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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1898)
a It Saady. Et) cried oat in agony, and they ran to the neighbor for help. Sciatic was torturing nim. Better run lor St Jacob Oil, or hare it bandy. It ia known to oure the wont easea, and ure effectually. The power in man to think ia the es- tenoeof bia aonl. Thought can de troy, thought can save. Prentis Mil ford aaid: "Thoughts are things." Can yon aee this thought called things? By intuition man perceives that thought are things; by intellect he realises the thing, the effects. The power of thoughts has fathomed the depth of the beavens and brought us the com forts and luxuries of our present civil isation. Catarrh In the Head Is an Inflammation of the mucous mem brane lining the nasal passages. It is caused by a cold or succession of colds, combined with impure blood. The way to cure It is by purifying and enriching the blood with Hood's Sarsaparilla. This medicine cures catarrh when all other preparations fail. ... Remember Hood's Sarsaoarilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. II; tlx for 15. Hood's Pills "ore constipation. 56 cents. LABOR AND INDUSTRY. The United States has 427,668 coke ovens; Pennsylvania 20,910. The capital invested in cotton mill in South Carolina now amounts to f 18,- 014,000. It is estimated that 85 per oent of the silk goods used in the Dnited States are me products ol our own factories. The labor press announces that E. V. Debs has severed his official connec tion with all labor unions, and will take the leoture platform. A writer in an exchange declares that 600,000 men now do the work.with the aid of machinery, which needed 16,000,000 to do a few years ago. The membership of the Clgarmakers International Union is taking a vote on a proposition to abolish the out-of-work benefit and to reduce the death benefits about 30 per oent. A good many of the New England cotton mills may be making silk a few years from now. Some of them "have caught on already to the advantages of making the change. It is reported that English machine builders have contracts for the equip ment of many cotton mills in India, including 11 mills being established in Ahmedabad, where six more may be in progress of construction. After an idleness of four years the 112-inch mill of the Glasgow Iron Company of Pottstown, Pa., has been put in operation, as was also a 65-inoh mill of the same company, giving em ployment to nearly 600 men. The first woolen mill in the Chinese empire is about to be established, and it will be fitted up with American ma chinery. Even if our own woolen mills are failing, our machine workers ap pear to be doing a good business. No household is complete without a bot tle of the famous Jesse Moore Whiskey. It is a pure and wholesome stimulant rec ommended by all physicians. Don't ne glect this necessity. The original manuscript oopy of Amerioa's national hymn, "My Coun try, 'Tis of Thee." written in f$S2 by Samuel Francis Smith, 1b now in the famous Vatican library in Rome. At one tune it was owned by David Pell Secar, of Bridgeport, Conn., having been persented to him by the author, ThaBev. Dr. Maher, while visiting Mr. secar a lew years ago, saw it and suggested that it be sent to the Vatican library, FITS Permanently Cored. A o fit or nervommes jtfwr ti'H day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for VREB fta.00 trial bottle and treatise. DR. B. H, KIJKE. lid. Area street, PnUadelpUa, faT " Women eat so little and so irregu larly that it is a wonder it has never occurred to Uncle Sam that they would make good soldiers. THEY WANT TO TELL These Grateful Women Who Have Been Helped by Mrs. Pinkham. Women who have suffered severely . and been relieved of their ills by Mrs. Pinkham's advice and medicine are constantly urging publication of their statements for the benefit of other wo men. Here are two such letters: - Mrs. Lizzib Beverly, 258 Merrimao St. , Lowell, Mass., writes: , "It affords me great pleasure to tell all suffering women of the benefit I have received from taking Lydia B, Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, lean hard ly find words toexpressmy gratitude for what ahe has done for me. My trouble was ulceration of the womb. I was un der the doctor's care. Upon examina tion he found fifteen very large ulcers, trat he failed to do me good. I took sev eral bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, also used the Sanative Wash, and am cured. Mrs. Pinkham's medicine saved my life, and I would "recommend it to all suffering women." Mrs. Amos Tbombleat, Ellenburgh Ctr., N. Y.. writes: 'I took cold at the time my baby was bort). causing me to have milk legs, and was sick in bed for eight weeks. Doctors did me no good. I surely thought I would die. I was al so troubled with falling of the womb. I could not eat, bad faint spells as often as ten times a day. One day a lady came to see me and told me of the benefit she had derived irom taking Lydia E. Pinkham medioine, and ai vised me to try it, I did so, and taken onlv half a bottle before able to sit in a cnsir. aiier i V . . . . ui.-" (area uotuen i wuiu uu I mb now In perfect heV : -..flf eiaio euu icmma apents in meir uw wwh CAD make from to to 110 a day easy. Something entirely new. No experienoo necessary, fiend fnr free sample. ' KICK & CO., ltjl First St., rooms 1 and 18, Portland, Or. f 'est'l- 1syrokLertes foot Bet I i l Sold br druggists. 1 f aJ nnn? WRECK AT ALSEA BAY British Ship Atalanta in the Breakers. TWENTY-F0UB MEN WERE LOST Heavy Surf Ia Pounding the Vessel to Fieoea Another Case of Back less Navigation. Yaqnina, Or., Nov. 21. The British shp Atalanta, onrryng a crew of 27 men and loaded with 2,800 tons of wheat, from Tacoma for South Africa, was wrecked near Alsea bay yesterday morning, and so far as known there are but three survivors. The cause of the wreck of the Ata lanta and the circumstances attending it, produce a tale most harrowing. The mismanagement of the vessel by its officers is ascribed as the(cauee of the disaster, and the crippling of the Ya qnina life-saving station by a penurious policy of that department of the gov ernment, adds horror to the situation. The only three survivors aver that some of their comrades on board the ship may yet be alive. While the members of the life-saving orew are in sight of the wreck, they are so far powerless to render assistance, owing to the want of apparatus. Meanwhile couriers scoured the beach and coun try adjaoent for 10 miles, to procure horses to bring up the lifeboat and beach oart. " The Atalanta lay about a mile off shore, In a field of furious breakers. Every swell passed over her works. Each hour a section of the vessel was seen to fall away, and the timbers float toward the shore. A strong and steady south wester aided the current from the same direction to bear the wreckage rapidly to tne beach. It was this pow er and agenoy, and this alone that en abled the three sailors who survive to escape the fate of their brethren. In a lifeboat filled with water, partly dis abled with wreokage, and without oars to direct their craft, they were borne to Terra firma, thus passing over a course of nearly two miles. One man, who was clad in simply a shirt, more hardy than the others, made his way along the beach. He found a farmhouse and announced the news, and solicited assistance for his companions. When the unfortunates on the beach were readied they were so benumbed withoold as to appear beyond help. It has required nearly 24 hours for one of them to regain his powers of mind and body. The rescued sailors have been taken into oabins along the beach. The most complete and reliable storv of the wreck obtainable comes from Frank Fogartv, a member of the Yaquina life-saving crew, who has patiolled the beach in the vicinity of the wreck. Captain Clark ordered him back to the station, which had been entirely deserted, except by the wives of the orew, to guard there tonieht. "The officers of the Atalanta paid the penalty of their folly with their lives." said Eogarty. "Not one escaped, un- he is penned up in the forecastle. to be released tonight or tomorrow. "The survivors have started the storv down on the beach that the wreck is more the result of carelessness on the part of the captain than of adverse weather. It is to the effect that the Atalanta was racing down the ooast with another sailing ship to make bet ter time, and having a more advan tageous tack, against the southwester, he steered close into Cape Foul weather. Not seeing the lighthouse, he supposed the vessel to be some distance from shore. This caused him to continue his southeast tack too long. "The logbook at the life-saving sta tion shows that Thursday morning, be tween midnight and 6 o'clook, when the Atalanta was on this tack, the Cape Kouiweatner ligntnouse was concealed .by fog and heavy sheets of lain. Nev ertheless, the survivors, according to report, do not excuse ,'the policy of the oaptain. Had not a race been on, they say, he would have taken no such chances." Atalanta Sailed From Tacoma. Tacoma, Wash., Nov. 21. The Brit ish ship Atlanta left here last Saturday With 165,000 worth of wheat, for Del ago bay, South Africa. She was in command of Captain Charles McBride, of Greenock, Scotland, where he has a wife. The ship left here with 27 men, the only names of those on record here being those of the captain and the fol lowing, who joined the vessel at this" port as seamen: '. - D. F. Green, A. B., 81 Chapel place, Dublin; J. Webber, A. B., 182 Forty Becond street, New York; 8. A. Jacob eon, A. &., Stockholm; J. 8mith, Fins bury; G. Covalis, Callao; J. Jones, Valparaiso; N. Sorensen, Bergen; G. Fraser, 829 Monroe street, Philadel phia; B. Codd, 74 Flanders street, Liverpool; J. Marks, Brightwood addi tion, Indianapolis. The Atalanta was of only 1,698 tons register. She was built in 1885, owned by N. Hill, of Scotland, aqd was woith probably $50,000. Captain Benny, Lloyd's surveyor here, thinks probably the lost ship is the German bark Atalanta, 2,200 tons, which he says is en route from " Santa Rosalia, Central America, and more likely to be carried into the shore by the southwest wind that is said to have prevailed. Another German ship,. At alanta, sailed from British Columbia November 4, in command of Captain Durmer, with, salmon for London, but that ship should be past Oregon long befoiehis. ' ; .. ,;;' ; prions Burned to Y if, tersburg, Nov. 21.- . t ywhicb completely destroy ...ensive sued, 10 persons were bu rw PAOIFIC COAST TRADE. Portland Mark. Wheat Walla Walla, 69 60c; Val- ey and Bluentem, 63o per bushel. Flour Best grades, $3.45; graham, id; superfine, f2.25 per barrel Oats Choice white, 89 40c; choic gray, 37 (a! 8 So per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $21(382; brew ing, 23 per ton. Millstuffs-Bran, $15.50 per ton; mid dhngs, $21; shorts, $16; chop, $15.60 per ton.. Hay Timothy. $9 10; clover. $7 8; Oregon wild hay, 6$ per ton. Mutter Fancy creamery, 60 65c seconds, 45 5005 dairy, 85 40o store, Suisse Cheese Oregon full cream, 111So Young America, 12 Wo; new cheese, 10c per pound. Poultry Chickens, mixed, $3 OS. 50 per 11. ler dosen; hens, $3.504.50; springs, 53; geese, $5.00(38.00 for old $4.606 tor young; ducks, $4.00 6.00 per dosen; turkeys, live, 12, 12 Ho per pound. Potatoes 5060o per sack; sweets, 2c ver pound. Vegetables Beets, 90c; turnips, 75c per sack; garlic, To per pound; cab- bago, $1 1.26 per 100 pounds; cautl flower, 75o per dozen; parsnips, 75o per saok; beans, 8c per ponnd; celery, 7075c per doien; cucumbers, 60c per box; peas, 8B)tc per pound. Onions Oregon, 75o$l per sack. Hops 1517o; 1897 crop, 46o. Wool Valley, 1013o per pound Eastern Oregon, 812o; mohair, 25c per pound. Mutton Gross, best sheep, wethers and ewes, 8o; dressed mutton, 7c Spring lambs, 7Xc per lb. Hogs Gross, ohoice heavy, $4.78; light and feeders, $8.00 4. 00; dressed, $6. 60 6. 60 per 100 pounds. Beef Gross, top steers, 8.60$3.75; cows, $2. 60 3. 00; dressed beef, 564C per pound. Veal Large, 6)6c; small, 6)$ 7$o per pound. Seattle Mark eta. Tomatoes, 6085oper box. Cucumbers, 10 15c poi doa. Onions, fee 90o -per 100 pounds. Potatoes, $1012. Beets, per sack, $1. Turnips, per sack, 60 60c Carrots, per sack, 65c Parsnips, per sack, $1. ' Beans, green, 2 So. Green corn, $1.251.60 per saok. Cauliflower, 75o per doz. Celery, 4060o. Cabbage, native and California $1.00 1.50 per 100 pounds. Apples. 50c65o per box. Pears, 75c$l per box. Prunes, 50o per box. Peaches, 75c. Plums, 60c. Butter Creamery, 87o pet pound dairy and ranch, 1820o per pound. - Eggs, 82c Cheese Native, 1212o. Poultry Old hens, 18o per pound; spring chickens, leo; turkeys, 16c. Fresh meats Choice dressed beef steers, prime, 67o; cows, prime, 6c; mutton, 7$o; pork, 78o; veal, 780. Wheat Feed wheat. $21. Oats Choice, per ton, $23. Hay Puget Sound mixed, $9.50 10; choioe Eastern Washington tim othy, $12. Corn Whole. $28.60; cracked, $24; feed meal, $23.50. Barley Boiled or ground, per ton, 242o; whole, $22. Flour Patent, per barrel, $8.60; straights, $8.25; California bmnds, $8.25; buckwheat flour, $8.75; graham, per barrel, $8.70; whole wheat flour. $3.75; rye flour, $4. Millstnffs Bran, per ton, $14; shorts, per ton, $16. reeu unoppeo ieea, 117(321 ner ton; middlings, per ton, $17; oil cake meal, per ton, $35. an Franelaeo market. Wool Spring Nevada, 1014c per pound; Oregon, Eastern, 1012o; Val ley, 1517c; Northern, 9llc. Millstuffs Middlings, $1B21.00; bran, $15.5016.50 per ton. Onions Yellow. 8045o per sack. Butter Fancy creamery, 24c; do seconds, 22c28; fancy dairy, 21 22c; do seconds, 20 24c per pound. Eggs Store, 1822o; fancy ranoh, 4042o. Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valencia, $2 2.60; Mexican limes, $66.60; Cali, fornia lemons, $2. 00. 800; do choioe $3. 60 4. 50; per box. THE OLD-TIMERS. Elder Abram Perkins of the Shaker settlement, is 91 years old, yet fre quently walks all the way to Conoord, N. H., a distance of over 20 miles. James A. Davis, who died in Dor chester county, Maryland, last week, Bteered the first steamer that crossed Lake Erie. Chicago was thon, he said, but three briok houses. Mrs. Nahoy Carine Is dead at'1 Dills boro, Ind., aged 67. For 47 years she had lived less than a mile from .a rail road and within easy sound of the loco motive whistle, but never saw either road, car or engine. . Mme. Bistori, otherwise the Mar quise Capranica del Grillo, is in her 77th year, and is lying critically ill at Rome, being thus unable to accept the invitation of the queon of Italy to pass a few days with tier at Gressony. Frederick P. Sanguinet, father of 11 children with 26 grandchildren, has just died at his home, 4353 Evans av a cue, St. Louis. His death is the first that has occurred in tho family, in cluding three generations, for overhalf a century. The Sangufnets have lived in St. Louis all the time.1 Duriiiff Mr. Sanguinet'i 78 years he has not been 111 a day, and until throe weeks when taken ill with liver trouble, ugageu in active nusiness as a A fWr. " " XSamno1 8pring Haskell bavefcNt Arating the 70th anni versary of ..fir wedding at 81 Lefferts place, Brooklyn. Mr. Haskell is 90 years old, his wife 86. They are both tar from being infirm. The husband uses no glasses; the wife reads com fortably with them. They talk spirit edly of the old days when Brooklyn was a wilderness, and they are the idol of their children, their grandchildren and their great-grand children. Chinese laundrymen of New York aave formed a trust, and prices have been raised. ALONG THE COAST. Itania of Osnaral Interval Gleaned From tho Thriving Paelflo Btatoa. Tho Salmon Pack. The full Sound pack, as given last week, is 133,000 cases, and the Fraser river 84,600. The Columiba river pack is given as 115,000, tho largest In the history of the river. The Trade Kesis ter estimate on August 27 was 600,000 for red Alaska, but later reports in creased it to 840,000 oasos. No definite figures for the total Alaska pack are at hand. The Sound sockeye pack was 256,500 cases; Fraecr river alone, 193,000; British Columbia (including the Fraser), 414,900; Columbia river, 883,580 cases. Tgtal puck last year, all points, was given at 8,121, 117 oases. The fall pack of Pugot sound last year was 120,300 case, with 87,600 for Willapa and Gray's hnrbor; 68,650 for Columbia river and a total of 205,628 cases of falls for the coast (not includ ing Alaska), against 284,690 this year. The run In the Gray's harbor district has been good this year, and will prob ably be 60,000 oases. Lot Ang-elea Oil Output. The oil producers' trustees have pub lished the regular monthly report for October. The statement shows that 15,036 barrels of oil were reoeivod dur ing tho month. During the same period the sales amounted to 23,732 barrels. The amount in storage on Oc tober 1 was 83,236 barrels. The amount on November 1 had fallen to 78,440 barrels. Virtually all of this amount belongs to the Oil Transporta tion & Storage Company. A circular just issued by this oompany shows that it intends to go into the oil buying and selling business. Orang-a Eatlmata. The orange crop will be late this year, and few will be fit to ship to the Northwest forthe holiday trado. The Los Angeles Express in writing up the outlook says that the total shipments from Southern California for the year foot up, of all kinds of citrous fruits, 15,148 carloads, whioh is a large per cent greater than for any previous 13 months. The coming crop is expeotod to equal last year's. Tht rn is a good demand for lemons, but this fruit is scarce. Mew Fish Canning Concern. A new"" incorporation has been formed at Astoria, Or., to be known as the Alasak Fisherman's Paoklng Com pany, with a capital stock of $70,000, divided into 140 shares of $600 each The company wi) engage in the can ning, salting and freezing of salmon in Alaska and elsewhere. The inoorpora tors are Theodore Slverson, Christ Christensen, John Nordstrum, Ole B. Oleson, A. L. Clark and John L Clarkson. .. Columbia River Shipping. The following ships left Portland Inst week, touching at Astoria: The British ship Mooltan cleared for Queenstown or Falmouth for orders, with 95,880 bushels of wheat, valued at 157. S00. shinned bv the Portlnnd 1 louring Mills Company. The British shipNivelle, loaded by Balfour, Guth rie & Co., finished also, ' and went into the stream, and thj Mozambique, with a cargo of wheat and barley, cleared. New Coal Depoalt. The canitalista have reaentlv sent an expert to investigate the deposit of lignite coal that exists on Mallory ridge, near Asotin, Wash. A test was made of the coal, and it was pro nounced all right, and from what can be learned it is thounht the extent of the mineral body will be more fully inquired into in the course of a few weeks. The vein is now onened un for a distance of 16 feet. Pooling Hopa for Better Prlcea. The hopgrowers in the vicinity of Independence, Or., in order to take advantage of the raising market are pooling their crops together and hope to obtain 17 cents. A recent shipment from there consisted of five carloads, containing 301 bales of first-olass hops. There still remains in that city some 700 bales of hops unsold. For San Franelaeo Market. Owing to the extreme dry season in California during the past year large sales of cattle for shipment to Califor nia have been made in Oregon. Two wholesale butchers of San Francisco purchased 900 head of fine beef cattle near Lakeview. The sale approxi mates $30,000. Boudi Sold. The municipal bonds of Great Falls, Mont., havebeen gold to good advan tage In ChioagO. The issue amounts to $375,000, qn which a premium of $10,105 was obtained, which added to the accrued interest made a total of $381,528.21 received by the city. Water Main Contract Let. The city council of New Whatcom, Wash., has let a contract for extend ing the city wator system 8,600 feet to J. H. Thomas for $19,808. Tin: pipe will be wooden-stave, and tl.j bond re quired in the sum of $30,000. Clearing-House Heturni. Victoria, B. C, has had a clearing house for two weeks now, and the vol ume of business shows a good increase. The returns for last week were $785,- 185, while for the weok previous the figures were $700,553. New Induitry. The first shipment was made last week from Port Moody to Vancouver, B. C, of oil of cedar. A company has been organized to carry on the indus try, and though now in its infancy, a possible great future is ahead of the enterprise. New City Ball Contraet Let. The counoil of La Grande, Or., last week awarded a oontraot for the erection of a new city hall, to cost $2,650. The largest log drive for several years will be brought down this season by the Colfax, Wash., sawmill. It will consist of 4,000,000 feet of logs. Undoubtedly there 'will be a great rush into the Atlin distriot, Alaska, in the spring. The country has proved very rich. A consignment of 280,000 feet of fir and cedar lumber, the product of the Simpson Mill Co., of Ballard, will be shipped from Seattle December 1 to Honolulu, to be used by the United States government in the erection of barracks. 1 ANARCHY IN PORTO RICO. Brlganda flying Their Trade In tha Interior. Washington, Nov. 81. The cabinet sossion today was devoted to a largo extent to configuration of complaints that have reached the war department, alleging that a state of practical an archy prevails in Porto Rico. These complaints assorted that the lawless elemeuts are committing depredation" of the gravest character, and tho sun ousncss of the situation is increased by tho fact that United States troops likewise have been guilty of grots mia- conduct. Secretary Alger has oabled General Biooke, inquiring as to tho accuracy of the complaints. The most serious allegations are against brigands and lawless dements in the smaller towns away from the coast. It is said that taking advant age of the unsettled state of the conn' try, due to the transfer of the govern ment from Spain to the United States, bands of men have organized for rob bery and rapine, burning houses and plantataions and levying tribute upon the people whorevei possible. In one oase, it is said, they made a raid on a small town of about 1,600 inhabitants, 15 miles from the nearest troops, and burned and destroyed property to a considerable value. AN APPEAL FOR HELP. Foreigner! at Hollo Ask for American Protection. Washington, Nov. 21. News of mixed character came to the navy de partment today from Admiral Dewey touching the situation in tho Philip pines. The admiral sent two of his warships, the Charleston and the Con- coid, some time ago, to the southward from Manila to ascertain whether there was truth in reports that the insurgonts had extended thoir activities in that di root ion. Today he cabled as fol lows: "Manila, Nov. 21. Secretary of the Navy, Washington: Charleston and Concord arrived today from Iloilo. Glass reports that the entire island of Panay is In possession of insurgents, except Iloilo, which is dofunded by 800 Spanish troops. All foreign citizens there beg for American protection. The island of Negros has declared In dependence and desires American pro tectorate. DESVEY." Glass is commander of the Charles ton. So far, nothing has been done by the administration toward curbing the insurgents in their operations, save verbal representations from the Ameri can commanders to Aguinaldo, in which it has been pointed out to him that it would be good polloy, In view of the probability of the annexation of the islands by the United States, to pursue a course that would not be ob noxious to the United States. But the situation Is'now realized to be critioal. So far as the Spaniards are concerned, perhaps tliey can be left to take care oi themselves, but the foreign residents at Iloilo are differently regatded. MORE SHIPS FOR NAVY. Three Sunken Spanlah Veaaeli to Ba Railed at Manila. Washington, Nov. 21. The United States navy will soon possess more than a sprinkling of forelgn-bullt warships. Admiral Dewey lina Informed the navy department that he hue contracted with a Hong Kong firm of wreckors to raise three of tho Spanish war vessels sank In the battle of Manila last May day. The cost of raising the ships and put ting them in thorough repair will be $500,000. The vessels to bo raised are gunboats of large typo, and, in the opinion of Chief Constructor Hichborn, they will be the very best kind of craft for the protection of the United States' inter ests in the Philippines and along the Asiatic ooast. Canaed a Stampede. V Spokane, VVasti.,iNov. 21. A Lew iston special to the Spokesman-Bovlew says: A groat strike of high grade ore Is reported near the Snowslioe pass, on the Wanen trail, 20 miles south of Florence, Idaho. A big stampede from Florence is reported. The Florence correspondent of the Spokesman-Review reports that the strike was made between the flow fam ous Buffalo Hump and Thunder moun tain. The great vein is from 80 to 90 feet wide, and carries an abundance of free gold. The Salmon river runs through the claims, and the Country never has much snow. Tug Pawtueket launched. Valleio, Cel., Nov. 21. The United States steel tug Pawtueket was launched at the Mare island nnvy yard today. She was christened by Miss Heather Baxter, the little daughter of Naval Constructor W. J. Baxter, in the pres ence of thousands of spectators. The Pawtuoket is 102 feet long, is of 225 tons, and is expected to develop 460 horsepower. She will make 12 knots per hour. Her boiler and engines are almost completed, and the Pawtueket will be ready for commission by Janu ary 1. Launching of the Wlaoonaln. Chicago Nov. 21. The United States battle-ship Wisconsin will bo launched at San Franoisco Saturday, November 26, and will be christened by Miss Elizabeth Stephenson, daughter of Isaac Stephenson, of Marinette, Wis. Grating Sheep on Beiervatlona. Washington, Nov. 21. The right of the government to prosecute criminally persons grazing sheep on all forest res ervations, except in Oregon and Wash ington, was sustained in a decision rendered today by the attorney general.' Secretary Bliss recently asked as to whether such prosecutions would lie under one of the series of regulations recently issued for the preservation of the forests, and the decision holds that they will. Manners of a Mlailonarjr, London, Nov. 21. A dispatch to the Daily Telegraph from Shanghai says that the Rev. Mr. Fleming, a mission ary, and a native evangelist, were murdered in the recent attack by the rebels in the town of Ewi Fu, in the Uppor Yang-tse-Kiang valley, when the Cathollo mission there was burned. Dr. Cardwell Promoted. Washington, Nov. 21. Herbert O. Cardwell, of the Sooond Oregon, has been promoted from captain and regi mental surgeon to major and chief sur geon of volunteers. 1 f Importance of Dradgary. Drudgery Is essential In all good work. Some drudgery muat precedu high effort and attainment in any and every sphere. Mixing colots is the drudgery in the greatest artist's palut ing, as surely as in that of tho young Leginner in his profession. He who ia not willing to do the needful drudgoiy iu the work he undertakes will never be a success in any high realm of hia aspirations. No man who is not ruudy (list to tread the lower rounds of a 'ad der oau evur hope to staud by and by at the top. S. S. Timed. Confiiaalon of a Millionaire. A millionaire coufeHsed the secret of till success in two words hard work. Ho put In the beet part of hit life Raining dollars and losing health, and now he w puttlna In the other half spending dollars to get It hark. Nothing emml Hoaletter'a Stomach Hitter for restoring health. It gets at the starting point the stomach and cures dyspepsia and indigestion. Reed pens split ut tho ond like quill pens, have been found in Egyptian tombs, dating probably 2,500 years bo fore Christ. To Cure a Cold In One Dar Take Laxatlvo Hromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money If It falls to cure. 2oo. If a woman catches cold wearing a thin dress to a reception her husband escapes public censure, but if she ditches it hanging out clothes all but his dearest friends stop speaking to hliu. Standi lljr In Need. Every living thing has pains and aches sometimes, and the aches and pains o( humankind have a friend in St. Jacobs Oil, which stands by In neod to cure and restore. When a girl coos around from town to town cooking oatmeal or a now kind 1 of pancake flour ut a grocery store she ' is called a "demonstrator." The word , is so good that Atchison girls are using I it instead of the word "cooking." i Atchison girls no longer cook potatoes they "demonstrate" them. They also, givo demonstrations in dishwashing. When coming to San Francisco go to Brooklyn Hotel, M-tl'i Hush street. American or European plan. Room and hoarti sl.Ofl tn Si. AO ner dnv mnnin fiOrnnta to $1.00 per day; single meals 23 cents.1 rreecoaca. uuag. Montgomery. Ate Ills Dinner In a Graveyard. As a Brooklyn Fifth avenue trolly car stopped the othor day at the sta tion adjoining Oroonwooil cemetery an old man In the rear of the car startled the other passongaia by exclaiming in tones loud enongh to be plainly hoard: "In the mdst of life we are in death I" Following, the direction of the old man's eyes, the other passengers saw a cemetery employo souted on a low white stone at the head ol a newly made grave. A tin dinner pail was firmly held between his knees and from it he was eating his noonday meal. Near him playing iu the grass was a little girl, probably the man's daughter. N. Y. Sun. If you want the best wind mill, pumps, Doners, engines, or general machinery, ace or write JOHN POOLE, foot of Morrison street, Portland, Oregon. It Is an inexplicable (act that men buried in an avalanche of snow hear distinctly every word uttered by those who are socking for tlium, while their most strenuous shouts fail to penetrate oven a few (cot of tho snow. Two bottles of t'lso's Cure fur Coniump tion oured me of a bad lung trouble. Mrs. J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind., Marsh 20. 1806. Texas has been Invaded hv an nrmv ol strange bugs, which are described as "angular-shaped oreatures, In form something like tho bodv of a natnnt iimoothing iron, with bushy tail or mouse colored hair bristles extondlng from every part of the body." Evi dently tho W. O. T. U. In Texas Is ne- gleoting its work. It will ropay yon now to watoh how the word "protocol" will be over worked from now on in all the ordin ary affairs of life. Wo will have pro toools in family rows, In nelghboihood rows and in politics. Exports of cottonseed nrodncti for the first five months of this year fur exceed thou., of the 12 mouths of 1806. A French doctor has Invented an electric holinut, inside of whioh is a Small motor that V Ibrn ten slrlnn nf steel, the motor making 600 turns per minute, 'ibis whizzing Is supposed to cure nervous headache and nnt tha sufferer to sleep. nows tiiist We offer One Hnndred Dollars Reward tnr n ease ol Catarrh that can not be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., PropS;. Toledo, O. We theundortiifrned.havft knnwn v A f!iinr.A lor the past 15 years, and believe him porfectly honorable In all business transactions and fin ancially able to carry out any obligations mad by their firm. wist a TRUAX, Wholcsalo Drusulsti, Toledo, O. WA1.D1NO, KlNNAN 4 MinVIN, ... wholesale frugf;lst, Toledo. O. nail's Catarrh Cum 1tnlinl,,i;ii.. .n dlroctly on the blood and mucous surfaces ol tho system. Price 7r per bottle. .Bold by all drugRlsts. Testimonials free, Hall's Family Plllj -ra the best. ....FLOUR MILL MACHINERY.... Warehouse Machinery, Chop Mills, Water Wheels. ' Supplies of all Kinds. Willamet Front and Ev.rett.St.. YOUR LIVERS Moore's Revealed Remedy willdolt. Three doses will make yon leol better. Get it from your druggist or any wholesale drng house , of from Stewart A Holmes Drug Co., Seattle, TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Dr.T.H. White, M,"or Don't Mind Ike Weather. There Is one thing that does hm mind tha weather, and that la rlicutua Usui; and one thing that does not mind rheumatism Is St. Jacobs Oil, u ( goes to woik upon it and cures right off. Character From Sorrow. Over and ovor anln the old truth comes back to us, that no man in gIIM (or much till he has suffered a Kr(,aj Borrow. The baptism of pain Is one of the instrumentalities which God mm (or purging away the dross of our n. tures and making us fit to be partukori o( the liihuiltance of the Kiut in liht Not those who hava escaped the flury trial, but tho.io who have gone through it and come out unhurt Mild glorified are to bo envied. God knows what li best for us. Therefore lie sends flr,( ono affliction and then another npnnni. Sometimes, because He sees It to ba necessary, Ho lifts the very flcKiduniei and allows wave alter wave o( mill fortune to sweep over us. If we huva the right stuff in us, wo ahull ba helped and not harmed by these seem ing calamities. Christian Advocate, ITEMS OF INTEREST. The Porto Rlrans demonstrate their patriotism .by shouting for freedom and toed lug themselves. At tho Rtorzzi pahice In U,,,,, Italy, there ia a book made of nuirhle the louves being of marvelous thinness.' Bangor manufacturers are aemling canoes of birch and oanvas to rules tine, Japan, India and China. Silver chloride, as regards its silver value, orrus)onds to an alloy of 75 par oent of silver and 86 per cent of coppur. It is a great misfortune (or 8mln that tho wur has not brought on a new act of men to the (runt to play In her politics. And now tho impetuous young Her man emperor has become a tlreniun. At last he has a wide open oppottuulty to extinguish himself, Japan had a colder spring than at any time In eighty years. In the mid dle of May there was enow at Nlkko and near Toklo. If tho earth worn not enveloped with atmosphere, tha tumperaturo on tha surfaco would bo about 8110 degrees be low zero Fahrenheit. In building nests birds usually nrolil the use of bright colored materials, which would add to tho chances of th enemy In loaating them, In 1807 South Africa Imported tl,437,&81 worth of bicycles. In the civilization process the wheel seems to tako precedence of the railway. TEE EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FlfiS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of tho combination, but also to the care and skill with which It is manufactured by scientific processes known to tho Caufoknia Fio Svnup Co. only, and wo wish to Impress upon all the importance of purchasing tho true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs in manufactured by the California Fio Syrup Co. ouly, a knowledge of that fact will assist ono in avoiding the worthlosa Imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cam Fornia Fio Syitup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Fljrs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all othor laxatives, as It acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing thorn, and it docs not prlpe nor nauseato. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember tho name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. Oal tOtniVILLt, Kr. HKW TOM. N. T. VETERANS If you made a horns stead phtrr nrior ti June 22,1874, lor lest i , ii. are entitled to an additional entry, which la auignablo and worth something. W idows and minor orphans ol deceased sol diers have satnn Hotit i h,ih k... i. nA A, waste postage unless you mad an 'original. Anlrv Mat alalrifl at.n... nK uullinm, Helena, Montana. BASEBALL, FOOTBALL. ATHLETIC AND GYMNASIUM SUPPLIES. fifUld fnt f!fttfl.lntriiA WILL I FINCK CO. $45 $45 $45 $45 $45 1899 BICYCLES "Best Wheels on Earth." IBM Ideals I22.IS0, 2, I0. Send for catalogue. Wvengeiits wanted everywhere, FRED I, ME KM LI, CYCLIC CO., PORTLAND, SPOKANE. TACOMA. Write for Prlcea Iron Works .PORTLAND, OB. CURE YOURSELF! Uo niiM for unnatural Ji.fliargiK, Inseminations, irritatlom or ulcerations n Tf 0 0 nt nimbrano. iMiunna, ami not Minn, gent or pollutions,. Sold ii,hlL or Bnnt In plain wrapper. ii ' PrRP'ii'i, roi ll.. or bottles, W.Tfc Ulroular mint on request. NO. 48-'8. N. 1. N. U. w HEM wrltlne to advertisers pleas paper mention this ftt 1 to 6 (UytAS m M OMrtntaaa aVJ." " '!. lt 0INOINNATl.il t: