LEGISLATURE ENDS Washington Body Worked Five Hours Overtime. PART OF FISH BILL LEFT OUT Section Prohibiting Sunday Finning on Columbia Overlooked Gover nor Disapproves Two Sections of Appropriation. BUI. OIjYMPIA, Wash., March 15. The hour of 6 o'clock had arrived this morning "when the Legislature adjourned. The of ficial clock had been stopped long before that hour, and, officially speaking. It still lacked some time of being midnight. As a result of the adjournment of the Leg islature, Olympia is practically deserted today, and what few of the members re mained In town today will leave in the morning. Governor Rogers today approved the , general appropriation bill, save two sec tions. These two sections. In substance, provided that boards managing the edu cational institutions of the state may-Sp-ply unexpended balances of any item of the appropriation to any other item of the appropriation for that particular in stitution. The Governor holds that this provision is contrary -to the constitution. By an oversight, a provision. In a cer tain fishing bill which passed both houses Is omitted from the enrolled bill, which was signed by the presiding officers of both .houses last night. The provision In question was one agreed to by the Joint committee of Oregon and "Washington legislators which consulted on fishing in terests early in the session. It provided that during the open season for- fishing on the Columbia River fishing on Sunday should not be legal. The bill in which this provision was included was one intro duced by Williams of Pacific in the House. Its 'main object was to extend the open season on the Columbia, The Sunday amendment was added in the Senate, and the bill, as amended, sent back to the House. It Is said that the record of the House does not show that the amendment was acted upon by the House, but by an oversight the measure was enrolled, signed and filed in the Secretary of State's of fice. The effect of the omission will be to allow open Sundays on the "Washing ton side, while on the Oregon side they are prohibited. Governor Rogers today approved the bill appropriating $25,000 for a state exhibit at the Pan-American exposition. Oregon Xotes. "Wheeler County has appropriated $100 for the Gird Creek road. The Wheeler County Court has ordered the Indian Creek road opened. Baker City Is clearing its streets of mud by means of a scraper. Wheeler County will advertise for steel cages for the Courthouse Jail. Three new residences are soon to be built in the southwestern part of Rose burg. The Benton County Court has awarded contract for a rock-crusher. It will cost $1154. The O. R. & N. Co., whose docks at Salem were washed away, contemplates replacing them. The Necanlcum Spruce Lumber Com pany will shortly remove its logging en gines to E. M. Grimes' place. The Jackson County Commissioners have Informally resolved to tage no action this year Jn regard to the new bicycle-tax law. Monday night a miscreant broke into a box car at Eugene and stole a lot of or anges and four boxes of Inner tubes for bicycle tires. The Elk Creek toll road, in Clatsop County, Is almost completed, and will soon be open for travel. One bridge remains to be put in. H. G. Wright, of Portland, has pur chased the Big Foot quartz mine, two miles west of Gold Hill, of Messrs. Fos ter & Wolf, for $5000. S. H. Calhoun, of Ashland, has ex changed ICO acres of land near that place for a like amount of land in Klamath County belonging to G. H. Palethorpe. Mr. C. McEndree, who owns placer claims on Pine Creek, on the Burnt Riv er slope, has been exhibiting at Baker City a gold nugget which weighs $107. Fred Arnecke has resigned his office of road supervisor of Rock Creek district, in Wheeler County, and J. H. Buker has been appointed to fill the unexpired term. The Benton Commissioners have or dered that M. P. Burnett file his bond as Sheriff and Tax Collector of Benton County, in the sum of $20,000, as by law required. It is reported that Arthur "Vannoy. manager of J. B. Griswold's branch store at Sumpter, has disappeared from the "upper camp." and that it is alleged he Is short in hie accounts about $300. Two professional tramps are sojourning at Seaside, according to an Astoria paper, and for some time past have been occu pying Summer cottages. Thus far they have committed no depredations, and have not been arrested. Inquiry of lumber dealers at Ashland reveals the fact that while Improvements have been going on steadily all Winter, building will take on a fresh Impetus with the opening of Spring, says the Tid ings. Lewis Cornoyer, an Indian from the Grand Ronde reservation, was arrested at Salem Tuesday for drunkenness. He pleaded guilty and was fined $10 or five days in Jail, but was given the alterna tive of leaving the city. He accepted the latter. Ed Vaughan, who stole over $30 worth, of cigars from a Eugene saloon, and who 'was arrested at Chapman's sawmill, near Hendricks' Ferry, last Friday, pleaded guilty and was fined $50 and costs, which he paid. . He also paid for the cigars stolen. The Klamath Falls Irrigating Ditch Company has elected the following offi cers: J. T. Henley, president; H. E. An keny, vice-president; Alex Martin. Jr.. secretary. The company has decided to double the capacity of its ditch this Fall. It Is now 12 feet wide and carries 2500 Inches of water. At the Fossil election, last week, the following officers were elected: Mayor, H. H. Hendricks; Councilmen, Charles' G. Millet and A, B. Lamb; Treasurer, W. w! Hoover; Recorder, J. D. McFarland. The hold-over. Councilmen are W. W. Stelwer and I. C. Kelsay. A young woman of pleasing address is going over the country swindling unsus pecting people, says the Junction Times. She goes Into a town and organizes classes in fancy work. Instructors are .to follow her In two or three days. She col lects the entrance fee and disappears, and that is the last heard of her classes. L D. Driver, Jr., tells the Independence West Side about a young thoroughbred bull which he purchased from the Ladd farm, in Washington County. Boys with worthless dogs and alrguns have torment ed the animal until It has become danger ous. Friday a young man with a pug dog entered Mr. Driver's pasture. The bull took after the dog; the dog ran to t) boy; the boy went up a tree. The bull caught the dog and drove one horn through the animal. An unusual occurrence was seen on the German ship Peter RIckmers while she was lying at anchor Sunday morning says an Astoria paper. The first and sec ond mates and two watchmen were stand ing in the passageway which runs through the cabin, during an electric squall. A flash of lightning struck the mainmast. The men were nearly thrown off their feet by the shock. They say that the electricity.Jeft the mast In the passage way and flashed in zigzag lines out through the open doors toward the after part of the ship. No damage was done. The crew, whlch is quartered aft, was awakened by the vibration in the ship and turned, out to learn the cause. A trembling was felt in another vessel near by at the same time, although it was not struck. 2 The Wheeler County Court has ordered that Justices tpf the Peace make private prosecutors in all criminal cases, either on information or on complaint,, give good and sufficient bond -to pay all costs and disbursements of the criminal pro ceedings, and that the County Court henceforth reject and disallow the fees of Justices of the Peace In such proceed ings where they refuse or neglect to re quire such bond, or where the same Is not taken in good faith or the costs are not taxed and paid according to the pro visions of sections 1411 and 1412 of Hill's Annotated Laws of Oregon; provided, that in cases of murder or other felonies where the principal,. Is fleeing, and there Is good cause to believe the criminal would escape if the1 necesary time was taken to give the required bond, such bond need not be exacted. i I I I I I I I i I I I i I I I I I I I I I I I Home Dressmaking. The art made easy by patterns, pic- tures and descriptions. Other matters coneernlnc female at- tlr? on the women's page of THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN (TOMORROW). I I I I I i I I I I I I I 1 i ! I RUINS OF A PALACE. Remains of the Handsomest of the Homes of Cllffdwellers. Denver Post. r Down in the southwestern "part of pic turesque Montezuma County, near the cor ner where Colorado. Utah, Arizona and New Mexico merge their state lines, lies Cliff canyon, near Mancos. Within Its an cient portals, scarred by the storms of centuries past, are hundreds of strange habitations where once lived the cliff dwellers. Time, with its obliterating and relentless hand, has removed from the world nearly all knowledge of those mysterious and ex tinct people. Only their homes, quaint and puzzling, remain to Indicate the tenor of their lives. In the perpendicular walls of the canyon, which rise on both sides to a height of 2000 feet, this prehistoric race of men built their dwellings. After the lapse of Innumerable yeans these may be seen still, standing like des olate monuments of days "when the world waa young." Unlike most memories, however, they do not tell to the curious visitors tho his tory of the departed. Implements of husbandry and weapons of war have been found inside the forsak en walls of the ancient houses, offering silent testimony of the various pursuits of the former owners, today they are highly interesting to thoughtful people who seek knowledge of the pasL The entire section of country beyond the southern Rockies, surrounding the corner where the four states meet is well termed the "land of the cllffdwellers." Rivers far larger than those now seen In this district, fed by the melting snows of lofty sierras, once ran to the south and west, cutting out in the limestone plateaus a network of canyons. Astron omers say that the landscape there re sembles the face of the moon. In all di rections are found the ruins of the cliff dwellers. Cliff Paface Is called the handsomest of them all. Across a great chasm it ex tends, a once solid wall of masonry xl thousand -feet wide. Under a vast oval cliff It stands like a ruined fortress with dismantled towers, bastions and ramparts. In front the stones have fallen away, but behind them rise the walls of a second story, and In the rear of the dark cavern Is the third tier. In the gloomy recesses further back are cozy buildings perched In utterly inac cessible nooks. Some of the rooms have good fireplaces. Others have mural deco rations of strange figures In red. Corn cobs may be seen imbedded In the plaster of several dwellings. Broken pottery of ancient design, large stone mortars, fragments of weapons and parts of skeletons are found on all sides. Under the rear of the cavo was the burial place of the clan. Cliff Palace, notwith standing its Imposing appearance, was aouDiiess a communistic dwelling. There is no hall leading through It, and nothing to indicate that it was a home prepared for a ruler of the people. Its beauty Is enhanced by the magnitude of the natural arch under which it was built. The great open cave does not seem to have been enlarged In any way. The canyon Is cut through Mesa Verde for a distance of over 30 .miles, and pre sents, with Its towering walls, a scene of rugged grandeur. Why its almost inac cessible sides were selected for home sites by the early man has puzzled archaeolo gists. Tke Decline of Intellect. 'Andrew Lang, in the Critic. The human Intellect, like "the service," has long been "going to the dogs." Old fashioned people tell us that "nobody reads anything but newspapers and nov els." Many critics In the serial reviews apologize for noticing a work that Is not avowedly a work of fiction. Most review ers have long dropped the hypocrisy or pretending to own any acquaintance with the subjects of historical, antiquarian, anthropological, mythological, and other erudite books. They frankly 'avow their ignorance, unashamed. Poetry, is still "a drug in the market," except where some new bard is welcomed as an exquisite oiend or bhakespeare and Racine. "Lit erary Gossip" is concerned only with the wealth attained by a few manufacturers of fustian. Lately I saw a grown man reading Sully's "Memoirs," in French, too, and, like the ancient mariner, "I blessed him unawares," so unusual was the spec tacle. The classics of all language, as a lady lately declared In print, have become "glorified school books." Every one admits that this is the condi tion of our intellectual affairs; that If, as far as literature is concerned. It evidence is desired, we might call Into court the author of "How to Write for the Maga zines." "The style most in vogue," re marks this literary expert, "is what is known as the 'popular' style," a rattier "self-evident remark," as the dustman said when the cook told him that he was no gentleman. He who would embrace the popular style "must not Indulge in fine work which is above the head of the person who spends his penny on An swers or Pearson's." That person, that capitalist who lays out his penny, may, be a dustman or a Duke. But, Intellectu ally, It must be difficult for a writer not to soar above his head. We are even warned "not to write about things that the sixpenny reader of the Strand or the Lady's Realm cannot understand, ow ing to limited education or capacity." The Cape to Cairo Railway is at pres ent being extended from Buluwayo to Wanki, a place about 200 miles farther north, where a great coal discover has just been made. It has alBo been found that the Zambesi can be much more easily crossed at this point than at the part I ViAfelliUilJ' CClWfctJU. WHERE FUNDS ARE tO GO WASHINGTON APPROPRIATIONS VOTED BY LEGISLATURE. Total Is $2,228,000, Which Is for the Term Beginning; April 1, 1001, and Ending: March 31, 1003. OLYMPIA, Wash., March 15. The gen eral appropriation bill passed by the Leg islature Carries $2,22S.O00. This amount Is for the term beginning April 1, 1901, and ending March 31, 1103. The following ta ble gives the apportionment In detail: Oat of General Fnnd. Salary of Governor" $ o.SOO Private secretary to Governor.... 3,000 Postage, traveling expenses and Incidentals 2,000 Publishing Governor's proclama tions 300 Extradition expenses 3,500 Rewards authorized by Governor.. 2,500 Examination into alleged infrac tions of the law , 1,000 Suppression of riots, insurrections or raising of troops 10,000 Survey of lands by the Governor, as provided by U. S. statutes.... 2,500 Total $ 32,800 Office of Lieutenant-Governor. Salary of Lieutenant-Governor, at $1000 per year $ 2,000 Total $ 2,000 Office of Secretary of Stnte. Salary. Secretary of State $ 5,000 Salary, chief clerk 3,000 Salary, auditor and cashier 3,000 Salary, first recording clerk 1,800 Salary, second recording clerk 1,800 Salary, stenographer 1,440 Postage and incidentals 2,000 Distribution of session laws and Supreme Court reports 350 Salary, deputy insurance commis sioner 3,000 Traveling and Incidental expenses. COO Deputy Commissioner of Statistics. 3,600 Incidentals connected with office.... 1,200 Total $ 26,790 Office of State Treasurer. Salary, State Treasurer $ 4,000 Salary, chief clerk 3,000 Extra clerk hire 1,200 Postage, telephone and incidentals 600 Adding machine 375 Total $ 9,175 Office of State Auditor. Salary, Auditor $ 4,000 Salary, chief deputy 3,000 Salary, bookkeeper 2,000 Salary, stenographer 1,440 Incidental expenses 2,200 Total $ 12.640 Cost bills in conviction of felony.. $ 25.000 Desk supply fund 4.000 Public printing fund 35,000 Transportation pf convicts to the state penitentiary 16,000 Rent of state offices, and expenses new Capitol 10,000 Removal state's property 1,500 Transportation of insane...., 14,000 Transportation of Incorrlgibles 4,000 Repair of shed over Capitol foun dation 1,000 Total $110,500 Office of Commissioner of Public Lands. Salary. Commissioner $ Salary, chief clerk Salary, chief engineer Extra help In engineer's dept. .... Salary, draughtsman Salary, bookkeeper Salary, stenographer and clerk Salary, two general clerks Salary, clerk of Board of Land Commissioners Appraisement, sale and lease of school, granted, tide and other lands Salary and expenses of agents In selecting state lands Advertising sale of state lands.... Postal and incidental expenses Sale of granted lands For contingent fund, defending state's title to school, granted and other lands before the courts and the several U. S. land of fices of the state, the Secretary of the Interior, U. S. land office filing fees and expenses on es cheated lands (not including at torney's fees) 4.000 3.000 3.000 2,000 2,400 2,000 2.000 4,000 2,000 14,000 12.000 3.000 3.000 2,000 2,500 Total $ 60,900 Establishing harbor lines, survey ing oyster and tide lands, ap praising and reappraising tide land, advertising for lease of harbor areas $ 4,000 total $ 64.900 Office of Supt. of Public Instruction. Salary. State Superintendent $ 5,000 Salary, deputy Superintendent 2,400 Assistance in examining teachers' manuscripts four times each year 2,000 Clerical assistance and incidental expenses 2,000 Traveling expenses. Commissioner.. SOO Postage, telegraph and telephone service 1,000 Expenses, State Board of Educa tion 1,000 250 Total $ 14,200 For "Washington State Fair. Washington state fair, two years.. $ 10,000 Total $ 10,000 Office of Attorney-General. Salary. Attorney-General $ 4.000 Salary, assistant Attorney-General. 3,600 Stenographic work and clerk hire.. 1,440 Stationery, postage and Incidentals 500 Traveling expenses. Attorney-General 1,000 , Legal assistance in land offices and other work 3,600 Court expenses, advance per diem and mileage, for witnesses before courts and land departments 300 Rent, assistant Attorney-General's office at Seattle SOO Total $ 15,240 Supreme Court. Salaries, Judges $ 52,300 Salary, clerk of Supreme Court 4,000 Salary. Supreme Court Reporter... 4,000 Contingent expenses Supreme Court 8,000 Library Total $131,250 State Reform School. Maintenance $ 45.000 General repairs 5,000 Introduction of manual training de partments 2,000 Library 200 Total $ 6S.300 r Superior Judges. Salaries, Superior Judges $ 69,000 Traveling expenses Superior Judges whose Jurisdiction contains more than one county 3,000 Payment' of salaries and expenses of Superior Judges pro tern. 700 Total $ 72.700 State Board of Audit and Control. Salaries, three members of board. .$ 12,000 Traveling expenses, three members 3.000 Salary, bookkeeper '2,000 Total v $ 52,200 Soldiers' Home. Maintenance $ 25,000 Assembly room and equipment 5.000 Addition to hospital and equipment. 3,000 General repairs and improvements.. 1,000 Library 200 Store room 1,000 Total i $ 17.000 For revolving fund : $150,000 West. Washington Insane Hospital. Maintenance, not more than 40 per cent of which shall be Used 'for salaries .r. $200,000 New wing 40,000 Dynamo engine and installing same1 5.000 Stand pipes and extensions of water mains 6.000 Fire escapes and additional fire apparatus -4.000 Bake oven, and building for same.. "2,000 General repairs and Improvements. 3,000 Furniture 1,500 Library 200 Total ., $ 35,200 School for Defective Youth. Maintenance $ 60,000 Boiler-house and moving boiler at school for the feeble-minded 2,000 General repairs and Improvements, all departments 2,000 Library 400 Total $ 64,400 State Bonrd of Horticulture. Salary Commissioner, at $1.000 $ 2.000 Traveling and Incidental expenses.. 1,000 Salary clerk SOO Renewal and renovation of horticul tural exhibits v... 200 Total $ 4.000 Office of Fish Commissioner. Salary Fish Commissioner $ 4,000 Traveling and incidental expense.... 1,500 Office rent and expenses , 650 Salary of stenographer L440 Total .$261,700 East. .Washington Insane Hospital. Malntenace, not more than, 40 per cent !of which shall be used for salaries $115,000 New wing and equipment 45.000 Additional boiler, connections, and installing same 2,500 Additional pump for pumping sta tion -and pipe for line between pumping station and hospital.... 7,500 Brick smokestack 4,000 'Additional fire department, equip ment and telephone system 2,000 Sewer system 5,000 Purchase of land lake frontage 600 General repairs and Improvements.. 2,500 Furniture 1,500 Storm sashes 1,500 Library' 200 Total j 7,590 Scientific Experimental Station. Salary Superintendent $ 4.000 General expenses 1,500 Buildings and water supply 1.500 One carload of Eastern oysters 1,200 Machinery, floats and cleaning pond 2,000 Purchase of crawfish 400 Total $10,600 Out of Fish Hatchery Fund. Salaries for two deputies $ 4,000 Traveling expenses 2,000 Launch for Puget Sound 4.500 Engineer's salary r 1,500 Fuel and expenses 2,000 Chartering steamer on Columbia.... 1.500 Total $ 15,500 Stnte Salmon Hatcheries. Maintenance $ 70.000 Improvements 12,750 ? P Total $ 82,750 Total appropriated from the fish hatchery fund $ 93,250 Total $95,250 Office of Commissioner Labor. Salary Labor Commissioner". $ 3,600 Clerk hire. Incidental traveling ex penses and mileage 2,600 Total $ 6.200 Office of Dairy and Food Commis sioner. Salary Commissioner $ 3,600 Expenses of Commissioner and dep uties 2,500 Salaries of deputies 2,500 Total j s.600 Office of Coal Mine Inspector. Salary of Inspector $ 3,000 Incidental expenses, traveling and mileage 1,500 Total $ 4,250 State Library. Salary of State Librarian $ 3,000 Salary of Assistant State Librarian 1.600 Postage and Incidentals 100 Total for State Library $ 4,700 Library Fund. For purchase of books $ 6,000 Indexing and cataloguing 500 Total $ 6,500 Out of Military Fund. (For maintenance of National Guard to March 31. 1903.) Salary of Adjutant-General $ 4.CO0 Salary of chief clerk 2.000 Salary of storekeeper and armorer 1,410 Incidentals, traveling expenses, postage, etc L000 Armory rent and maintenance of National Guard , 40.000 Supply of new clothing, repair of clothing and transportation of supplies and ammunition 12,000 Equipment and maintenance of . medical and hospital corps 1,000 Freight on cannon 500 Traveling expenses of Governor's staff 500 Total $ 62,540 State Board of llealtfa. Salary secretary of 'the board $ 200 Traveling expenses 1,000 Office rent 300 Expressage 60 Telegraphing CO Postage 120 Four semiannual meetings' of board 400 Total $ 2,140 Out of the Grain Fund. Grain inspection .". $23,000 Office of Grain Inspector. Salary chief inspector at $1800 $ 3,600 Agricultural College. Maintenance $ 60,000 Building and equipping an armory and gymnasium 10,000 Library 1,500 WHY SO MANY FAIL. Total $181,300 ' State Penitentinry. Maintenance $120,000 Dynamo, engine and Installing same 6.000 I General repairs and Improvements. 5,000 The Reason So Many Catarrh Rem edies Are Unsuccessful. There are few troubles, for which there are so many remedies and so-called "cures" as for catarrh, and it may be added there are few diseases so difficult to really and permanently cure. Inhalers, sprays, powders and douches are all applied locally and give temporary relief, often for only a few hours, and It is doubtful it anything like a real cure of catarrh was ever accomplished by the use of local applications. Catarrh Is a constitutional disease. It Is In the blood like rheumatism and to cure It requires an Internal medicine to act upon the blood, to drive out the catarrhal poison from the system entirely and any one can readily see that a salve or pow der or Inhaler which simply clears off the mucous membrane of the nose and throat can have no effect on the real cause of catarrhal disease. The remarkable success of the new catarrh remedy, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, Is because It drives out of the system through the natural channels, the catar rhal poison, the germs of grip, bronchitis and consumption and causes the hawking, spitting and gagging because the exces sive secretion Is no longer supplied when the blood Is made healthy from the reg ular use of Stuart's Catarrh Tablets. The remedy Is In form of large 20 grain lozenges, pleasant and palatable, com posed only of wholesome antiseptics and so safe to use that little children use them with perfect safety and benefit If the little one Is suffering from colds, croup or cough from any cause. Stuart's Catarrh Tablets have been on the. 'market scarcely one year, yet they have irietwit,h, such popularity and suc cess that druggists-everj'wherc'.Jn United States and Canada now' have them In stock and report a constantly increasing demand for them. You will surely get thinner and thinner, until p at last you are starved to death. Grass won't answer, although it is good for the horse. You must have a food suitable to your needs. Ayer's Hair Vigor is a hair food. It won't take the place of grass or of bread. It is good for the hair, and that is all. It feeds the hair with hair food. The hair can't keep from growing. It stops falling out because it is hearty and strong. And the old color is restored to gray hair; all the rich, dark color it used to have. " A year ago my hair was coming out very fast I bought a bottle of Aver's Hair Vigor to stop this. It not only stopped the falling of my hair, but made it grow very rapidly, until now it is 45 inches in length" and very thick. Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kan. JtlC ClOlLQr A;lr vrmr fl m irnfst- first Tf h rannnt- mrrlw ,,. mr.A .... .--. J11- I mi CL bottle, express a bottle to yon. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office. All druggists. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. SEND FOR OUR HANDSOME BOOK OK THE HAIR. SggggSghHjg5 Cases for apparatus and museum.. SCO Warden veterinary hospital for con tagious diseases 500 Livestock 1.000 Sewer system 5,000 "Water supply and lire protection 10,000 Insectary. greenhouse and horticul tural barn 1,000 Addition to heatJng plant 4,,00 Miscellaneous repairs and Improve ments 1,500 Total $ 94.SO0 Xevr Whatcom Xormnl School. Salaries and maintenance 42,500 Equipment and supplies for chem ical, physical and biological lab oratories 1.500 Furniture 300 Furnishing room in old building 1,000 Library 1.000 Building annex for present building 40.000 Heating and ventilating said annex 5.000 Furniture for said annex 2.000 Total $ 93.S00 Ellenshnrir Xormnl School. Salaries and maintenance $ 35,000 Repairs on plant, roof, carpenter work, mason work, etc 2,500 Library 1.000 Furniture, leased dormitory.. .... 1,500 Total $ 40,000 Cheney .Xormnl School. Salaries and maintenance $35,000 Library 1,000 Repairs, fixtures and Improvements 4.000 Heating apparatus 5,000 Total $ 45,000 State University. Maintenance $150,000 Science Hall 70,000 Power plant 50.000 Total $270,000 Indexing House Journal 5 300 Indexing Senate journal 250 Transportation and salaries. State Veterinarian and deputies 2,500 Expenses State Board of Equaliza tion 400 Purchase of Washington Supreme Court reports 3,750 Total $72,000 Experimental Station at Pujallup. Buildings and Improvements $ 2,000 Maintenance 6,000 Total $ S.OOO St. Helena. Imperial and Colonial Magazine. In the old days not good old days when East Indlamen went round the Cape, St. Helena was a great port of call and of revlctuallng. It was prosperous then, and when In 1S15 Napoleon the Great came there as a prisoner Its prosperity was at Its zenltn. The government had no control over It. Tho Island belonged to the East India Company, and it was only by arrangu- ment with the board of directors that it could have been used as a place of de portation for the mighty Emperor. Why was It so well fitted for tho purpose? It Is In mid-ocean a thousand and mora miles from any continent. Its coast rises up In precipitous rock from the ocean. Escape, save at the risk of a broken neck, would be almost Im possible. Only at one place James town on the northeastern coast could any boat hope to land and even there only If the elements are kind. This is not always so. There la the roller season. Great rollers come In from tho South Atlantic, and often for , days there can be little or no communi cation between an anchored vessel and the ond of an embarkation quay. What St. Helena was between 1S15 and 1S21 It Is now, a safe prison. But Its prosperity is gone. No one goes there unless com pelled by necosslty. Once a month a Cas tle Union steamer calls for a few hours, lands and takes off the mails, discharges one or two officials, oj: receives them homeward bound, and that Is all. Thus did I como to visit It the other day. Tho Governor was at the castle a kindly In dian civil servant, certainly, ruling his little island on a moderate salary. There was a half battalion of "West Indian troops under Major "Westmorland splen did fellows In gaudy trappings and a few gunners. How wistfully they looked at the travelers! D&BURKltAftfSWfflDERWL OFFm (30 Days' Treaj ff st? -mpcpenis.rir rL ua QtBaMPBUNtt. CONSTIPATED I $P "Njr. "HyJIilJgJ ""' V " " -. jB j&gf Sk tk ST WJ' Means misery on the eve of life. Nine out of ten old people are constipated because the muscles of their intestines have become weak, worn out and flabby. Constipation is the curse of old age, causes bile and acid poisons to remain in the blood, making ' the skin yellow and wrinkled, the eyes bleary and causing the "bones to ache." Keep the bowels strong, healthy and regular and old age loses all its terrors and weak nesses. No reason why grandpa and grandma shouldn't hav bright eyes, and clear, ruddy skin and feel lively and active, if they will only keep their bowels open and vigorous with CASCARETS CANDY CATHARTIC, the greatest bowel tonic ever heard of. Try them to-day a 50c box a whole month's treatment and find that the tortures of constipated old age are PREVENTED "4, The fame of Dr. Burkhart's Vegetable Com pound Is proclaimed by all civilized nations be cause it positively cures Kidney, Liver. Stom ach and Female Diseases, Sick and Nervous Headache. Pains in Back. Blotches or Plrnples on Face, Coated Tongue. Rheumatism' and La Grippe. 10 days' trial free. AU druggists. DR, TV. SrBUBKHART, Cincinnati, O. BY .ST?fe LIVER TONIC -g!0 5-- .-taiS.WSr" " -EFW-- - :'"i33' G3&sm m sraf m m i wmM mJ??&J?5: JOc tgjhjf; 25c 5Uc ALL DRUGGISTS. UFjJ" all bowel troubles appendicitis, bll fel hi iouancss, bad. breath, bad blood, wind 0$ on tho stomach, bloated bowels, foal pains after eating, liver trouble, Ballovr complexion and dlzzlnens. when your bowels dpoa't move regu larly yon aro getting: sick. Constipation lilll more people than all other diseases together. It Is a tarter for tho chronic ailments and long years f sufTerlns that como afterwards. Xo matter wli.U alls yon, start tailing 0 AS CARETS to-day, for yon will novor pet well and bo well all the tlmo until yon put yoifr bowels rlsht. Take onr adrlce; start with CAsCARETS to-da7, under an absolute (ruar aateo to core or money refunded. m NEVER SOLD IN BULK. GUARANTEED TO CUiiE: ITre xcara asro tho Brut box of CASCAH ET8 was aoid. Sy St t o-rcr six million boxe-a a vsr. rrentar than any similar medicine In the world. TM lsab.olnto prcorof great merit, and onr bct tetlmonlal. vo noTo faith ana will aell CA8CA1IET8 absolutely znarantoed to car, op monoy refunded. Go bny today, tvro 30c boxes, giTOtuenia fair, honest trial, ns pcrslaplo directions, ond If you or not satisfied, uflernslaz one SOebox, return the nnntedSOc box and the empty box to us by siuli, or the drucoU Vrorn whom yo". purchased it, and uetyosr noneybact for Dotfc boxes. Take our adrlce no matter what alls you start to day. Health will qnlcJtly follow and yoawllfblees i tho day Jon flrst Started the use o-CASCAlLETS. Boot free by niall. ddresi: oTEBLLa BE3IEDI COmKEW IORo, or CfllCiUO. . f