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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1896)
LUCIEN BONAPARTE. He Was tho A bleat and Mc Comw of the) Enaprra Brother. The younger brother had, after the first juvenile heats of radicalism, be come a moderate republican, holding his convictions resolutely. Having op posed the hereditary consulate for Na poleon, he withdrew, unmindful of any reward he might have claimed for his services of Brumaire, to lead a life of study and cultivate his inborn literary tastes. On the death of his first wife, by whom he had two daughters, he mar ried, in direct opposition to Napoleon's wishes, the beautiful and accomplished Mme. db Jauberthon. This was in 1803. He had been importuned to put her away and lend himself to the project of buttressing the empire by himself ac cepting a crown and contracting a royal marriage. He was by far the ablest and most courageous of the Bonaparte broth ers, but his heart was true, his princi ples were fixed, and he was utterly in different to the rise of Napoleonio em pire. It was with reluctance that he came to Mantua. There are two accounts of what happened there that which has long been accepted of Napoleon offering and Lucien hotly refusing the crown of Portugal, with the hand of Prince Fer dinand for his daughter Charlotte, and that which makes the first offer to have been Etruria. Both accounts agree, how ever, that the bid was raised to the promise of Italy all on condition that he should divorce his wife and rule in the interest of his brother's imperial power. Lucien disdained even this bribe, declaring that he would accept the crown, but that he would rule in the interests of his subjects, and that he would iu no case consider a divorce. Angry words were spoken. Napoleon crushed in his hand a watch with which he had been toying; hissing out that thus he would crush wills which opposed his. "I defy you tjo commit a crime," retorted Lucien. Before parting there was a half recon ciliation, and Napoleon requested that at least his brother's eldest daughter might be sent to Paris for use in his scheme of royal alliances. Lucien as sented, and the child, a clever girl of about 14, was sent to live with Mme. Mere. She was thoroughly discontented and wrote bright, sarcastio letters to her stepmother, whom she loved, de picting the avarice of her grandmother and the foibles of her other relatives. These, like all other suspected letters of the time, were intercepted and read in the "cabinet noir." Their contents be ing made known to Napoleon, he sent the petulant, witty writer back to her father. Despairing of any support from Lucien or his family, Napoleon formal-1 ly adopted his stepson Eugene, the vice roy, with a view to consolidating and confirming the Italian feeling of depend ence on Prance. Professor Sloane's "Life of Napoleon" in Century. When Economy Economize. "Will it pay?" should be the first question asked when looking over the old clothes with a view to making over. Time should be considered first, and if it can be put to a better use then let the garment go and buy a new one. If time will permit, then consider whether the garment will look well enough when completed to be satisfactory. Will it have a shabby, made over look, and, if so, will a quantity of new material re move that objection? Then consider the expense of the new goods, make a few figures if necessary,, and, once deciding that it is a paying investment, rip, cleanse and make, with a hearty faith in the good results. Ladies' Home Journal. Saw the Tickets Were Used. Miss Prim You didn't bring your lit tle girls to the Sunday school entertain ment Mrs. Fussy No, I didn't dara to. There's so ainch measles a ' Arlet fever around, youkpfl"'" Jckets were not w" .,' imilMh. 4l-r4 ' 'to the l:"- boy ! ."-itteveland Plain Dealer. COLUMBIAN PRIZE WiraS, CONOVER PIANOS CHICAGO COTTAGE ORGANS WERE GIVEN Highest Awards At the World's Exposition for excellent manufacture, quality, uniformity and volume of tone, elasticity of touch, artistic cases, materials and workman ship of highest grade. CATALOQUItj ON APPLICATION tRBe. CHICAGO C0TTA6E0RGAN GO. CHICAGO. ILL. LARGEST MANUFACTURERS OF HHPS AND ORGANS IN THE WORLD. and Trade-Mark, obtained and all Pat ent business conaucreo iur moderate fees. n.i. orncc IS OPPOSITE U.S. Patent OrriCE and we can secure patent 10 less tune tu&u those fmni Wa.hinotnn. - Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. WO ajavum, U F"- ""i chaws. Our lee not aue un patent u sccurcu. ttWths U. & and ioraga countries sent free. Address, c.A.onovy&co, M Smit OrPMC. W!INSTON, D. 0. HAS STUDIED NEGRO SONGS. ! Mrs. Jeannett Robinson Morptajr aad Her Favorite Fad. A drawing-room entertainment It hardly considered complete nowaday! unless It Include something by a guitar or banjo performer. Among these few are more popular than Mrs. Jeannette Robinson Murphy of New York, herself composer of not a few pleasing little songs. Her unusual success Is the Dat ura! result of giving the subject of ne gro songs a great deal of attention. Born and raised In the South, she early Imbibed a great love for the peculiarly plaintive airs with which the negro men and women lighten their work. Like all other Southern children of well to-do parents she bad a "mammy," and It happened that this colored woman was renowned for her ability as a sing er. Mrs. Murphy recently said: "As a child I used to follow this old colored woman about when she was busy just to near her sing, caring more for the sound of her voice than for the weetest Northern music. As I grew op I began to wonder as to the reason of the strange fascination of the negro ongs for all classes of people. I found tt was not merely in the mur'c or words, for the quaintest of darky melodies ren dered by one unfamiliar with the ne groes Instantly lost Its charm. I final- j (y grew so curious about the matter that ' few years ago, In Tallahassee, I set ! about to solve the problem for my own satisfaction. I found to my delight i that the weird effect of the plantation songs is from the observance among the darkles, probably unconsciously, of cer tain rules In regard to the accent and breathing. They never take breath, as we do, at the end of a line or phrase, connecting their sentences with that peculiar wavering tone so full of pathos and melancholy. Another singular thing Is the heavy accent on the latter part of every monosyllabic word, thus giving twe musical tones tor each word of one syllable, with the same, long drawn, walling sound between the tones. There are many other peculiar ities In the exact rendering of the plan tation songs, but these are the most es sential and the most strongly marked that have come to my notice." Mrs. Murphy does not confine herself to parlor recitals, but gives her ser vices gratuitously to prisons, hospitals and missions. Only One Way to Get Volunteers. There had been a lack of men joining the ranks, and the colonel was visit-! lng a recruiting station, Inspecting the workings of bis recruiting sergeants. Suddenly a terrible noise of shouting' and shuffling of feet came through the' open window. Now it came from the stairway, Intermingled with sundry loud bumps and knocks, and the door burst open, showing a red-faced, pers piring little sergeant pushing, haul ing and tugging at a big country lad.' The latter was doing his best to es cape the firm grip of the soldier. "Halt!" cried the colonel "How Is this?" he aid to the sergeant. "Is this the way you secure recruits by force, sir?" The red-faced sergeant looked up and down, then at the colonel, and blurted out. "Sure, sir, the only way to get them vol nnteers Is by force, sir." Trained. "Are you afraid, Lily, when you go driving with Mr. Phillips, that the horse will run away?" "No, Indeed. " Mr. Phillips has train ed his horse to drive without llnes." Bxcbange. How mixed up divorced people must get In their kin affairs! When the planet Mars is nearest the earth it is 86,000,000 miles away. AM APPEAL, FOB ASSISTANCE. The mn who Is charitable to himself will Ssten to ths mate nppeal for sssistan e msde y bis stomach, or his liter, In the abape of divers dyspeptln qualm, and nneaay sensa tions in the re; lone of the glands that secretes his bile. Hosteller's Stomach Bitters, my near sir, or madam as the case may be Is what you require. Hasten to use, If you are troubled Wlih heartburn, wind In the stomach, or note tht your akin or the whites of your ej es are taJtlnf a sallow hue. Some Si Louis physicians insist that the anti-toxine treatment will enre the ooniomption as well as the diphtheria. DKAI-MESS CANNOT BI CURED By local applications, as they cannot rench the diseased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cure deafness, and tbat Is by constitution -al remedies. Deafness is caused by au inflamed condition of the mucous lining of Eustachian Tube. When this tube pets inflamed you have a rumbling sound of Imperfect hearing and when it Is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to it normal covdition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is othlng but an Inflamed condition of the mncous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. t. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's family Pills are the best I believe Piso's Cure is the only medi oine that will oure consumption. Anna If. Soss, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, '95. FITS. All fl's stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Wo fits slu r tl e first day's use. Marvelous cares. Treatise and 12 00 trial bottle free to fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, Ml Arc St, Philadelphia, Pa. Tut Gibuia for breakfast. Satnrally, have good appetite, keep your ood part and your nerves strong by taking flood's Sarsaparilla The best In fact the One True Blood Purifier, Hood's Pills cure biliousness, headache. '2bf. SURE CURE for PILES i lloblsg sad Blind, BleelD(orPretraflinan.rlelat...to DR. aq-fAN-KO'f VtLI HMIPjf, Swe, fu, .tears, iaaian. A mTiln outs. Hr.lt assl ft, trim it saswsssi "Mi fcosaimsj, eadlaaa.- IfltS. WARKTT BOBHISOS MURPHY. Eat An Ecbo of tlie Truclee Smash-Dp Many Will Recall This Sad Affair Which Happened in 1892. Mr. H. Watkla., of This City, Who Was Injured 1st the Wraek Toll of His Terrible SoffortnifS and Flsusl Car. From ths Examiner, Ban Francisco, CaL Mr. H. Watkins lives at 8008 Geary street. Ban Francisco. He is a railway postal olerk, and has been in that business for years. When seen at his home he gladly told his experienoe with Dr. Williams' Fink Fills for Fale People. He narrates the faots leading op to his trying them, the benefits he has enjoyed by their use and the re sults of reoommending them to others. He said; "I have suffered from rheumatism for years. At times I hare been so bad that I oonld not raise my arms over my head. Mo one had worse rheumatism than I had. I got it first in the Truokee smash-up. I was laid on the now in the wreck and then taken to the railroad hospital. Ever ainoe then I have suffered at times terribly, that is to say, np till a year ago. Once at Redlands, in San Bern ardino county, I thought I should die, and at Promontory I was so crippled that I had to be oarried to the mail oar. No one who has not had it can understand the agony. I was not able to get out of bed at times. I had to crawl on hands and knees from the bedroom to the kitchen. "Occasionally when I tried to rise in the morning the pains would seise me snd I had to be oaught to prevent my falling. I tried every kind of medi cine. The only thing tbat helped me at all up to a year ago was some fear ful stuff an old Mormon gave me when I was taken down in Utah. It was horrible stuff to take and only eased me for a short time. "About a year ago I went into the 'No Percentage Pharmacy,' on Market street While I was there an old man named Cowen, of Vallejo Junction, came in. He told me he was going to get Pink Pills for his rheumatism. I told him if they oould do him good they might help me too. He had been up to Byron Springs and was nearly doubled up with rheumatism. The doctors told him just as they had told me, that medioine would do him no good. Well, I didn't give up. I am a young man and you would not expect me to give myself up as a hopeless rheumatio at my age. I was ready to try anything. I bought two or three boxes of the pills and began to take them. The way in whion they took bold of me was simply wonderful. I did not take many of the pills either, and of course, I am careful not to ex pose myself. I have never been lame since and have never lost a night's sleep from rheumatism. I recommend ed the pills to my friends and I have yet to hear from the first one who has not been benefited. As for myself, I would gladly make affidavit to the good they have done me, in faot I am only too happv to do so, for I cannot say too muoh for the benefit I have re oeived. "Going through Vallejo Junotion on my train one day I saw the old gentleman, Mr. Cowen, and I called out to him 'how are the Fink Pills.' He replied they are fine.' "I was down in Los Angeles and oalled upon a postal olerk, a friend ol mine. He told me that his wife was a great sufferer from rheumatism. I told her to try the Fink Pills, and now there is no one in Los Angeles whe thinks more of the pills than Mrs. Carr, that is her name. 1 don't think she had rheumatism quite so badly ai I, but she was just as anxious to get rid of it, and she is jnst as grateful to b well again. "I always keep a box of the pilli handy just in oase I should need them, though my wife will tell you how rarely I use them now." Dr. Williams' Fink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the element necessary to give new life and richnest to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nerv ous headaohe, the after effect of la grippe, palpitaiton of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms oi weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid ou receipt of price, 60 oents a box or six boxes for 12.60 (they are never sold in bulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Wil liams' Medioine Company, Sheneotady, N. Y. Be Was Not sit Gettysburg. "People sometimes ask me," said an old soldier, "if I was at Gettysburg, and when I tell them the fact tbat I was not, do yon know that I sort of im agine that some of -them think that then I couldn't have been very much of a sol dier? I suppose it's natural enongh too. It is perfectly natural that people shonld be most impressed by the greatest bat tles of the war, and natural enough to get an idea that the greater the battle the greater the danger and the greater the call for bravery, but as a matter of fact, a man can be killed just as dead in a little fight as in a big one. "Mew York Sun. It is now olaimed that foods stored in an atmosphere of carbolio aoid gas are preserved indefinitely, the fresh ness and flavor being retained better than by the use of dangerous antisep tioes or of ioe. Oxalate of lime is found in the bark of trees. The strange discovery has recently been made by Dr. Kraus, in Germany, showing that there is a 1 steady loss of these orystals during the winter season. The man who sits down to wait for a golden opportunity to knock at his door will need a thick oushion on bis ohair. ; .The trouble with the man who is al ways talking about what he'd do if be bad plenty of money, is tbat he never has any. '. Over 800,000 specimens of fossil in sect have been oolleoted from various parts of the world. Of these, butter flies are among the very rarest, as less , than twenty specimens all told, have MSA NUM. - I - ' ' . . THE HURRIOANE. -, Lord ef the winds! I fee thee nigh: I know thy breath In the burning sky And I wait, with a thrill la every vela, For the comlaf of the hurricane. And lot en the wing of the heavy galea. Throng h the boundless arch of heaven he sails. Silent and slow, and terribly strong, The mighty shadow Is borne along. Like the dark eternity to come; While the world below, dismayed and dumb. Through the calm of the, thick, hot at mosphere Looks up at Us gloomy folds with tear. They darken fast, and the golden blase Of the sun Is quenched In the lurid has And he sends through the shade a funeral ray A glare that Is neither night nor day, A beam that touches with hues of death The clouds above and the earth beneath. To Its covert slides the silent bird, While the hurricane's voice Is heard Uplifted among the mountains round, And the forests hear and answer the sound. He Is come! he la come! do ye not behold Hit ample robes on the wind unrolled ? Giant of air! we bid thee hall! How his gray skirts toss In the whirling isle; How his huge and writhing arms are bent To clasp the sone of the firmament. And fold at length, in their dark embrace, From mountain to mountain the visible space. Darker still darker! the whirlwinds bear The dust of the plains to the middle air; And hark to the crashing, long and loud, Of the chariot of Uod In the thunder cloud! Tou may trace Its path by the flashes that start From the rapid wheels wher'er they dart, As the flre-bolts leap to the world below, And flood the skies with a lurid glow. What roar Is that?-'tla the rain that breaks In torrents away from the airy lakes. Heavily poured on the shuddering ground, And shedding a nameless horror round. Ah! well-known woods, and mountains, and skies, With the very clouds! ye are lost to my eyes. I seek ye vainly, and tee In your place . The shadowy tempest that sweeps through space, A whirling ocean that fills the wall Of the crystal heaven and buries all. And I, cut oft from the world, remain Alone with the terrible hurricane. William Cullen Bryant f , j SIX CENTS A DOZEN. 6he lives on Forquer street a bright faced, smiling little Italian woman. Her husband Is out of work, and she Is fighting the wolf from the door, part ly by being foster-mother for a baby of six months, and partly by finishing boys' pants for G cents a dozen pair. I could not believe It at first It seem ed Impossible that anyone could ask human fingers to toll for so little, but then, flesh and blood Is cheap, and we must have bargains! There Is a small cottage a miserable hut It seems to an American eye. In one of the sunniest valleys of Southern Italy. The humble roof shelters Ave people the father, a dark-browed, but kindly man of steady habits; his wife, not very neat nor very enlightened, but eminently pious; a daughter, 14 years of age; a son, of 12, and a diminu tive old woman called by courtesy, a child of 5. To-day there is a commo tion within, for to-morrow the priest will pass on fcls regular round of visita tion, and the house must he set In or der. And, Indeed, It Is fairly clean; for despite not very cleanly Instinct", things can scarcely get so bad In Italy as with us. To begin with, the cottage stands by itself, and tumble-down as it Is, the fresh breezes and the soft perfumes of the little garden, and, above all, the genial Italian sunshine, keep it free from the dreadful condi tions one day's carelessness breeds In Forquer street And now the house Is tidied. The little basket of fresh eggs is ready. Flowers deck the tiny place, the best holiday attire Is put on, and at last in the distance the reverend man of God appears. He enters the humble door, pausing on the threshold to be stow bis blessing, and In Its new coat of -whitewash, the little hut seems worthy to receive It, The due rites are performed, the eggs laid In the attendant's basket, and with words of peace the priest rises to depart. But no, there Is another matter. Will the father hear of it? And then the hus band tells that they are going to Amer ica. He has heard wonderful tales of that far-away country and it Is never hard to get bread there. They hare longed to go for many months, and now a cousin has offered them a loan for their passage-money it will be easy to repay It, once there and be fore the father comes again they will be gone. Will he not give them a spe cial blessing this time? Oh, It would not be for always. When they had grown rich, they would come back and live out their old age In dear Italy. Nevertheless the aged man, who loves them, lets fall a tear, and his voice trembles when, with uplifted hands, he Invokes the divine sanction and blessing upon their long Journey. Castle Garden! What dreadful nois es! And still they can feel the throb of the great ocean steamer's heart, and they sway on the stable land as If still on deck, but no time must be lost Chi cago, the great hearted city of the West Is to be their home, and again their journeying Is resumed. But at last they are here. And what a greet ing! The rain Is drizzling down Into' the dirty gutters, already full to over flowing, the streets reek with foul odors, and the room they are to call home is not by Itself, and tijt is no place for a garden, They K,$ the twelfth family under the single roof families that have only one, two, or at the most three rooms to call their own as long as they can pay the rent Their own single room tenement Is the front one in the basement, and is eighteen feet long, eleven and one half feet wide, and seven and one half feet high. And yet some people are so extravagant that they really believe it la necessary to the health, for each Individual In a room to have 60o cubic feet of air space for his own particular use I For this on room our friends are to pay $3,50 per month. Hers ths firs must live, eat Aid sleep, with ths smell attending washing and cooking omnipresent ti A any won. dor ths good wife hopes their fortune will sooa be made, so that she may feel ths soft air of Italy again? But some way, ths fortune comes slowly. In ths summer time, ludeed, the father is so fortunate as to se cure work on the streets, and his wages of $1.20 per days seems princely, until he finds with what ready facility money slips away even from an Italian In Chicago. The boy la soon Initiated by his comrades into boot blacking and paper selling, and In the early fall the elder daughter goes Into a tailor ahop where she sits all day over work that Is taking all the youthful vigor tnd beauty out of her, and worst of all, the poor mother moans, she scoffs and Jeers now at the old, simple life in Italy, and manages to pass half the night she doesn't know where, or wlili whom. Her . wages are not making them rich, either who said money was easy to get In Chicago her wages are only $1.60 a week. And her son he curses and drinks and refuses to go to confession. Even her husband, so good and pious In Italy, doesn't seem to care any more for what the priest says, and often comes home drunk. Oh, why did they come to America? And the one room gets dirtier and dirtier, while they be come poorer and poorer. Winter comes, and the father Is out of work. Then the mother visits the tailor shop and comes home with an armful of boy's pants to finish for which she gets 0 cents per dozen pair. If she works hard she can make eighteen, possibly twenty-four cents a day. Truly, a fortuue Is easily made In Chicago! But the depths are not yet The husband, taking pattern after his neighbors, thinks they might; take a lodger or two; and they make their appearance the next night two low browed, vlclous-looklng countrymen, whom five years In Chicago hare bru talized, and the desperate mother shud ders when she sees the glancei they bestow upon her daughternow 11, and all Innocence well nlgbt stamped out of her. Then, by and by, she gives up ho.ie, and sits and broods day after day with an ominous look In her eyes, when by chance they rest upon her little 0 year old daughter. What chauo la there for her? Morning papers! Tlmes-Hernld, Tribune, News! All about the murder and suicide! Paper, sir? And Chris tians snd philanthropists read nnd shudder and then dismiss the matter as an erery-day occurrence. A poor Italian women, "In a temporary fit of Insanity," has killed ber little 0-year-old daughter, stabbing her to the heart with a knife", and then, with the same weapon, she cut her own throat. Tho reporter says there seemed to be "no special reason for ber madness." And mothers exclaimed over the lack of maternal Instinct among the poor and then went shopping, and were so blind they could not see the blood that ev erywhere stained the ready-inarin gar ments exposed for sale! And the Recording Angel wrote down the word Murder! but not after an Italian name; and opposite many thou sands of names, respectable and re vered on earth, he wrote: "Inasmuch as ye did It not to one of the least of these, ye did It not to me." Then a great city was called to judg ment, am1 the verdict upon ber was this: "She maketh her poor a reproach and a shame, compelling them to live In conditions under which It Is lmpowstblo to be pure. Because of her worshp of money, and "because of men's blood and for the violence of tho laud, of tho city, and of all that dwell therein, the stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber shall answer If "-Barn's Horn. How Edison Learned to Tell Stories. "It seemed like a waste of time," said a gentleman who passed an evening with Mr. Edison In Norwalk, Ohio, re cently, "to hear Mr. Edison rolling off story after story, and demanding of all his acquaintances to tell him more, when he knewshow much Information we might have received from htm. I finally asked him bow he got to be such a story teller. 'Well,' he repllcd.when I was quite a young man I was a tele graph operator during the war. I was stationed at St Louis, which was a sort of distributing point for a large dis trict and when we would get our batch of stuff off, and we still had several hours to put In, I used to get pretty tired. Then we would begin to call up the operator at the other end of the line and gossip with htm. I always liked stories, and If Chicago had a good one he would wire It to me. Then I would send tbat off to Louisville and New York and Cincinnati, and hear them laugh over It by wiring back, "Ha, ha," over the wire. In this way we would get all the best stories there were going, and we would always write them out for the day men. It got to be a sort of passion after a while, and has stuck to me ever since.'" Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Mystery of the Rifle, Something that no man understands Is why a ride, clapped In an Immovable vice, will not put the bullets In the same hole livery time, even If the wind does not I tterfere. A correspondent of Shootlnft and Fishing tells how ho put a rifle of 32 caliber Into a vise and fired it ten times, the sights being al ways aimed at a mark. The bullets went all over a four-Inch circle at fifty yards. Theoretically all ought to have gone Into the same hole. A man who holds his rifle gripped hard at one time and easily at another will not shoot as well as one who takes the same hold of bis rifle every time. The beet results are obtained from bench rests when the man puts his shoulder against the rifle butt Toung; Cockerel as Broilers, The best time to thin out surplus" fowls, especially the cockerels, Is when they attain the right size for broilers. They will bring more then than after they have attained full growth In the fall, when most of the thinning out Is usually done by farmers and when the market Is sure to be glutted. For early broilers In June and the fore part of July an extra price can generally be obtained, as the market then is not so well supplied as it is later. Telegrapbs in the United States. This country has 1,000,000 miles of telegraph wiresenough to reaoh forty times around the glob. BOITT'S SCHOOL FOB BOYS. (Tbbsi Comuhch Acquit 4ra.) "An eioellent Institution, beautifully Situated at Burliniatue. Han Mateo Ooun- . ty, Cat , Having had ocoaaion to Invest! ; rate the management and methods of , Huttt't School, we are eatlatisd that for 1 cartlul supervision of boys and thorough moral, mental and physical training it has ; no lurienor. It has fairlv earned its in- Oreatlug popularity." & K Evtninq ISut. A temperature of 4,000 to 0,000 de gress can be produced only between the carbon points of an eleotrio arolight The next hottest place in the world is in the crucible of an eleotrio furuaoe. The highest tobaccos good as Every knows there as ii7m' 1.Y i Mil IKDW SmoSuniMacco tiff You will find each two ounce pons inside bag ol lllackwcll s Hurlinm. Buy a bag of this cele brated tolmcroend read the coupon which of vuluuble to get IOR one increases every year. will see why. Walter Baker "Knocks Out o o B3 M ' M -8i 3 f-sSa k ! IPILU The Large Piece and High Grade of "Battle Ax" has injSa the sale of other brands of higher prices and smaller pieces. Don't allow the dealer to impose on you by saying they are "just as good" as "Battle Ax' for he is anxious to work off his unsalable stock. TyV """T JT A it the name of Woman's Friend. It is ful in relieving the backaches,headaches which burden and shorten a woman's women testify for it. It wiU give health and strenirth and make life a pleasure. For sale by all druMists. BLUMAUEK-FBANK DBUO CO., Poetlasd, Agents. JkerilTO taVflliTM in every town, for one of the beet selling articles made, Uked by erery man, woman and child, Fredericks esmitary Tooth Hru.h with Tonrue Cleaning Attachment. Endorsed by all the leading; phvsiclaus and dentists. BeudlSe, fnrsamtile, Ketillsior 25o and 60c. WILL 4 FINK CO., 818-820 Market Street, Han Francisco, CaL FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or ViuALSPn' fa9t Well," KUIVER PILLS ar the On. Thing tou... . Only One for n Ooae. Sold by Druggists at 8So. a box Sanplta mailad free. Adorns Dr. Bossnke Mad. Co. Phils. Pa. MRS. WINSLOW'S "rarj - FOR CHILDREN TCETHINO yrsalyainriyl.ta, SS Cat. a awttle. I T5vtj'wHEiic Jlflilht FaIiS"'" I Jr I I Bast Couth BrrapVsateaOood. OssI I I I In tuna. Bold by drnswista, 1 1 V, P, JT. TJ. No. ,-. F. . TJ. No. 738 Fits fa rSAwMl IMfatM ITSI. W. B. Fstka, who Bpllepsy, ha without doubt treated and cur. d,n0'sce-a tl.an any llvina; Physician his success la a.timl.blna:. We havs heard of cane ol to years' standing by Him. Hi publlahesa valuable work on thla dla. Mm, which he Benda .with a He of his absolute cure, free to any eitTttrere rho may send their P. O. and Kapreaa adilreas, We ailvise unv ne wishing arure to adrimae rof.W. H. FEf.CE- T. D.. SCmlarSt. WewTark claim for other Mfo J w "Just as Durham." old smoker Is none just good as one coupon inside luig.niiu two cou cncli four ounce aives a list presents and how tlicm. them. & hundred and fifteen r Cured years Walter Baker & Co. E have made Cocoa and Choc olate, and the demand for it Try it and you K & Co Ltd Dorchester, Mass. All Others' a "TV""!" TllB vel7 remarkable and certain xvomaL-iu tt,MJu;x nas given uniformly success and weakness life. Thousands oi f T$tl)i$ wbat ails you?! Ravs nu a fe.llns J n weiant In tka ' Stomach Bleating ( afUreatlna Bslck Iniof Wind Vomit-1 ln of Food Water- brash Htartbnra Bad Test la the Mouth In til. Morn ing-Palpitation f thsHtart,4nstoDls- tension of Stomach , Cankered Mouth Gas la the Bowala i low ef fl.sk ricals Appetite , Depressad, lrrltabls ' Condition of the i Mind Dlislneos ' Headache Conatls- i atl.o er Dlarrhaiaf ( Thea ym hers DYSPEPSIA In on. of Its many forms. The ons eosltlre care I for this distressing complaint is JIcl;cr'$ Dyspepsia Cablets. b. mall. BKIUlld. AM Nweln. nf ,,. ' CMiSUSS Rmkt, Hotel Imperial, Now Yorv, I I says i "I suffered horribly from dysrpsla, buli . Acker's Tableta.Uken alter meal.havaounil m "l t . . - i ACKER MEDICINE CO., iS Chambers St., 1.1