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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1896)
Highest of all in Leavening ABSOLUTELY PURE WHAT BECOMES OF OLD WHEELS! Once True and Standi Friends Now Gone to Pieces. Eave yon ever wondered what has become of the thousands of old solid tire wheels that were in such universal use before pneumatics revolutionized things? A reporter put the question to a dealer the other day. "A few were converted into pneu matics and cnshions and are still on the streets," he said, "and some were taken by the dealers as part payment on new machines, and are still stowed away in their shops, there being no sale for solid tires. The secondhand dealers and re pairers bonght a great many of them up, dissected them, so to speak, and are now utilizing the parts in repair work. The balls, hubs, spokes, axles, bolts and nuts are all useful, and at the last the old frames and rims can be broken up and sold as scrap iron. "Some have gorse to the country, and Josh Hayseed maybe seen complacently pedaling down to the mill for a bag of corn. Machinists use them for making models, occasionally a pushcart will be seen mounted on two rusty old wheels, and even the boys on the street take the small wheels for the making of express wagons. And the balance, I suppose, you'll find stowed away in the cellars and wood sheds of their possessors. Once true and stanch friends, they are now of no use in the world. Abandoned to cob webs and ashes, with no company bnt rats and mice, they dream away their few remaining days. Once again they stand in full suit of glittering nickel, admired, caressed and praised by all be holders. Again they are on the road, bearing their masters in safety down long rough hills and through sand and mud. Once again they see the smooth, bard track respond to the efforts of the riders as they throw every ounce of ef fort into the last sprint, and hear the shouts of the excited crowds as they whiz across the tape. Abandoned and alone, eating out their hearts with rust, they gradually drop to pieces, too proud of their vanished prestige to give ona thought of envy to the modern pneu matic." Washington Star. AN ANGEL IN DISGUISE. A Burglar Conferred a Favor by Opening a Safe. The proprietor of a large store on High street went to his place of busi ness at an unusually early hour the oth er morning. In fact, the sun had not yet risen when he turned the key in the door. On entering he was surprised to find a man trying to open the door of his safe. He stood and watched him for some time, apparently deeply interested in the proceedings, when finally the burglar swung open the door of the safe with a delighted chuckle, but happening to turn he saw that he was discovered and became very much alarmed. He jumped up and was about to make his escape through a back window when the mer chant called to him : "Don't be in a hurry, my friend. Gome back and sit down awhile and smoke a cigar while I straighten things up a bit, and then come home to break fast with me. You have done me a great favor." "Why, how's that?" asked the bur glar in great surprise. "Well, you see, I had the combination of the safe on a bit of paper, and last night I accidentally locked itln the safe and forgot how to work it. I spent most of the night trying to get the thing open and came in early this morning to have another try at it" West Medford (Mass.) WindmilL For Wheelmen. A certain lawyer's face was a puzzle the other day as he pored over a pam phlet. Finally he broke out with : "What the deuce they call this The Law Bulletin for I can't see. " His companion shouted with laughter. "It's The L. A. W. Bulletin, you jay 1" he cried, and then he chortled in his glee. Worcester Gazette. Thfc- . ."OS. Judge But what is your opinion as to the animus of the prisoner? Witness The what, your honor? Judge Animus a Latin word sig nifying mind that is to say, what was his intention or temper or spirit? Witness Animus and mind, then, are the same thing? I don't think he wer had any, your honor. Boston Transcript. PADN K8LLER THE GREAT Family Medicine of the A?e. Taken Internally, It Cures Diarrhoea, Cramp, and Pain in the Stomach, Sore Throat, Sudden Colds, Coughs, &c., &c Used Externally. It Cures Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Sprains. Toothache, Pain in the Face, Neu - ralgia, Rheumatism, Frosted Feet. Ho article erer attained to each unbounded popularity. Salem Observer. An article of great merit And Tirtne. Cinn, JfonpareiL We can bear testimony to the efficacy of the Fain-Killer. We have seen its magic effects in soothing the severest pain, and know it to be good article. Cincinnati Dispatch. A speedy cure for pain no family should b Without it. Montreal Transcript. Nothing has yet surpassed the Pa In -Killer, which is the most valuable family medicine now in use. Tenn. Organ. It has real merit ; as a means of removing pain, no medicine has acq aired a reputation equal to perry Paris' Paia-Killer. Awtxw (Ay.) Dail If etc s. It is really a valuable medicine it la used by many Physicians. Bottom Traveller, Beware of imitations, buy only the genuinw Power Latest U. S. Gov't Report THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION. General Harrison Explains How It War Made by the People. Ex-President Harrison's paper in The Ladies' Home Journal of "This Conn try of Ours" series treats comprehen sively of the constitution and its appli cation and operation, defining the in strument, its scope and limitations clearly. "The word 'constitution,' " he writes, "as used among ns implies a written instrument, but in England it is used to describe a governmental sys tern or organization made up of charters as the Magna Charta the general acts of parliament and a body of long established legal usages or customs. These are not compiled in any single in strument as with us, but are to be sought in many places. "The common American usage in making a state constitution is to elect by a popular vote delegates to a conven tion, whose duty it is to prepare a plan of government. When the delegates have agreed and have properly certified the instrument, it is submitted to a di rect vote of the people, and each voter casts a ballot 'For the constitution' or 'Against the constitution. ' If a majority vote for the constitution, it then be comes the paramount law of the state. The legislature does not make the con stitution ; the constitution makes the legislature. The American idea is that constitutions proceed from the people in the exercise of their natural right of self government and can only be amended or superseded by the people. Whatever one legislature or congress enacts the next one may repeal, but neither can re peal or infringe a constitutional provi sion. "The delegates to the convention that framed the constitution of the United States were not, however, chosen by a popular vote in the states, but by the legislatures. Nor was the question of the adoption of the constitution submit ted in the states to a direct popular vote. There have been 15 amend ments to the constitution adopted. Ten of these were proposed to the legisla tures of the states by the First congress and ratified. The other five amendment have in like manner been submitted by congress to the state legislatures for rat ification, conventions in the states not having been used in any case. It will be noticed also that the vote upon the adoption of the constitution and upon amendments thereto is by states, each state, without regard to its population, having one vote. But while these provi sions make the popular control less di rect than is usual in the states and nec essarily recognize the states in the proc ess of making and amending the consti tution, the idea that constitutions pro ceed from the people is not lost." A MESSAGE FROM THE GALE. Listening on the Ice Floe to the Roar ol the Coming Storm. When the swell is heavy in the ice pack, it is often very difficult to ascer tain from which direction it comes, and just as difficult as it is, just so impor tant may it be that it should be found out rightly, as the safety of the ship might wholly depend upon correct judg ment as to this. When the huge ice masses begin to move and screw and press on the sides of the vessel, rising and falling in a heavy swell, then there is only one escape namely, to work the vessel into the fields away from the side from which the gale blows. A mistake as to the direction of the running swell has often proved fatal, and the mistake is easily made. An old arctic sealer told me how in hours of dread in the arctic icepack he had laid his ear down to the ice floe and listened to the roar of the coming swell that terrible message fiom the furious gale and how he thus had discovered whence the gale was pressing and had been able to save the ship from destruc tion. I tried his method and found that it worked admirably. What is well worth noticing is that open water nearly always is to be found in the ice pack on one side of icebergs. The icebergs that we met were generally in motion, car ried onward by the ruling current. Of ten they ran forward in the icefields at a speed of several knots, piling up the hnge floes before their cold, glittering bows, but behind them they left an open sheet of water large enough for any ship. Now, there would of course be many dangers for a vessel tugged along in the ice pack by such a floating monster, but I believe nevertheless that this method might be instrumental in saving a ves sel from being crushed when the icefield is moving heavily. C. E. Borchgrevink in Century. Resources of Journalism. "I've got to have something to fill out this column with, " said the foreman of the Spiketown Blizzard, poking hie head into the editorial sanctum. "That's all there is about it. I've run in all the dead ads and all the catch lines and slugged everything out till there isn't even a piece of wood reglet left in the' office, and I'm short yet half a dozen lines or more." Whereupon Editor Clugston sat down and wrote as follows: "Owing to the crowded state of our columns this week we are compelled to omit several inter esting communications now standing in type. Friends will please bear with us. Advertisers must be accommodated. Until .the pressure on our columns hae eased up correspondents will please write briefly and confine themselves to simple statements of fact." Chicago Tribune. He Noticed That. Husband Really, I didn't notice the dresses. Mrs. Brown, though, wore hei gown en train. Wife It's a wonder you noticed that much! Husband Couldn't help it I stepped on it Chicago Record. Beady to Dicker. Grinnen What are you going to take for that frightful cold you've got? Barrett I'll take anything you'll of fer. Do you want it? Chicago Tribune. IMPERIAL MILLIONS By JULIAN HAWTHOEHE. Copyright, 1801, by American Press Associa tion. "Why must we part?" he demanded. "Give me a reason. What has happened to change you since I saw you last?" "Can you give me a reason why we should not part?' she returned. "Yes, I cant" said he, "a personal rea son." "Ahr she said quickly, "I have a per sonal reason on the other side." "What is it?" She turned on the piano stool on which she had been sitting, and began to touch the chords of the instrument, but sc lightly that they responded, as it were, in a whisper-of melody. "I have something to do," she replied. "I have lost three years already. I can not go on so. I must devote myself to that only." "To What? Cannot I help you?" "You don't know what you are ask ing, Count de Lisle," she replied, glanc ing at him over her shoulder. "You know I have told you that I love some one. I wish to devote myself to him. How can you help me in that?" " "Do you mean" "I mean Keppel Darke. There is no one else that I can love." "Ah Keppel Darket You are jest ing, after all. A sentiment a memory is not love. This is not your true rea son. Why do you play with me?" "Do you think Keppel Darke is dead?" asked Olympia, harmonizing her tones with the notes she was drawing from the keys. "I thought so once, but I have begun to feel that he is alive. I know it in my heart. I see him in dreams. He is often near me. I am happy in this communion with him. Whatever disturbs it I wish should cease. And nothing disturbs it so much as the Count de Lisle." "Olympia, you are not speaking seri ously; you are smiling." "Why should I not smile? I am happy, What am I to you?" "You are everything to mef he said impetuously. "I love you!" "Is that the first time you have said those words to a woman?" she asked, f ao ing him. The question embarrassed him, and he hesitated. She laughed. "I will not take yon at your word," she said. "Keppel Darke loved no one bnt me; I gave him my promise, and it shall never be broken. Would you break your promise in my place. Count de Lisle? Or would you wish me to beyoui wife, knowing that I loved him.-"' "Indeed I would!" he exclaimed. She shook her head. "The man 1 would marry must be jealous of me." "Jealous of a dead man?" "Why do you say Keppel Darke dead? Have you killed him?" "I only say marry me, and you may love him all you will!" Olympia rose and closed the piano. The count also rose, and they confronted each other for a moment. "I will marry you," she said at length, "when you bring Keppel Darke here. and he bids me do so. ' He bent forward and looked in her eyes. There must have been in them some speaking light, revealing what her woman s tongue refused to tell. "Olympia!" he cried, in a voice too weighted with emotion to be loud, "you know me you have made a fool of me but you love me!" His arms closed about her, and a fire of new life seemed to flame up in his heart as he felt her soft pressure against him. It went glowing through his veins, and images of ecstacy trembled in his brain. Across what gulf of darkness had he passed since last he had held her thus! But peace and joy were only here. They kissed each other with a slow, deep kiss, full of memories of pain that was past, and of a present delight so exquisite that they half feared to move their lips, lest all should prove a dream and they should awake. Such happiness comes in moments only, yet when it comes the soul recognizes it as its true estate a glimpse of the eternity in which it was meant to dwell forever. No dream is half so fair as this brief reality, whose intensity makes all the rest of life seem dreamlike. In such a moment lovers live in heaven and are the peers of angels. "Oh, Keppel, why have you denied yourself so long?" sighed Olympia at last. "I should have known you at the first if I could have brought myself to believe that you would hide from me so." "A disguise like mie is something more than a cloak that can be thrown off and resumed at will," he replied. "From the first I have been as strange to myself as I have appeared to others. But for you I should never have found my real self again. With that change came so many changes I began to forget that I had ever been Keppel Darke, and all my youth and what belonged to it seemed never to have been; but I was as if born middle aged, with no youth or kindly associations to humanize me. If it had not been for you I should have lived on so, and at last died so, if a man without a childhood and a soul can be said to die." "Yes, you are yourself again now!" murmured Olympia. "I have felt a wall between us all this while; I knew, in some secret place of my heart, that you were on the other side; but yet I did not outwardly know it until the last day or two. it was like the fairy tales, when the prince is enchanted, and the princess cannot recognize him; but at last the spell is dissolved, and then they know each other. I am not afraid of you now: I can see through your beard, and your hair, and your eyeglasses; you are only Keppel!" and she gave a little laugh and drew down his face and kissed him. "I feel as if I were nothing but a mere child," said he, laughing, too. "I want to do nothing but sit here with you and love you, and talk to you and hear you talk and be silly that is, really wise. My heart feels so light! Does yours?" "My heart sings like a bird and I am the song! And the song says: 'I love Keppel Darke! Iam glad he is alive, and that the Count de Lisle has vanished!" " "I hate that stiff, conventional tman tom, to But he has his uses, and w will make him be useful to us. He it rich, and he is devoted to you!" "Do you wish to give me up to him, sir?" "Ah! He wants to marry you, I an told!" "And you will let him marry me il only I promise to love you? Bnt tell me, Keppel, why were you such a fool, dear? Why didn't you come to me at once? The next time you delay so J sha'n't wait for you!" . r " "How could I know that you would want me? Dead people coming back tc life are sometimes very much in the j way. I thought it wiser, for your sake, to send some one to find out how th land lay." "For my sake? For yours, I think! They both laughed again. "How did you come to find me out? he asked. "You had accepted the Counl de Lisle so long that the last thing I ex pected was an inquiry for me." "There is something mysterious about that," replied Olympia, turning grave. "When that strange man of yours Garcia has put me into the magnetic sleep, which is not a sleep at all, but a deeper waking, that makes ordinary waking seem sleep in comparison ir that state, whatever it is, I cau see mj own thoughts, just as one sees thingt with one's bodily eyes. And I see things that have happened to me, not as they seemed to me at the time, but as they really were. So I began to have im pressions of you, and at first I could nol understand them, for there was no rea son that I knew of why you should ap pear to me. But at last I noticed that the meetings between us (in my visions) were the times of my meeting the Count de Lisle, and from that I was not long in solving the puzzle. When the count came this afternoon I was so angry with him for having deceived me that I was almost ready to let him go off and take you with him! If you had not looked through his eyes at the last moment, and so given a new turn to things, yon would have been nicely punished and 1 should have died!" This terrible picture called for conso lation on both sides, and the two loven administered it to each other. Thes were sitting in the embrasure of the window, a deep, well cushioned divan, protected from the room by the pianc and a pot of ferns, while the light of the western sky, now golden with the set ting sun, came softly through the semi transparent silken window shades. They had put one cushion up on the window sill, and both their heads were upon it: Keppel's arm was round Olympiad waist, and the hand of that arm held in it her hand. By turning his face only a little Keppel's lips would come in con tact with a white and alluring region just beneath Olympia's ear; but if sh happened to be turning toward him al the same time, as might easily happen in conversation, it was no longer the place under her ear, but her moutl that advanced into the proximity witl Keppel's. This arrangement was con venient enough, one would think, tc satisfy even two lovers; but they had improved even upon this by a system oi signals, which could be felt, but not seen. Whenever Keppel wanted Olympia tc turn her face toward him he pressed the hand that has already been mentioned as held in his, and he did this so fre quently that it might have been regard ed as a reflection upon Olympia's profile., only her profile was too ravishingly beautiful to be liable to reflection ex cept in a mirror. Ravishing though it was, however, the full face was not thereby prevented from being more lovely still; not because it more nearly approached classical perfection, but be cause it carried with it the glance of hei dark, deep gazing eyes, and the full curve of her mouth, and the faint fra grance of her breath. Either way, it was a choice of felicities for Keppel, who could not have been better off unless he had had both the full face and the profile at the same time; and a casuist might have called even that in question. "But," said Keppel, after a while, "do you remember everything that happens to you while you are in the trance?" "Nothing that my body does," she said, "but I remember what my mind does and sees.. I see Other minds, though I don t always know whom they belong to. borne axe beautiful, like lovely land scapes; some are dreary and barren; some are all darkness and horror. I saw such a one the other night the same night that I discovered that you and the Count de Lisle were the same person, There was a hidden place in it, like a cave, with branches and thistles grow ing before the mouth of it, and ugly birds flapping in and out. I knew that there was a dead body in that cave, and I was afraid that I should have to go in and pull it out, but just as I was at the entrance it all faded away and I seemed to fall through a deep space, where everything was still and dim. When it ended I was in my bed here at home." "We will have no more of this," said he. "It is not right that you should be made liable to such experiences. And if there even were need for it, it is passed now. I know all I require to know, and now that we have met, I don't care for anything else not even to punish the guilty." "Yes, love makes up for everything, doesn't it?" returned she, "but the guilty punish themselves. All the vengeance in the world could not bring us nearer together." "There is only one thing that makes me wish that justice might be done," said Keppel, after a pause. "I have al ways wished that the world should know that I was innocent. Now that I am no longer disguised from you, I wish not to be disguised at all. And I doubt if I can maintain my mask as easily as I have done hitherto. I shall continually be speaking in my old voice, and acting in my old way.' It has all come back to me so strongly that I no longer see my self or think of myself ad the Count de Lisle." . "We will not live here," said Olympia. "We could go to New Zealand or Peru or Asia, where no one knows us or can reach us. You are my country, the only one I care to live in. Let us disap pear, like the fairies!" "Riches can buy most things, but the more riches you have the less can you buy seclusion. We can't escape that way. Wherever we went we should find a newspaper correspondent. "We might give the money away," Olympia suggested. "You could build and endow your school of art, and a few things like that, and then we would go off, like good people when they die, and we should certainly go to heaven, so long as we staid together. Then the news paper people would stay behind with the monev." to be continued. In Holland it is customary when there is infectious disease in a house to notify the fact to intending visitors and the public generally by tying a piece of white rag around the bell handle. The raspberry was introduced into England from Virginia in 1696. The cherry was introduced from the eastern shores of the Black sea at a very early date. GTJNMAKER OF ILION JEFFERSON M. CLOUGH REFUSES A TEMPTING OFFER. His Health Was Too Poor to Permit Attention to Business A Great Suf ferer for Many Tears, But He Has Now Recovered. From the Springfield, Mass., Union. Thexe isn't a gun manufacturer in the United States who does not know Jefferson M. Clough, and why? Be cause he has been intimately associated all his life with the development of the two best American rifles, the Rem ington and Winchester. For years he was superintendent of the E. Reming ton & Sons' great factory at Ilion, N. Y. After leaving there he refused a tempting offer of the Chinese gov ernment to go to China to superintend their government factories and accept ed instead the superintendency of the Winchester-Arms Co. , at New Haven, at a salary of $7,500 a year. It was after this long term of active labor as a business man that he found himself incapacitated for further serv ice by the embargo which rheumatism had laid upon him and resigned his position more than two years ago, and returned to Belchertbwn, Mass., where he now lives and' owns the Fhelphs farm, a retired spot where he has five hundred acres of land. Being a man of means he did not ! spare the cost and was treated by lead ! incr nVliraimana u n rl Ja tlia at nalaVKnf. ed springs without receiving any bene fit worth notice. During the summer of 1893 and the winter of 1894 Mr. Clough was confined to his house in Belchertown, being unable to rise from his bed without assistance, and suffer ing continually with acute pains and with no taste or desire for food, nor was he able to obtain sufficient sleep. Early in the year 1894 Mr. Clough heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. He began taking these pills about the first of March, 1894, and continued to do so until the first part of September following. The first effect noticed was a better appetite and he began to note more ability to help himself off the bed- and to be better generally. Last August (1894) he was able to go alone to his summer resi dence and farm of 163 acres on Grena dier island, among the Thousand islands, in the river St Lawrence, where from the,highest land of his farm he commands a view for thirteen miles down the river, and sixty of the Thousand islands can be seen. Instead of being confined to his bed Mr. Clough is now and has been for some time, able to be about the farm to direct the men employed there, and he is thankful for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for him. These pills are manufatnred by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and are never sold in bulk. They may be had of all drug gists or direct by mail from Dr. Wiil liams' Medicine Company. Some of cur clever lawyers are not clever at all when they are called upon to give evidence. They cau hack and tear testimony to pieces, but when it devolves upot: themselves to make state ments from the witness stand they are not "in it." Proof of the truth of this assertion came out at a trial a day or two ago. One of our celebrated lawyers was called upon to testify. Instead of giving direct answers to his interrogator as he himself would insist on having a witness do his replies, or, rather, statements, were entirely foreign to the line of his examination. He was repeat edly cautioned against this style of giv ing testimony, but the warnings might have been leveled at the statue in the courtroom for all tbe results that ac crued. Boston Traveller. THE GIFT OF A GOOD STOMACH Is one of the most beneficient donations vouchsafed to us by nature. How often it is grossly abased ! w nether tne stomach is nattu ally weak, or has been rendered so by impru dence in eating or drinking, Hostelter's Stomach Bitters is the best agent for Its restoration to vigor and activity. Both digestion and appe tite are i newed by this tine tonic, which also overcomes constipation, biliousness, malarial, kidney and rheumatic ailments and nervous ness.' Teache' Suppose you were a king, Tommy, what would you do? Tommy I'd never have to wash my face any more. IN SNOWBOUND STATES. In states and territories where snow and ice last all the long winters through, where men are much exposed and suffer much from cold, it is a wonder they do not pro vide better against some of the conse quences. In some lumber camps, chop pers stand all day in knee-deep snow with half frozen feet. Ihifeet are much more tender than the hands from being covered up all the time. Men are often lame all sum mer from the irost bites of the previous winter. Why it is so, is simply because they do not know that St. Jacobs Oil will cure frost bite in a night. His terraou'8 -lmost endless, And thus his people sit And find it very hard to make Head or toil ef it. FITS. All nts stopped tree by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Bestorer. No nts aftei the first day's nse. Marvelous cares. Treatise and 12.00 trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Bend to Dr. Kline, 831 Arch St- Philadelphia. Pa. Tbt Gkbmea tor breakfast. pRENCH " Fashions Illustrated by 6 dolls with 31 dresses, 6 salts, 28 bats, and 35 other articles, furnishing the ladies with the latest French fashions as well as the children with an amusing toy. WaVS tO f f VJICk I n e S B Fashions. 3 Black well' s Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C, and the Fashion Dolls will be sent you postpaid. You will find one coupon inside each 2 oz. bag, and two coupons inside each 4 oz. bag of Blackwelus Genuine Durham Tobacco. Buy a bag of this Celebrated Smoking Tobacco, and read the coupon, which gives a list of other premiums and how to get them. 9 CENT STAMPS ACCtPTED. HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cuie. F. J. CHENEY & CO, Props., Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and fin ancially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Tboax, Whole-ale Druggists, Toledo, O. W albino, K innan & Marvin. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mncous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c per bottle. Sold by all druegtsts. T tlmonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best NEW WAT KAST NO DUST. Go East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla Walla via O. B. fc N. to Spokane and Great Northern Railway to Montana, Dakotaa, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St. Louis, East and South. Bock-ballast track; fine scenery; new equipment; Great North ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family TouriBt Cars; Buffet-Library Cars. Write A. B. C. DennUton, C. P. & T. A Portland, Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A., St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in formation about rates, routes, etc Piso's Cure is the medicine to break up children's Coughs and Colds. Mas. M. G Blunt, Sprague, Wash., March 8, 1891. From zr.&Jburfial of Xedirin not. w. h. Feeke, who makes a specialty of Epilepsy, has without doubt treated and cur ed more cases than any living Physician ; his success is astonishing. We have heard of cases ol 2o years' standing f enred bj -J I n,P?.- lAT-or. rmt ile of his absolute cure, free to any sufferers who may send their P. O. and Express address. We advise any one wishing a cure to address tttwu. f. v., a ceosxst., sew Tor suffered terribly fom roaring in my head during an attack of catarrh, and because very deaf, used Ely's Cream Balm and in three weeks could hthr at o"s well as ever. A. E. New-, man, Graling, Mich. 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 Senses of Taste and 3melL The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril, and lt agreeable. Price. 60 cents at Druggists' or b) mail. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren Street. New York. REAL ESTATE MORTGAGES BOUGHT H. E. NOBLE 313 Commercial Bl'k, PORTLAND, OR SURE CURE for PILES Itohinir Dd Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Plli jrtsM ml mm to DR. BO-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY. Stop- itch- ing, absorbs tumor. A positive eare. Circalsn wot frM. Prio If you want a sure relief for limbs, use MIS HdlUilL SVWllwithUUa Allcock Bear in Mind Not one of the host of counterfeits and imi tations is as good as the genuine. WEINHARD'S it the name of Woman's Friend. It is ful in relieving the backaches.headachea which burden and shorten a woman's women testify for it. It will give health and strength and make life a pleasure. For sale by all druggist?. SLUMAUER-FRANK DRUG CO., Pobtland, Agents. 'WHER DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OP SAPOLIO iftntS QFFn 1 OyU CATALOG Now Send ( Send 6 Coupons, or J Send 1 Gonponand6oents,or Send 10 Cents without any pnt FREE Take Care Of your physical health. Build up your system, tone your stomach and digestive organs, increase your appetite, enrich your blood, drive out all impurities and prevent sickness by taking Hoods Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. $1 ; six for J5. HnnA'a Dill a act harmoniously with UOOU S rUlS Hood's Sarsaparilla. 26 CIS. HERCULES GAS JlJiD GAS0MJ1E ...ENGINES... NOTED FOR... SIMPLICITY STRENGTH ECONOMY SUPERIOR WORK- MANSHIP.m IN EVERY DETAIL These engines are acknowledged by expert engineers te be worthy of highest commenda tion for simplicity, high grade material and su perior workmanship. They develop the fall actual horsepower, and run without an electric spark battery; the system of ignition is simple, inexpensive and reliable. For pamping outfits 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 intermittent power their economy Is un questioned. STATIOKARY AID MARINE ENSUES xairoTAcroBXn bt American Type Founders' Co. PORTLAND, OR. Send for catalogue. fl MRS. WINSLOW'S OTIT!! i- FOR CHILDREN TEETHING -, Far sale by .11 Drag-stoU. 25 Cent, a bttle. 1 LOOK AT THE iOX This is Walter Baker & Co.'s Cocoa box be sure thatJyou dont gtt an imitation of it. Sold by Grocers Everywhere. Walter Baker & Co.,Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. pains in the back, side, chest, or Porous Plaster WELL-KNOWN BEER (IN KKQ8 OK BOTTLES) Second to none TBT IT.. No matter where from. POBILASD, OR. The very remarkable and certain relief given woman by MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY has riven h-k nniformly success f"i C 3 itr - and weakness life. Thousands of Buell Lamberson 20S Third Street ready ...PORTLAND, OR. j for One... Mention this paper i THE AGBMOTOR CO. does naif th world's windmill business, becase It baa reduced tne coot of wind power to 16 what it was. It bas manj braucb nouses, ana supplies iui guwa luaniNun at four aoor. it can ana am iuruuui a . . better artlcl tor leas money than othen. It makes Pumping and n otul a.hMnlMllflMk luwnj) uwvi. uwim 1 1 .i.i i.-m w- a and Fixed Steel Towers. SteeTBuxz Saw if'FrsMi, steel reed Cotters and Feed WSJ Bfa Grinders. On application It will nam. one il of Dim artlplna that It will famish Until Jsnnarr 1st at 13 the usual price. It also makes Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue. Factory 12tk, KockwcU aas Fillare Streets, Ckicar DR. GUM'S IMPROVED m LIVER A Mild Pbnln. One Pill for a Dom. A movement of the bowels each dajr is neeeatarr for health. L These puis snpplr what the system laei It regular. They cure Headache, brijrhtea tnd dear tbe Complexion better than MUM rstem laes. tn to. Eyes and am MIIIPSJ Morphine Habit Cored in lO M VI 1 1 1 1 to 20 days. No par till cared. U T I U III DR. i. STEPHENS; Lebsnon.Oh.o. I WHERE All tlSt FAILS. :h Sttud. Taste. Good. m lime, bohx pt nraayisia. N. P. N. V. No. m -8. F. N. V. No. 711 13 tn tin J-