
to shiver, Well might, she draw her
sealskin about her pretty figure; posi
tively slut chattered.
"Madame," I said, "I beg you, upon
my knees, accept my rug; you will
be III, It will be my fault, and never
In my life shall I console myself."
"I am not speaking to you, sir," she
said, dryly.
I was very nervous, very excited.
To begin with, I found her charming,
and then I was furious over my ridic
ulous blunder, In short, I had arrived
at a great resolution.
"Madame," I said, "accept this rug,
or, I swear to you, I will precipitate
myself from the ' window." And,
throwing the rug between her and me,
I lifted the window and seized the out
side knob of the door.
Was I determined to throw myself
out? Between you and mo, not alto
gether, I think, but It appears I
looked as If I were, for she cried, Im
mediately: "You are crazy, sir, to
think of such a thing."
"The rug, or I Jump!"
She took the rug, and In a tone-l
more softened, said;
"But, sir, you will perish with cold."
"Do not disturb yourself about mo,
madame; I am not chilly, and even If
I should be cold, It will only bo the
Just punishment of my unpardounhlo
stupidity."
"Hay of your too great hnslo, for
you are tight, the Intention whs good;
but how could you have taken that
lady for me?"
"Because hIic appeared to be charm
ing." She Niulled; the. lee was broken
the Ice of conversation, be It under,
stood, for, otherwise, I shivered, Hut
how quickly I forgot the cold aud thu
Journey and all! She was delicious,
exquisite, adorable,
She loved travel, like myself; she
hail been In Italy like myself; In Spain,
like myself; In literature, In music. In
everything, the siime tastes us my
own. And then, think of this: A crowd
of general connections. She was Inti
mate with the Sulnt ('hamas, with the
Savoys, with the Mouttuuons, above
all. To think that I had, perhaps, met
her twenty times In those salons, and
that I hud never noticed her.
She spoke naively, amiably, with
the charming simplicity that admired
so much. A slight very slight pro
vincial accent, Imperceptible--n war
ble rather, gave her words the light
skip of a bird, To profit by the sit
tuition lo hi' audacious, Imii Juan,
cavaMer, all that I wished -the
thought did not even enter my head.
It would huve been vulgar, and such
a woman could Inspire nothing vul
gar, We conversed, naturally, wllh
keen pleasure. And that was all,
Though 1 dll everything lu tie
world to conceal It, heavens, how cold
I was!
At DIJou (2: jo), my right foot was
seined; we telegraphed to Tonnerre
for the things left behind.
At Macon (l:U), it was the turn of
the left fisit; we received 0 dispatch
from Tonnerre, saying that the bag
gage would arrive at Marseille tlo
following day. '
At ljyoii I'errnche (5:tS), my left
hand became Insensible; she forgot to
claim her sleeping -berth.
At Valence (S:o:i), my right hand
followed the example of the left; I
learned tbnt she was a widow nnd
without children.
At Avignon (9: 55), my nose turned
Violet; I understood that she never
loved her first husband.
Marseilles nt lost (12:05), I sneered
Violently three time; she handed me
my rug luul said, grucloiislv; "Au r
volr" Au revolr! Ah, I wns wild
I passed the night nt the Hotel d
Noallles at) agitated night, full of
thoughts of her.
The following morning, when I
nwuke. I had the mont horrible cold
In the head Imaginable. Would 1 dure
present myself in tbut statu to my
friends, the Kombauds? Bah! Travel
ers must tuke travelers' chances. They
would take me as I was. and the next
day I would cure myself ln the sun
at Nice,
That excellent Konibaud had Invit
ed severs! friends In my honor, and
among the persons them was my trav
eler my charmer.
When I was presented to her. an Im
perceptible smile p:iyed nlxnit her
lips. 1 bowed and said: "And Ton
nere?" "I hove them." shi' whispered,
We sat down nt table,
"What a cold, my good fellow" crle.l
Ilombaud; "where the devil did you
get It? In the cars, perhaps?"
"Possibly," I replied; "but, to
the truth. I do not regret It,"
Nolsidy understood ibis remark,
tell
but
I felt the soft and friendly glance of
my traveler glide toward me acnmi
the table.
Whut more nhall I te you? Tim
following day I did not leave for Nice,
and I nm to be married In a fortnight.
Argonaut.
Found.
A Jersey yearling heifer at my
(dace, 5 miles from ()rgon City, tienr
the Kedland road. Owner will call
and Identify.
Fit EI) HKIDEMAN.
2t2 K. F. I). No. 2. Oregon City.
To stop that pain In the back, that
stiffness of the Joints and muscles,
take Pinnies. They are guaranteed.
Ism't suffer from rheumatism, back
nche, kidney trouble, when you get ;io
days' treatment for $1.00. A single
dose at bed time proves their merit.
(Jet them tcslny. Sold by Huntley
Bros.
TIME CARD.
0. W. P. RAILWAY
.cave Arrive Leave Arrive
2
u
a
a
a
a
o
A
e
i
c
a
rTbo'
0:25
7:00
7:35
8:10
8:45
9:20
9:55
C
a
o
t
O
0:66
0:35
7:10
7:45
8:20
8:55
9:30
" a
14:00
0:25!
7:00
7:35
8:10
8:45
4iT
5:48
7:30
8:05
8:40
9:15
9:50
10:25
11:00
54
29
20'
55
30
05
8:04
8:39
9:14
9:49
10:24
10:59
11:34
40'
9:20110:
15
50
9:55
10:30
11:05
11:40
12:15
12:501
1:25
10:
11:
10:05
10:40
25
11:35
10:30
12:
12:
1:
1:
2:
:00
:35
:10
12:10
11:05
11:15
12:09
12:45
11:40
11:60 12:44
1
1
2012
5512
:15
:50
12:25
1S19
1:54
:45
1:00
:20
2:30
1:25
1:35
29
:04
39
14
49
24
59
2:00
2
:50
3:05
2:00
2:10
2:35
3:10
3:45
4:20
3
4
:30
:05
:40
3:40
2:35
3:10
3:45
4:20
4:50
5:30
8:05
6:40
7:15
7:50
8:25
2:45
3:20
4:15
4
4:50
3:55
5
5
6
7
7
8
8
9
9
:15
5:25
6:00
0:35
7:10
7:45
8:20
8:55
9:30
4:30
5:05
6:40
6:15
6:50
7:25
8:00
8:35
4:55
:50
5:30
6:05
8:40
7:15
7:S0
8:25
9:00
:25
:oo
:35
:10
:45
:20
6:34
7:09
7:40
8:19
B:64
9:29
9:55
:52
9:00
10:0010
:52
9:35
11:00
:52
10:0010:56
12:05
:52
11:00 11:65
12:00
i:oo
To Milwaukle only
,!V!a Lent' Junction, dally excent
iday. leave on Sundays. 4:30 a. m.
A.' M. figures in Roman; P Vr in
black.