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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1895)
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report 11 AO' ABSOLUTELY pure I WYLLIE, THE HERO LADDIE. Hand's Great Checker Player StlU Ex pert mt the Age of Seventy-six. Sixty years a champion is the remark able record or J a mo 8 Wyllie, the most famous checker player in the world. Wyl lie was champion of the town of Kilmarnock, Scotland, when but 15 years of rage, and by vir tue of bis mar velous record against the best james wtxxik. players all over i world for half a century he may tte reasonably be called the greatest Iyer on earth. Wyllie is npw 76 years and very deal, but his sight is still , and he is yet able to defeat nearly ' man he meets. I m too anld for inghts," he says sadly, but he nsnal- manages to win whenever the stakes i worth securing. i was born in the Pierce Hill neks, near Edinburgh, in 1820, and the time of his birth his father was sergeant major in the Scots Guards. a mere lad Wyllie was apprenticed a Kilmarnock weaver, bnt his re- larkable skill as a checker player made Im famous and induced him to aban- bn learning the weaver's trade. A dro- br named Fortens whom young Wyllie ad beaten took Wyllie to Edinburgh ad surprised the natives. Fortens be' an a game with a local player of repu- ation named Bertram and then found : excuse to drop ont of the contest. my herd laddie play for me," he Bertram consented, and to his nazement the herd laddie won 69 lames ont of GO, and Bertram only euc- (eeded in securing a single draw. The tory of this achievement gave Wyllie reat local fame, which was increased cben he defeated Professor Andrew An lerson and Robert Martins, two great cotcb players. Wyllie then became a watch peddler id traveled about Scotland selling pieces as a regular business and laying checkers for money against all Imers. "A shullen a same" was his i no matter who played against and when he first visited America 1873 ho charged his opponents 25 ats a game. During this tour he over 11,000 games, losing less 1 50. In 1881 he again visited Amer- andwon 17,054 out of 19,517 games, Iw 1,754 and lost only 109. In match he defeated C. P. Barker, the b bra ted Boston expert, but was beat by Clarence A. Freeman, the Provi- i expert, who is of Indian descent, the late R. D. Yates of Brooklyn. llie also played throughout England -o.nstra.ua, ana uasmaaea great aeai iioney as the result of his skill. fyllie claimed to be the champion of world until about a year ago, when as beaten by a young Scotch expert, les Ferrie. l"HE WHITNEY-PAGET MATCH. Whitney's Betrothed an Englishman Has Become Wealthy In America. ke many other American heiresses, Pauline Whitney, the eldest daugh- f ex-Secretary of the Kavy William hitney, is to marry a young Eng- niu of wealth and distinguished itry, bnt her Englishman, Almeric aget, has made his money in Amer- s an adopted citizen of the United s and is a resident of St. Paul. He ncmber of the famous Paget fain- nd is the youngest son of the late jral Lord Alfred Paget, an officer i9 British army and chief equerry o queen. His eldest brother, Arthur t, is a colonel in the Scots Guards in 1878 married a daughter of the Mrs. Paran Stevens, the New York ty leader. Another brother is Cap Alfred Paget of the British navy. present head of the family, the bnis of Anglesey, is a cousin of Al- c H. Paget and in 1880 married a khter of J. P. King of Sand Hills, The couple did not live happily to- cr and nave separated. ben Almerio H. Paget was 10 years go ho conclnded that his position as gest son was not very promising, accordingly he came to America to RIC U. PAGET. MISS PATTLETE WHITNEY. his fortune. At first he worked on bch in the far west and later re- to St. Paul, where he engaged o real estate business and made a deal of money during the days of m. tie apparently Knew wnen to bid when to sell, for he not only the money he had made, but in d his store. He then succeeded in sting British capital in America ecanie the successful manager of London and Northwest American age company, limited, which posi e still holds. eral years ago he met Miss Whit- hile the young woman was cross e Atlantic with her father. He Ijoiued the Whitneys in a tour of ile, and his engagement to Miss y followed. Miss Whitneys about Irs of ago and is a tall, handsome. )lished young woman, who is very in lew York society. At the 14 shewa8 sent to a select board - ool mid remained there, leading VjQiet. studious life until she was y presented to New York society ;uid ball given by her parents in er, 1893. Since her mother'! ivo years ago sue has seldom ap- Paid Millet's Bills and Got a "CoroU" M. Ziem, the Paris painter, relates a story of the brother of the present presi dent of the French republic, and Corot, the artist M. Casimer-Perier, Jr., was an intimate friend of Corot. On a visit which ho made to the great artist in 1875 in his home at Verdizon, in the forest of Fontaineblean, he found Corot putting the last touches on his "Biblis" ("Nymphs In the Forest at Sundown"). The masterpiece filled Casimir-Perier with enthusiasm, and he begged the artisc to sell it to mm. "I'll give yon my canvas, " replied Corot, "on one condition that yon pay the butcher and baker bills of my friend Millet" "Taken!" answered the wealthy Frenchman. In Chailly, where Millet lived, the butcher and baker were asked to make out their bills and send them to M. Casimir-Perier. The art lover was some what surprised when he found that Millet had lived on credit for 12 years, and that the bills amounted respectively to 22,000 and 24,000 francs over ?9,- 000. M. Perier paid the bills according to agreement and carried home the Corot. The price at that time was con sidered enormous, as the purchaser could have bought the painting in the market for about 1,500 francs less than 400. The bargain, however, was a good one, as the picture today, it is estimated, is worth almost $30,000. It is still in the possession of the Casimir Perier family. New York Tribune. A White Woman as an Apache Warrior. The following story is told by one of Arizona's early pioneers: In 1864 Dr. Alsap and Lord Dnppa, well known pioneers, were prospecting with a party in the Bradshaw moun tains on tho Hassayampa creek. One morning the party separated for the pur pose of hunting. In going up a canyon. in which they were separated from their companions by high mountains, Dup- pa's detachment was attacked by a large band of Tonto Apaches. The whites gradually fought their way across the ridge with the hope of rejoining their companions. During the advance Dnp pa, who was stationed behind a rock, noticed that he was the particular mark of an Indian with a bow. Several ar rows had fallen at his feet, and one struck him in the arm. Raising his rifle, he took aim, and just as he was touch ing the trigger the supposed Indian cried, "Don t shoot! m good English, bnt it was too late, and the body fell over with life extinct Soon after the two parties succeeded in forming a juno tion, and the Indians retreated, leaving their dead. Out of curiosity the party returned to the place where Dnppa killed the sun-. posed Indian and found that it was a white woman, evidently about 80 years of age and dressed in all the parapher nalia of the Apaches. Investigation was made, but no trace of her former where' abouts could ever be obtained. Yuma Times. MInntes of the Council of Ten. Recent researches in the archives of the Venetian republic have brought to light the records of the mysterious and dreaded council of ten, inclusive of the minutes of their most secret meetings, which were kept with the greatest care and regularity. This council was the real executive power in the republic, tho doge, especially in the later years of Venetian history, being purely an or namental personage and deprived of all real power. It is well known that the council deposed and executed more than one dege for alleged crimes against the state and was only controlled in the ex ercise of its authority by the grand coun cil, from which the majority of Vene tian citizens were, after the closing of the golden book of the council, perma nently excluded. In the domain of police and foreign affairs the council of ten reigned su preme, the grand council, when it met which was not very often confining its action to home legislation and the election to office bearers. The assassina tion by poison of enemies of the repub lic was considered an important branch of public business, and proposals for this purpose were eagerly listened to and discussed at the council's meetings. Paris American Register. Proud, bnt Resourceful. When Baroness Sprecher finds her supply of -cash running short, she gen erally buys her daily provision of food at the pork butcher's, but in order to reconcile her aristocratic dress and bear ing with the plebeian surroundings she goes to work as follows: Entering the shop with an air of extreme curiosity, she will say: "Aw, tell me, I pray, what is that thick, strange looking object yon have exposed to view in the shop window? It has the appearance of mosaic. " "That is collared brawn," is the re ply. . "Coll what did you say?" "Collared brawn." "And is it fit to eat?" "Certainlyl" "Dear me 1 How yon excite my cari osity. Would, you mind cutting me a little of that peculiar substance?" "For how much, madam?" "Ah, it is out of sheer curiosity, yon know! Say twopence worth, please." The mistress of the establishment, in order to secure her ladyship's patronage, cuts a pretty thick slice of tho "strange looking object," and the baroness, after disbursing the twopence, sweeps out of the 6hop carrying her dinner with her. Meggendorfer's Blatter. Sidney Smith's Suggestion. When Sidney Smith was " rector of a parish in Yorkshire, he found his vestry were discussing- the propriety or other wise of paving ascertain approach to the church with wooden blocks. Having decided to undertake it, the . question arose as to how. "Gentlemen, " said the witty rector, "I think if yon will all put your heads together, as the say ing is, the thing can be accomplished without ranch difficnlty. " RESCUED HER BABY. V Mother's Wonderful Self Control Save ; the Life of Her Little Girl. A little child rescued in a drowning condition from the bottom of a deep well by her mother is the incident that excited the residents of Green Lake last week. The three children of John L. San- dell, who ' lives in a comfortable home three-quarters of a mile east of the lake, were playing in the yard a week ago yesterday. All were girls, two of them 6 and 8 years old respectively, and the youngest a little tot not quite 2. Near the house is an 18 foot well, with water in it two feet deep, the entrance to which was surrounded by a frail picket fence. Tho children in their play pulled and tugged at this railing until finally it gave way, and before the. older girls eonld comprehend what had happened their little sister, going too far, had fallen into the well and was struggling on the blatjc surface of tho water 10 feet below. The fefldrX3n at once called to their mother, who was alone insido tho house. Mrs. Sandell, horrified, ran to the curb, but could see nothing but the yawning cavern that held her child. She thought of a ladder at the barn 150 feet away, and without losing a second's time she brought it to the well, but it was only 12 feet long. She realized that desper ate chances had to be taken, for the child had already lain in tho water sev eral seconds, and a few more meant that its life would be gone She dropped the ladder in an agony of fear lest the ends should strike the baby dead. The in stant it had settled in place she forced herself through the narrow aperture at the top, measured momentarily with her eye the distance to the ladder against the wall six feeet underneath and dropped. By a chance that seemed miraculous she caught it squarely, and, balancing herself, instantly descended to the bottom of the welL There she found the child nnconscioua It had been in the water at least three minutes and was almost dead. Mrs. Sandell lifted the helpless in fant and climbed to the top of the lad der, at the same time calling to the children above to run for help. While they were gone she repeatedly rolled the babo upon her own body, forcing from it tho water it had swallowed until sho was gladdened with signs of returning life. It was half an hour before the chil dren returned, and when they came back they brought Otto Aura, an cm ployee of the Fremont milL He obtain ed from a neighboring house another ladder long enough to reach to the bot tom of the well, and in a few minutes had helped both mother and child to safety abova Seattle Post-Intelli gencer. THE LIBRARY TUNNEL. It Is to Be TJsed In Transferring the Nation's 1,000,000 Books to New Quarters. It is known to only a few that a tun nel is to be constructed from the crypt of the capitol under the east park to the vaults of the great building for the congressional library, now in course of construction. The plans for the tunnel have been completed, and work npon it will soon be begun, that it may be fin ished in season to be used for the trans portation of the nearly 1,000,000 books and pamphlets which make np the vast bulk of the library from the old rooms to the new. It is probable that a tem porary railway will be laid in the tun nel, that cars may be employed to carry a large quantity of books at once. One of tho most remarkable transfers of the kind in tho history of libraries was that in Berlin somo years ago, when a regiment of soldiers were pnt to the work, received their burdens and marched and countermarched under per fect discipline, accomplishing in a short time the vast labor of removal It is possible that when the new building is occupied a pneumatio tube may be laid ' through the tunnel, that congressmen may immediately receive books which they desire to consult with out the trouble and loss of time which wonld be entailed in going to tho libra ry in person cr awaiting a trip by a messenger. It is not expected that the work of removal will begin before the spring of 180G. Washington Cor. Pitts burg Dispatch. A Palatial Church. The erection of the magnificent cano py over the high altar of Our Lady in the shrine of Gnadalupe has been com' pleted. The pillars to support it are each of a solid block of polished Scotch granite weighing seven tons. The di ameter of each pillar is 3 feet and the height 20 feet The altar will be ready for dedication on Dec. 12 (Guadalupe day) and will be the most elaborate and costly one in America. The additions to the church edifice will not be com pleted for nearly two years at the pres ent rate of progress. When finished, the shrine of the Lady of Guadalupe will be one of the notable Catholio church edifices of the world. The solid silver altar railing weighs 20 tons, and many millions of dollars are in other ways represented in the palatial place of worship. City of Mexico Letter. . Driving Across the Country. State Senator Engene Ives of New York, the author of the Ives pool bill, is emulating Novelist Black's "Strange Adventures of a Phaeton" by driving across the country in a surrey. Mr. Ives started on this trip from his home on the Hudson, 30 miles above New York, on Aug. 2, driving a span of high bred roadsters and accompanied by his Wife and their 15-months-old baby. Traveling at an average rate of 40 miles a day, Mr. Ives and his companions cov ered . tho distance as far as York, Pa., over the battlefield of Gettysburg, along the Shenandoah valley, across the moantains and into Virginia without going a mile by rail. He will drive home the same way he camo. His only gnide is an ordinary map of the United States, supplemented by a bicycle guide. New York Herald. He Was a Deceiver. "I have been deceiving you," he wildly cried. She would have fallen had she not clutched the air. "I have been deceiving you. I " The words seemed to be fairly wrung from his unwilling lips. " am the man who writes these 'fair, with stationary temperature' predictions in the papers." ; With a shriek that was eloquent with anguish, she turned and gazed gloomily into the gathering dusk. De- AN ELECTRICAL PROCESS, A New Flan for Working Rebellious Ores to Be Introduced In the West. George D. Burton, of New York, thus describes a new process for work ing rebellions ores, which he intends to introduce in the West: "The ore is placed in a receptacle of about half . a bushel capacity, made to stand an esti mated heat of 10,000 degrees, which is a greater heat than can be measured by any pyrometer now in usa The bottom of these receptacles are perfor ated with holes from one-half to one inch in diameter. Any number ol these may be used in a battery to get whatever capacity may be required, As the ore is heated the metal melts and drops in globules down through a solution coming np through the hole. The basis of this solution is water, with its gravity increased by adding salt, soda, borax, alum, cyanide or other acids. "Different metals require different densities, depending on the amount ol heat required to melt and cause them to leave the ore. The voltaic ores could not be formed without increasing the gravity, neither would the metals leave the ore without some flax to make it run. "By increasing the voltage one metal after another can be removed separate ly. For instance, take a piece of ore containing silver, gold, copper and lead. With a low voltage and moder ate amperage and by elevating the so lution into contact through the holes. an arc is formed, and lead will be liq uified and go down. Then by increas ing the voltage and amperage silver would fall, and so with copper and gold, all fusing at different degrees of heat. "The works in Canada are for work ing the nickel, and there all the nickel in the ore is saved, while but about half is by the old process. Aside from that, by this process and the use of condensing stacks, all sulphur, arsenic, and other volatile and valuable ingre dients may be saved. In other words. everything of value, and all of it; is separated and preserved. It makes no difference how rebellious the ore may be and this means a great deal when you consider how much valuable ore is not worked at all on account of the cost by the old process. As to the cost, there is a great advantage, and the electricity may be transmitted twenty miles to a mine from the source of power, thus saving the cost of hauling the ores. ' ' Mining Mutes. 3 At Coos Bay, Oregon, it is claimed, a chemical process has been found that successfully separates the fine gold par ticles from the black sand of that re gion. There is lots of this black sand all along the coast, and if a successful process really has been found for get ting the gold out of it, many millions will be added to the Western states. Mining matters in and around Lew iston, Montana, are in a prosperous condition. The Ammon and New Year properties are in full operation. Sev eral small sales have taken place dur ing the past week or two. Claim own era are busy doing assessment work and it is sale to say that not less than two thousand claims will be repre sented in Cone Butte, Moccassian and Judith Mountain districts this season. Thirty or forty members of the Brit ish Columbia board of trade, Victoria, Will shortly pay a visit to the mines ol West Kootenay, they will rematn about two weeks and-will no doubt re turn and report that the mining claims worth having are owned and con trolled by Americans, who were the first in the field and made known to the British (Jolumbias what a splendid mineral country is within the borders of their proviuca The schooner Golden Gate, which has been on a prospecting tour among th eislands of the Aleutian Archipelago, returned to San Francisco with tales ot wonderful mines, where rich ore is to be cut out with a cheese knifa The Golden Gate sailed from San Francisco on the 26th of May with a party ol young men, who had agreed to share expenses and profits of an Alaskan min ing expedition. Three of the party of twelve or more returned with the schooner but they are full of buoyant hopes, and after the ore brought down in the hold of the vessel is assayed, will return to the islands with more machinery. The men say little about the location of their big strike, but it was learned on board the schooner that the mine in which they place most re liance is on one of the islands just south of Eodiak island. The ore is re bellious but rich enough to warrant the expenditure necessary to properly mill it. Black Hills Activity. Revival of placer mining on a large scale will soon be inaugurated on the Grantz placer claim, says the Black Hills Times, Deadwood Gulch, just above the flour milL A lease of the ground has been secured by Dave Mor gan, one of our well-known miners, who was foreman for Mr. Grantz in the early '60s, when the claim was worked with profit Mr. Morgan is thoroughly conversant with the ground and will work it in a novel manner. He proposes to use teams and scrapers in removing the surface dirt and old tailings, to a certain depth, and then sluice everything to bedrock. It is an admitted fact that there still exists many thousand dollars' worth of gold in the placer claims of Deadwood gulch, which can be recovered through practical and systematic work, bhonld some enterprising individual or cor poration put in a bed reck flume, the venture would prove highly profitable. No Wonder Her Hair Turned White. "Mr. Dnsenberry, here's the story of a man's hair turned white from fright Now, that's a little hard to believe, isn't it:" Oh, no, my dear. The medical books are full of such cases. I once saw a girl's hair turn white right be fore my own eyes. She was on a chair back reaching for preserves on the top shelf of a pantry. The chair tilted, and she fell heavily to the floor." "And her hair turned white?" "When I helped her up her hair was as white as the walL" Oh, that's an exaggeration, Mr. Dnsenberry. Caused by fright, was it?" - . .. -- - ;: 'Well, I don't know that I'll insist npon that part of it, my dear. She had landed her head in the flour bar- RENEWAL OF YOUTH A STRANGE STORY FROM A NE BRASKA VILLAGE. Villagers Excited Over the Increased Vigor of the Older Inhabitants Experience of Two "Vets." From the World-nerald, Omaha, Neb. A' World-Herald reporter was attracted- by the evidence of renewed ac tivity of some of the older inhabitants of the village of Bruce, a suburb of Omaha, Neb., and inquired the causa Mr. Andrew Finkenkeler, who was a member of Company B, of the First Iowa Volunteers during the war, made the following explanation so far as he himself was concerned: "In July, 1866, while my company was on the march through to Austin, Texas, I was attacked with rheuma tism of the worst kind in one leg, at Alexander, Louisiana. Being weak, 1 was sunstruck and remained uncon scious for several hours. Every sum mer since I have been unable to stand the heat of the sun, and have been compelled to give np my work. There was in my head a bearing-down feel ing, which increased until it seemed my head would burst, and it caused a ringing in my ears, and palpitation of the heart set in, so that the slightest noise would set my heart thumping. Several times it has rendered me nn oonscious for from seven to ten hours at a time. In addition to this rheuma tism extended np my entire side until it drew my head down on my shoulder. I lost my strength and flesh and was totally unfit for work. "For twenty-eight years I have con sulted physicians and taken their pre scriptions without deriving any mater ial benefit. My ailments increased in intensity until I was assured that there was no hope for me. During last year I went into the butcher business, but the dampness from the ice used in creased my rheumatic pains to such an extent that I was not only compelled to quit the business, but was confined to the my house and bed for nearly six months. "In November last I read in the World-Herald a case of a man who had been entirely cured from the ail mets from which I was suffering, by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. On November 28 I pur chased a box. In a week I was aston ished to know that I felt better than I had for six months past, and before I had used half a box the ringing in my ears began to lessen in volume and fin ally left me. The pain from the rheu matism gradually left me, so that within one week from the time I took my first pill I was able to sit np in bed. On January 1st I was able to go ont and walk around a little. The palpi tation of my heart entirely ceased. On February 9 I was so thoroughly cured that I accepted a position as night watchman in- the Forest Lawn cem etery, remaining ont of doors from 6 P. M. until 6 A.M. I have gained in weight from 144 pounds, which I weighed in November last, to 172 pounds, which I weigh now. For nerve bnilding and for enrich ing the blood Pink Pills are unexcell ed. They may be had of druggists or direct from the Dr. Williams' Medi cine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.f for 50 cents per box, or six boxes for $2.60. Forming characters I Whose ? Our owt or others? Both. And in that inonien tons fact lie the peril and respousibilitt f uf.r existence. Elihu Burritt Tasmania was named in honor of Tan man, the discoverer The Onward March of Consumption is stopped short by Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery. If you haven't waited beyond reason, uteres complete re covery and cure. Although by many Deuevea to De incur able, there is the evidence of hundreds of living witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, con sumption is a curable S disease. Not every VP' 1 . i . uuc, mil u turgc per' callage of cases, and we believe, fully 08 ner cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so iar as to induce repeated Dleeaings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercu lar matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Mr. A. H. Cransby. of Ha 158 Kerr St, Memphis, TeniL. writes that his wile had easy, cer which had eaten two large holes in her breast, and Which the best physician Of the surrounding country treated, and pronounced in curable. Her grandmother and aunt had died of ancer and when told this, the most eminent specialists of New York, tinder whose treat ment she was placed, de clared her ease was hopeless. All treatment having laded, She was given up to die 6. S. S. was recommended, nd astonishing as it mar seem, a few bottles cured her sound and well. - Our treatise on this dis ease will be sent free to any address. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. G FRAZER ; AXLE CREASE BEST IN THE WORLD. Its wearing qualities are unsurpassed, actually outlaating two boxes of any other brand. Fret from Animal Oils. 1KT THK GKNCINK. FOR SALE BY OREGON AND WASHINGTON MERCHANTS SJJ and Dealers generally . A SURE CURE FOR PILES DR. BO-BiN-KO'S PILE REMEDY. wbloh acts ditaeth' as parts S eotod, abeorba tnmonk bus itching, effecting- a parmanent enra. Pnoe 0a. I'.llRfX WHtRF ill US fillS. Best Cough SynipVTaates Good. T7sa In time. Bold by drogglsta. 2) SMALL BEGINNINGS Hake great endings sometimes. Ailments that we are ant to consider trivial often grow, through neglect, into atrocious maladies, dan gerous in themselves and productive of others. It is tne disregard of the earlier indications of ill health which leads to the establishment oi ii 11 sorts of maladies on a chronic basis. - More over, there are certain disorders incident to the season, such as xn alalia and rheumatism, against which it is always desirable to fortify the system alter exposure to the conditions which produce tbeB. Cold, damp and miasma are surely counteracted by Hostetter's Stomach Bitttn. After you have incurred risk from ibesi influence, a wineglass! nl or two of Hos tetter's SiomxCh Bi tiers directly afterward should be swallowed. For malaria, dysiiepsia, liver compltint, kidney and I .ladder trouble, nervousness and debility it is the most de servedly popular of remedies and preventives. A wineglassiul before meala promotes appetite. "What has become of your fine diamonds? They're still in tne tamny, x aoper "un, yes; my unc.e has them." ., DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED Bv local applications, as thev cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to care Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused ;by an in flame J condition of the mucous lining ot the Eustachian Tube. When this tuie gets inflamed you have a rum Dung sound or imperiect n earing, ana when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation cau be fatten out and this tube restored to its nor mal condition, hearitig will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case ol Deafness (caused by catarrh) .k. .nnA. KA ..-nrJ .... UAlla f Cure.. Send fr circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. 'Sold by Druggists, 7oc. NKW WAX JCAsT NO DUST. Go East from Portland. Pendleton, Walla Walla via O. K. & S. to Spokane and Great Northern Kail way to Montana, Dakotas. St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St Louis, East ai d South. Rock-ballast track:; tine scenery ; new equipment Great North ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family Tourist Cars; Buffet-Library Cars. Write C. C. Donovan, General Agent, Portland. Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. &, T. A.. St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in formation a bo t rate-, routes, etc. Piso's Cure s the medicine to break np children's Coughs and Colds. Mr. M. G. Blcnt, Sprague, Wash., March 8, 1894. Tbt Gkbmea for breakfast. I Can't Sleep Ii the complaint of many at this season. The reason is found in the fact that the nerves are weak and the body in a fever ish and unhealthy condition. The nerves may be restored by liood's Sarcaparilla, which feeds them npon pure blood, and this medicine will also create an appetite, and tone np the system and thus give sweet refreshing sleep and vigorous health Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye today. $1; six for 36. l DIllo act harmoniously with HOOD S r 1 1 1 S Hood's Sarsaparilla. 25c One of my children had a very bad discharge from the note. Physician! pre scribed without benefit. After using Ely's Cream Balm a short time the dis ease was cured. A. O. Gary, Corning, N. T. CATARRH ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflamma tion, Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane from colds, Restores the 8enses of Taste and SmelL The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. A oat ticle is annlied into each nostril, and is agreeable. Price, 60 cents at Druggists' or by fift Warren Street, New York. Walter Baler & Go. Limltefl, Tb Lerfot MannfkctuTen of PURE, HIGH CRADE Cocoas and Chocolates On this Continent, hart received HIGHEST AWARDS from the ere at Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA. aiiflirkn In Tie of th WaUlIOn. many imitation. rood. consiiTTu r thou lit make mn that our place of mannfactur. nam1w. nAlvllHter. Mill UprLoicdon cadi package. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ft CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. DR. GUNN'S INPBOVED UVER PILLS A MILD PHYSIC. liVP VlT.T. 17 AH. A ItASR. A movement of the bowola each day necessary for health. These pills supply what th system lacks to make it regular. They care Headache, brighten the Vcm .nriiHna.r t.ht HomnlAzion better than cosmetics. They rather gripe nor sicken. To convince, you. we will mail wra1 wrapl8 irwe, OT lull "OX 'r . iw. rM wisvaxj COSANKO UED. COM Philadelphia. P l or a f nil box for Sold where. SBvBBBSBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBSBBSSBBa miiAirpti DiieiuA navf UIIIUUEIi iMMgiwM ruiv if you use the Petalasaa Incnbatsr St Brooders. Make money while other are wasting time by old processes. Catalogtells all about it,and describes eciy article neeaea lor u poultry business). The "ERIE" mechanically the best .wheel. Prettiest model. We are Pacific Coast Agents. Bicvcle cata logue, raailcd free, Rives foil description , prices, etc., aObwts wartto. PETALUMA DCUBATOK CO., retalnma,CaL Branch Hocsa, 3 8 Main SI, Los Angeles. IT. P. N. TJ. No. 612-8. F. N. U. No. 689 SHEEP-DIP LITTLE'S Mixes JAMES UIDLAW NOW MB r r 1' H mm, 11 I II 4?B. .1 ffl all! i"?"r"i Jl rus. GRASS SEEDS BUY MALARIA! - Three doe olv. Try it. ' WEINHARD'S 'HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAROL O v Am I ' M9;tm M KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with 'ess expenditure, by more promptly adapting the wo.ld's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest Mie value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial propeities of a erfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to milliona and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. HERCULES 8 Engines CAS and CASOLINE NOTED FOE SIMPLICITY, -STRENGTH, ECONOMY AND SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. These engines are acknowledged by expert en gineers to be worthv of highest cnmmcnilation for simplicity, high-graJe material and superior workmanship. They develop the full actual horse power, and run withont an Electric spark Battery; the sjsiem of ignition is simple, inex pensive and reliable. For pumping ootflts for Irrigating purposes no better engine can be found on the Pacific Coast. For hoisting outfits for mines they have met with highest approval. For in termittent vower their economy is un questioned. TifTIOHIRY FMKIIME MANUFACTURED BY PALMER a REY TYPE FOUNDRY, Cor. front and Alder Htm., PORTLAND, - ORECON. 8end for catalogue. HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S PAIR. The best prepared SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CAPXE & SONS. New York. MRS. WINSLOW'S sosrhuVng - FOR CHILDREN TEETHINO -Far sale br all lraaclta. Cent, a bottle. POWOEi) DIP THE BEST MADE I with cold water. Reliable and safe. I CO,, Prntand, Or, liSXtl BlfELL UMBtBSOM 205 Third St., Portland URANUS DO' YOU FEEL BAD? DOES YOVK BACK ache? Does every step seem a burden? Yon need MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. WELL-KNOWN BEER (IN KEGS OB BOTTLES) Second to none IT IT.. No matter where from. 1- OBTL ND, OR. In society.