.v.. BK DOCTOR'S ORDER. 4- OP-PICKING," said young Durell, as he took a rosy August annle from his pocket, and fed It leisurely to the beau tiful horse against which he leaned. "Why, yes, it is a rather romantic busi ness, if you look upon it from a roman tic point of view. You're an artist, eh? Come to sketch our little bits of roman tic scenery? But there's nothing par ticularly picturesque about our hop fields. Just suushine and the gold green of the clusters, and the curling tendrils reaching out for something to grasp at, and the air so blue and clear that one can almost see the straight lines of the sunshine. Of course, it look.i pretty to me, for I was born and brought up upon it; but excuse me I can't see what there is specially wor thy of an artist's pencil." "Do you see those long perspectives of green alleys," said he; "with figures running in and out, and the old wom an sitting among the fragrant heaps, with the scarlet cloak, and two little toddles at her feet? And yonder feeble, bent old man, with water cans on his shoulders? Why, there are a hundred bits of genre here, to say nothing of the background." And Unyniond took out his millboards and color boxes, set up an impromptu easel, and began diligently to paint. Squire Durell's son looked on with an amused smile. To bim, the machinery of the great hop farm was the real business of life. Artists and such like were merely pleasure seekers who dis ported themselves airily on the out skirts of creation. "You will find some very pretty faces here," said Durell, "if you care for sketching that sort of thing. People come br -e from all parts of the country in hop-picking time. Gypsies, tramps, respectable poor workers who don't ob ject to turning an honest penny, young people who come here for the frolic of the thing, and poor old wretches who think that every season will be their last. It's healthy, the doctors say. At all events It's profitable. In hop season there Isn't a cottage, a farmhouse gar ret, nor even a barn untenanted. There are tents, a white sprinkle of them, down In the meadow by the vines, "where people sleep at nights. You can see them from here. You are staying in this part of the neighborhood? No? My father will be very glad to see you up at the house, If you will honor ns by becoming our guest to-night." And raising his light straw hut, Daniel Durell went his way, the beau tiful, satln-sklnned white horse follow ing like a docile kitten at his heels. "Hugh," he said to a servant who had come down with a hamper from the house, "take a cup of coffee and two or three of these white rolls, with my com pliments to that gentleman In the white linen coat who is sketching under the trees. And, Hugh!" "Sir?' "Djd you carry the sardine sand wiches and the basket of apricots and he young girl In take 'em, Mr. was all for call- ilnded your order. arid lii.rEfEEEEf. ris fast as I could, ending notwKear." Durell smiled. That's aght," said he, "and don't forget the cold meat and slices of new bread for old Dunstable. He grows weaker and weaker every day, and there was nothing but the heel of a loaf id a black-cheese rind In his dinner isket, for I saw it myself." 's all right, sir," said Hugh. i.nd then Durell, going up to the great shrewdly noticed all the hop prs as they sat and lay around nn- the shadow of the vines. In the far niente of the noon intermis- aud finally came Into the great. room where the scent of cheese- filled the air, and the muslin i fluttered to and fro In the The sqiuire himself sat there, gouty but contejnt. Iced claret and cold chick en wereon the table; forced hot-house peaches Scented the atmosphere; a plate of deviled tongue, with curry sauce, supplied' the fiery element, and delicate cutlets, breaded and fried In egg, were brought in. The old gentleman's face brightened at the sight of his son. "It has seemed a long day without you, !.ny boy," said he. "Sit down, sit down. Do you know, Daniel, I've been thinking all the morning that I wish Lou d bring a wife home to the old She would be company for me are gone. Why don't you my lad?" I been thinking of It, father," ulre's son. "But what would Br, If I were to marry a noor Ire set do wn his glass of Iced Ivldently this was entirely a of the matter. Daniel?" aor girl, father, and as ely as yonder half-opened Sd. You will perhaps laugh at e added, "but I have lost my to one of our hop-pickers." lie!!" name Is Mary Bavenel, sir. I saw her before this season. She ting t,cps with her aunt, or some relative a pale, fragile looking In as beautiful as a dream. And her." Ati squire shook his head. Fn trust you, my son," said he Uoever you choose to bring here as welcome as the flowers In all tMs time the artist, strolling long to observe tne various came upon a pale faced girl in girl with large, melting, wino-ce-5, straight, pure features and hair, overhanging her fore- a mist of Jet ilavenel!" he cried, In a tone fmazement Miss Ravenel,' " she smiled lou are astonished to see me the doctor declared that hop- 1 be the very thing tor Verna brought me, and And I am really accom- 5ders In the hop-picking )wn here and eat some of is hothouse grapes. They .daily by an unknown is," as Aunt Verna not exactly un- )urell's son. He ng all these dellght- I tell him over and need of them. I i a starving dress- ag of the kind," with a blush and a smile. "But, oh, he is so good! And I like him so much! Now show us, please, what you have been sketching." Mr. Durell came down, In the warm, red glow of the summer sunset, to the willow-shaded curve In the river where Miss Ravenel liked to sit when her day's work was done. "I have brought you some of the rare orchids from the conservatory," said he. "You told me the other day you liked flowers." "I am much obliged to you," said she, gratefully. "But, Mr. Durell, I have something to tell you." "Stop a minute," he said. "I have something to tell you that I love you, that I want to make you my wife. Dear Miss Ravenel, you are surprised at this? Have you not seen It growing out of my heart by degrees? My father Is old and Infirm, but he Is ready to welcome you with all paternal love, and " "You really love me?" she cried, with wide open eyes. "Mo, a poor, pale, lit tle hop-picker 7" "You, my queen and my Ideal!" "Then," she said, all smiles and blushes, "I think I ought to repay you by loving you a littla And I think I do nay, I am quite certain of it" "My darling! Oh, my darling," he murmured. "But wait; you have not heard what I am," she urged. "You are Miss Ravenel." "I am General Ravenel's daughter. I am here by the doctor's order, not be cause I need the dally wages of a hop picker. But you won't like me any the less, will you, for that?" Mr. Durell stood amazed. Miss Rav enel the great heiress! "We are stopping at the Clancllff Hotel," said she. "I have my phaeton "I HAVE SOMETHING TO TELL YOU." and ponies there. I will drive up to the house to see your father, since ho can not come to me." "But I thought you were a poor girl, hiring one of these tents rso much a night," said Daniel In perp-xlty. "That's where you were mistaken," said Miss Ravenel, smiling. "But hop picking has done me a deal of good. Aunt Verna says my cheeks are redder than they used to be; and I must be better, because " "Well?" "Because I feel so happy," said Mary Ravenel, coloring like a rose. And so Daniel Durell found his life's treasure out among the garlanded hop poles. Hearthstone. The Bold, Bad Bug. I am sitting by the river, Elolse, Where the waters dance and quiver In the breeze, And the little birds are winging Overhead and sweetly singing Till their melody is ringing Through the trees. Here together we sat chumming, Eloise, While we listened to the humming Of the bees; And you said when I made money As the little bees made honey I would be your solid sonny Oh, you tease! As we sat beneath the willows, Eloise, Bosoms heaving as the billows Of the seas, Oh, how fond the recollection That by prudent circumspection I was winning your affection By degrees. All at once a scream went flying Through the trees, Seemed to shatter e'en the sighing Of the breeze; And the voice which erstwhile charmed me Now with pitying ring alarmed me Seemed to freeze. What a chill of fear came o'er me, Eloise, As you threw yourself before me On your knees; And you said a bug that harm meant Was between your back and garment And you begged the dreadful varmint I would seize! But my modesty was riven, Eloise, And my blushes ran up seven- Ty degrees, And you called me craven coward, Epithets upon me showered, And alone left me embowered 'Neath the trees! So again I here am sitting, Eloise, And the same old birds are flitting Through the trees; In the same old way they're winging, And the same old songs they're singing, And the same old music's ringing On the breeze. But I've grown a whole lot older, If you please, And I've certainly grown bolder, By degrees; And if now I had occasion I would stop that bug's invasion Without any hesitation, Eloise. Denver Post. Good Evidence. Lawyer Why did you discharge that man arrested for scorching? Judge Pedals Scorching! That man wasn't scorching. Impossible! Why, he only rode a last year's model - of a low grade wheel. Now, If he had been riding a Crackadoom, as 1 do But right there the lawyer interposed, and the same old endless discussion on the merits of different wheels was re sumed. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Any one who will patronize an excur sion will laugh at a circus ciowi THUNDEHSTORM FATALITIES. few Deaths Attributed to Them, Not withstanding the Popnlar Fear. A curious news item gives the results of an investigation carried on by Dr. G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark University, on the things that most ex cite fear in people. Of the 298 classes of objects of fear to which 1,707 per sons confessed, thunder and lightning led all the rest, although in certain lo calities, as for Instance, those subject to cyclones, etc., the fear of the latter predominates. It may be accepted as probably true that thunderstorms con stitute the most pronounced source of fear with the majority of people, due no doubt to the always impressive and not infrequently overpowering nature of the phenomenon. But is there any justification in fact for this fear so far as fatal results are concerned? We believe there Is not, but, on the con trary, that many other causes which barely have a place In Dr. Hall's list are infinitely more entitled to the dis tinction as fear producers than light ning. As proof of this we may cite statis tics of the United States weather bu reau. These show that for the four years 1890-93 the deaths from light ning numbered 784, or an average of 190 a year. Again, H. I Kretzer, of St. Louis, found from the record of nearly 200 newspapers that for the five years 1883-88 there were 1,030 deaths caused by lightning, or ah average of 200 a year. We doubt whether of the number of deaths classified as "acci dental" In the whole United States any one group can show so small a num ber. In New York city alone over 200 people are drowned every year, while nearly 150 are burned or scalded to death, and close on to 500 persons meet their end by falls of one kind or an other. Comparing the record of 200 lightning fatalities for the whole coun try with the above records for New York city, with its total of nearly 1,500 accidental deaths every year, it will be seen how groundless is the popular fear of lightning. It Is a survival, an In herited superstition. The popular belief that a stroke of lightning Is Invariably fatal Is also not borne out by the facts. Indeed, one record specially devoted to this feature shows that of 212 persons struck only seventy-four were killed. Taking It all In all, there seems to be no more groundless popular fear than that of lightning. Indeed, if one can go by statistics, the risk of meeting death by a horse kick In New York is over 50 per cent, greater than that of death by lightning. Yet with all the weight of statistics agalns Its deadllness, light ning will probably continue to scare people as heretofore. Terhaps, after all, there may be a more direct cause than the mere psychological one usu ally ascribed to it, and that Is the fact that many people of nervous tempera ment are affected hours before the ap proach of a thunderstorm and thus rendered particularly powerless tp stand the strain which more or less af fects the most phlegmatic natures dur ing a disturbance In the heavens. Bos ton Transcript. His Ruse Saved Him. Thought, at any rate, is not slow in Philadelphia. The following anecdote proves it: According to the rules laid down by the Philadelphia department of public safety any officer making a mistake and calling a patrol wagon tvltbout -cause Is subject to a fine of two days' pay. Quite recently one of the best and most efficient officers of the thirteenth district went to call up the station house and Inadvertently called the patrol. He was in an awful stew for a moment, but while swear ing at himself for his carelessness he espied a well-known local character ap proaching with a peculiarly unsteady gait. "Stop," said the bluecoat, whoso brain had suddenly absorbed a bright idea. "You've been drinking and you will just help me out of a difficulty." "What have I done?" asked the man, "Oh, nothing, only I have made a mis take," replied the patrolman, "and if the patrol comes you go to the station and if it don't you can go along about your business. I've let you off many a time. Now you can help me." The patrol arrived, the victim was hustled Into the wagon and taken to the sta tion and locked up for the night Of course he was discharged In the morn nlng none the worse for his slumber on the hard bench. The officer to square himself handed over 50 cents to the man and chuckled to himself at the thought of how he had saved $5 by his Ingenuity. Troy Times. Liost Opportunities. "Talking of lost opportunities for riches," remarked the retired capita list, "I count two against myself which I will regret until my dying day. One came a number of years ago, when a man wanted to buy a small lot of ground from me and offered for 1t 1,000 shares of the Bell Telephone Co., which he valued at $1 a share. I refused the bid. The stock has since sold at $750 a share. The other lost opportunity was even worse. An old friend, who had been a school companion in my youth, came to me and implored me to help him out with an option he had on a sliver mine in Colorado. He had raised $8,000 and he needed' that much more to prevent the expiration of the option in about a week. I had been bitten In a number of gold and silver mining speculations, and I refused to put up the desired $8,000. My friend found a man on Market street who had more nerve than I and took up the option with the $16,000. Since that time those two men have cleared $7, 000,000 on that mine, $3,500,000 apiece. The lightning may strike me yet, but I doubt whether I will ever recover those lost millions." Philadelphia Record. Slaking It Worth While. It is ever the habit of mortals to trump up excuses for certain lines of conduct, but probably none are more ahsurd than the following: An Irishman walking over a plank sidewalk, in counting some money acci dentally dropped a nickel, which rolled down a crack between the boards. The Irishman was much put out by his loss, trifling though it was. Early the next day a friend, while walking by the spot, discovered the man drop ping a dollar down the same crack. "It was this way," explained Pat; "I reasoned thot it wasn't worth me while to put up thot sidewalk for a nickel, so I'm dropping down a dollar to make It' worth me while." Strange, If True, "There's a man In town who owns a clock he has wound every night for thirty-three years." "That's nothing. We have a clock that my husband has forgot to wind every night or forty years." The only difference between med dling and investigating Is that you al ways Investigate and the other fellow meddles. What has become of the old-fashion-ad man who .aid, "No, I don't, nuther?" NO MORE LEAP YEARS. They Will Not Stop, However, for Eight Centuries. In time leap years will go out of ex istence entirely, but as this will not occur for over 800 years - we haven't much personal Interest in the event In the ordinary course of events 190C would be a leap year, but It will not count In the calculation. In other words, wlflle it does occur It does not occur, simply because It is not In the agreement, that it shall occur. The story is a long one, but it can be brief ly told so that the average person can understand it without much difficulty. In 1582, In the arrangement of the Julian calendar, ten days were dropped so as to get things running on the then new but the present basis of calculat ing time. So as to keep things running right It was determined that a year ending a century should not be bisex tlle, except every fourth century. Thus there was no leap year In 1700, 1800 or 1900. It is, or at least was, rather hard on the ladies, who have special advantages In leap year, for It Is the only year that it is proper for them to propose themselves In marriage, but as It has always been so In matters af fecting womankind, men always find reasons for restricting their privileges. The ladles lose their privilege again in 1900, but though there will not be many of those who see 1900 who will see 2,000, the latter year, ending a fourth century, will be a leap year. In this way three days are retrenched in four centuries, and the remaining seven days will be made up in a little over 800 years. After that calendar years will be like solar years, and er rors In the calculation of time will oc cur no more. The loss of leap years will in thou sands of years affect the seasons. I suppose the mathematicians of the centuries hence will be so expert In handling figures and making calcula tions that they will have no difficulty in keeping things going correctly. Washington Star. TRUMPET CALLS. Rant's Horn Bounds a Warning Note to the Unredeemed. SOUL Is worth more than a ser mon. True love slays lust. Love Is never wasted. Too many good resolutions die in their infancy. Shallow brooks make much bab ble. It Is grand to right the wrong you see. The will of heaven never has a cod icil. Minor sins rarely fall to reach ma turity. Calling bricks butter will not make them soft. If you cannot dispel the mists, climb above them. Personal salvation means purse-and-all consecration. Trayer performed as a mere duty, brings no blessing. He never wastes words who confines himself to the truth. Like the manna, the Bible tastes to each man ns he wills. The world, the flesh and the devil aro Incarnate In the saloon. If we would not tremble before Him, Emanuel must be Jesus. So far from God only saving the good, He can only save the bad. The Good Physician never makes a mistake In the prescription. Running In debt with no intention of paying, is genteel stealing. If you are marching with Christ, you will have collisions with sin. Better the tear of godly sorrow, than the laugh of sinful pleasure. To preach "the truth In love" Is to preach against every heresy. The mannerism of man is the paint he uses to hide the raw material. When the wicked make merry, the devil always leads the applause. To grasp Christianity often calls for the surrender of a man's religion. By the shame of the Cross Christ de scends to the depths of our shame. If conscience spoke words of flattery, Its slightest whispers could be heard. Praise a fool, and It makes him proud; praise a wise man, and it makes him humble. Attending church service and attend ing to Christ's service are things which differ. WHAT THE LAW DECIDES. The drilling oil wells by each owner of adjoining lands near the division line, so that each may obtain the amount of oil contained In his land, is held, In Elley vs. Ohio Oil Company (Ohio), 39 L. R. A. 7C5, to be lawful and to afford each of them sufficient protection against the other. An Injunction against the plaintiff Is held, in Sternberg vs. Wolff (N. J.), 39 L. R. A., 762 to be properly imposed as a condition of a similar injunction in his favor to limit the power of the de fendant to make promissory notes or checks for a corporation in which they have equal interests. An Injunction agaKist the proprietor of a theater to prevent breach of a contract to furnish the theater and equipment to the manager of a com pany for a certain time and to prevent him from furnishing the theater to a rival company during that period, is denied in Welty vs. Jacobs (111.), -40 L. R. A. 98, as the contract Is not one that can be specifically enforced. Persons attending a club banquet at a hotel on the Invitation and at the ex pense of the club, which had a contract to pay a special sum for each plate fur nished, were held, In Amey vs. Win chester (N. H.), 39 L. R. A. 760, to have no right of action against the proprie tor for the loss of their hats left by them on a rack at the entrance of the dining-room, although they had been registered and assigned a room at the hotel. President McKinley a Pipe Smoker President McKinley has become a pipe smoker; Attorney General Griggs chews tobacco privately; Postmaster General Smith smokes cigarettes; Sec retary Gage smokes cigars and chews tobacco; Secretary Alger la an invet erate smoker. The abstainers of the cabinet are Secretaries Day, Bliss and Long. Good Field for Women Doctors. One reason why female physicians nw.n on nlon tl f Til In Rnoslfl fa that tv. u.i c ov l"-' . ... .UMV l L1Z country Includes among Its inhabitants over 12,000,000 Mohammedans, who do not allow male physicians to treat women. Some men would rather be right than be President, but there are others who never make an effort to be either. Oil cures Oil cures Oil cures Oil cures Oil cures Oil cures Oil enres Oil ouies Oil cures Oil cures Rheumatism. Neuralgia. Lumbago. Sciatica. Sprains. Bruises. Soreness. Stiffness. Backache. Muscular aches. St. St. Jacobs Jacobs St. St. Jacobs Jacobs St. Jacobs St. Jacobs St. Jacobs St. Jacobs Dewey's Expenses. Admiral Dewey's expenditures in powder and shell to sink the Spanish fleet at Manila, according to his own official report, was about $45,000. The cost for the same item in disposing of Admiral Ceivera's fleet off Santiago is between $90,000 and $100,000. Ex perts regard the figures in both cases as surprisingly low. Do You Like Boils If you do not, you should take Hood's Sarsaparllla and it will purify yonr blood, cure your boils and keep your system free from the poisons which cause them. The great blood purifying power of Hood's Sar saparilla is constantly being demonstrated by its many marvelous cures. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine, fl; six for So. Hood's Pills cure Sick Headache. 25 cents. Prosperous Woman Farmer. One of the most prosperous farmers in Oklahoma is Mrs. Jane Crumm. who lives near Calumet. Pour years ago her husband died, and since then she andNa 14-year-old boy have cultivated 820 aores of land, and this year iaised over 5,000 bushels of wheat, besides corn, oats aud other things. The widow plowB every day and has paid a large amount of obligations of her hus band since his death. STRONG STATEMENTS. Three Women Relieved of Female. Troubles by Mrs. Pinkham. From Mrs A. W. Smith, 59 Summer St., Biddeford, Me.: " For several years I suffered with various diseases peculiar to my sex. Was troubled with a burning sensation across the small of my back, that all gone feeling, was despondent, fretful and discouraged; the least exertion tired me. I tried several doctors but received little benefit. At last I de cided to give your Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. The ef fect of the first bottle was magical. Those symptoms of weakness that I was afflicted with, vanished like vapor before the sun. I cannot, speak too highly of your valuable remedy. It is truly a boon to woman " From Mrs. Melissa Phillips, Lex ington, Ind., to Mrs. Pinkham: "Before I began taking your medicine I had suffered for two years with that tired feeling, headache, backache, noap petite, and a run-down condition of the system. I could not walk across the room. I have taken four bottles of the Vegetable Compound, one box of Liver Pills and used one package of Sanative Wash, and now feel like a new woman, and am able to do my work. " From Mrs. Mollie E. Uep.p.el, Pow ell Station, Tenn.: "For three years I suffered with such a weakness of the back. I could not perform my household duties. I also had falling of the womb, terrible bearing-down pains and headache. I have taken two bottles of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and feel like a new woman. I recommend your medicine to every woman I know." Shawl for an Empress. One of the most wonderful shawls in existence is a woolen wrap presented as a wedding gift to the empress of Rnssia by women of Orenburg, a town in the southeastern part of the empire. When spread out it is 10 yards square, but is so exquisitely fine that it may be passed through a finger ring, and when folded makes a parcel a few inches square. St. Jacobs St. Jacobs No danger in Schilling s Best tea. It is delicious besides. Mary Stuart's Watch. Mary Stuart made a fad of collecting timepieces. Among those owned by her was a coffin-shaped watch in a case of crystal. Probably the most remark able one in her collection was the one bequeathed to Mary Seaton, her maid of honor. It was in the form of a skull. On the forehead of the skull was the symbol of death, the scythe and the hour glass. At the back of the skull was time, and at the top of the head the garden of Eden and the crucifixion. The watch was opened by reversing the skull. Inside was a rep resentation of the Holv Family, sur tounded by angels, while the shepherds and their flocks were worshipping the new-born Christ. The works formed the brains, while the dial-plate was the palate. She also possessed another skull-shaped watch, but it is not known what became of it. In the hotels built in China for the use of foreigners, the highest stories are the most expensive because the breeziest. Of the bog moss sphagnum there are no fewer than 215 species, about 600 varieties. of "Arrottronf ' Combined Theory and Practice i Bookkeeping are numerous. Investigate this new method of teaching. It la extremely interesting, thoroughly practical. Going to Business College? Do not fail to learn what and how we teach. PORTLAND BU8IWE88 COLLEGE, Portland, Oregon. Call. or write. Visitors always wej. come. A. P, AmxrraoNO, Principal. m tima. Sold tr drupsiiu. m cushIri IlT IlsTTajis. 13 Ben Coiiari krrob. Ttnm Qcci. Use FROM ABROAD. Smoking was not permitted in Eng land railway carriages until 1846. In some parts of Norway coin is still used as a substitute for coin. There are 27 royal families in Europe, two-thirds of which are of German origin. It is said that the first weeping wil low in England was planted by Alex ander Pope, the poet. The cartmen who haul sand to Rorne for builders work 19 hours a day for 35 cents, and sleep in the stables with their mules. As an effect of the South Wales coal strike, the Great Western railway has sustained a direct loss upon a oarriage of minerals of 138,000. No restaurant in "St. Petersburg is allowed to have its bill of fare exclu sively in a foreign language. By a re cent edict a Russian version must al ways be added. There are 400,000,000 people in the British empire, and the queen would have to live another 70 years to enable her to see all of them pass before hdr, if marching night and day for all that time. A recent report issued in Germany says that 3,574,501 hectoliters of beer were absorbed in Berlin in 1897, "so that each inhabitant drank 206 liters." In 1892 the average consumption was 169 liters. The sjstem of vaccination is so per fect in the German army that smallpox has been reduced to six oases annually. All rewuits are re-vaccinated, and there must be at least ten punctures in each arm. It is stated that Turkey lost less than 1,000 men in battle in the Greek war, but 19,000 died in Thessaly of disease and 23,000 were sent home invalided and of the latter 8,000 subsequently died. Among the dead were 17 army officers. Why Teeth Decay. The question to what extent the alkaline earth salts in drinking water affect the decay (caries) of teeth has of late been studied in several quarters. Statistics have been collected by Rese in several localities in Bavaria and by Foerberg, in Sweden. These have re vealed the interesting fact that the extent of decaying teeth bears a definite relation to the hardness of the water; in other words, to the quantity of cal cium and magnesium salts in the earth through which the water passes. The harder the water the better the teeth; the smaller the quantity of these salt the greater the decay of the teeth. Sudd. Ap. Zeitung. A Remarkable Plant. A flower known as the larghing plant, which grows in Arabia, is so called because its seeds produce effects like those produced by laughing gas. The flowers are of a bright yellow, while the seeds resemble small black beana WHEAT S3 A BUSHEL. Some farmers are holding their wheat be cause they think the price will go to $2 a bushel. The price, however, may go down and thus great losses will follow. In all matters delays are dangerous, particularly so in sickness. At the first sign of bilious ness, dyspepsia, indigestion or constipa tion cure yourself with Hostetter's Stom ich Bitters. The production of electric energy by the direct .sutMn; ofi iixe atmosphere is now ciruimed to be possa'ble with a bat tery iai which there is a peculiar treat ment of plates of conapressed giaphite. No. household 1 (emmplete without a bot tle of tbe Tarmous Jesse "Moore Whiskey. It is a pure and wholesome stimulant rec ommended by all physicians. Don't ne gleet this necessity. The first vessel to carry the American flag around the world was the ship Co lumbia, which sailed from the port of Boston September 30, 1787. CIT? Permanently Cured. No fits or nervonsnes after first day's use of Dr. Kllue's Oreat Nerve Restorer. Send for FKKK SS.OO trial bottle and treatise. DR. R. H, KLSSSE, ltd. 930 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa. Use Dr. Plunder's Oregon Blood Purifier now. The basin of the St. Lawrence river covers 530,000 square miles, of which 160.000 are in Canada. WHEAT Make money by succesf ul speculation in Chicago. We buy and sell wheat on mar gins. Fortunes hftvp hMn made on a small beginning by trading in fu tures. Write for full particulars. Rest nl rat. erence given. Several years' experience on the vyuicujju dumu ui i raue, ana a tnorough know ledge of the business. Send for our free refer ence book. DOWNING, HOPKINS 4 Co , Chicago Board of Trade Brokers. Offices In Portland, Oregon and Seattle. Wash. BASEBALL, FOOTBALL. ATHLETIC AND GYMNASIUM SUPPLIES. Send for Catalogue. 1111 I 8 riUPir f(l Market St. if ILL A MHuA (ill. San Francisco. YOUfi UVERsSg Koore's Revealed Remedy will do It Three doses will make you ieel better. Get It from your druggist or any wholesale drug house , or mwua tMcnM, at iiuiuius uragua, Seattle. BUY THE GENUINE SYRUP OF FIGS ... MANTTFACTUKED BY ..V CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. tW XOTK THE KAMB Buy Direct Jf-t, WOOLEN M ILLS Kfes And save middleman's profits. Men's fine tailor-made sulis, 13.95 to $14. Fit guaranteed. Cata logue, samples, self-measurement blanks, etc., mailed free. Address J. LANDIGAN, McKay building, Portland, Or. Mention this paper 3Mtj CURE YOURSELF! CRBSH l'e fii for unnatural VlalioSltji.V discharge!, lufiammatioit, tWm Oniraaued irritations or ulcerations MMW not io ArUtmrt. of mucous membranes. gMPnrasts eaniafioii. Painless, and not astria o1theEvs ChemiolCq. or poisonous. BjA ciNciitNATi.o B Sol' r trntra-taia, s1 Circular sent on rNjaert. Mm P. X. U. Ho. 43, '98, W HEX writing, to advertisers plaaae meatlon ttaia paper. Women and the Wheel. Fron the Gazette, Dela'rarc, Ohio. The liealthfulness of bicycle riding for women is still a disputed question between eminent physioians and health reformers. Used in moderation it surely creates for women a means of out-door exer cise, the benefit of which all physicians concede. Used to excess, like any other pastime, its effect is likely to be dangerous. The experience of Miss Bertha Reed, the 17-year-old daughter of Mr. J. R. Reed, 335 Lake street, Delaware, O. , may point a moral for parents who, like Mr. and Mrs. Reed, have experi enced some concern for their daughters who are fond of wheeling. In the fall of '96 Miss Bertha, who had ridden a great deal, began to fail in an alarm ing manner. She grew steadily paler and thinner, and it appeared she was going into consumption. Rest and quiet did her absolutely no good. A physician found her pulse at 104 a very high rate. Thinking this may She Ri le Well. have been due to temporary nervous ness when he examined her.he watched her closely, but her pulse continued at that rate for two weeks. He was satis fied then, from her high pulse and steadily wasting condition that she was suffering from anaemia or a bloodless condition of the body. She became extremely weak, and could not stand the least noise or excitement. In this condition of affairs they were reccom mended by an old friend to get some of that famous blood medicine. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They did so, and almost from the first dose Ber tha began to improve. She continued to take the pills and was by means of those pills made entirely well, and more grateful people than her parents cannot be found in the whole state of Ohio. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved a boon to womankind. Acting directly on the blood and nerves, they restore the requisite vitality to all parts of the body; creating functional regularity and perfect harmony throughout the nervous system. The pallor of the cheeks is changed to the delicate blush of health; the eyes brighten; the muscles grow elastic, ambition is created and good health re turns. The skin of the reindeer is'so imper vious to the cold that anyone clothed in such a dress, with the addition of a blanket of the same material may bear the intensest rigors of an Arcticwinter's night. Nearly 1,000,000 women in Spain work in the field as day laborers; 350, 000 women are registered as day ser vants that is, they work for their food and lodging. There is no such class anywhere else. follow It ITp. Sit down and cool off suddenly, and then regret it, for stiffness and soreness is bound to follow. Follow it up with St. Jacobs Oil and yon will have nothing to regret from a prompt cure. Astronomers say that in onr solar system there are at least 17,000,000 comets of all sizes. Dear Editor: If you know of a solicitor or canvasser in your city or elsewhere, especially a man who has solicited for subscriptions, in surance, nursery stock, books or tailoring, or a man who can sell goods, you will confer a favor by telling him to correspond with us; or if you will insert this notice In your paper and such parties will cut this notice out and mail to us, we may be able to furnish them a good position in their own and adjoining counties. Add re s 3 AMERICAN WOOLEN MILLS CO., Chicago. It is the custom of Persian ladies, when they make social calls, to throw roses at one another. ...Willamet Front and Everett Sts. ATLAS EXGIXES AND BOILERS. American Type Founders Company r "A Perfect Type ofihe Highest Order of Excellence in Manufacture. " Breakfast (icoa Absolutely Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. .Costs Less Tp que cent a cup. Be sure that you get the Genuine Article, made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. Established 1780. HI Roots crowned. Bridges Made. Painless filling and extraction. DR.T.H. WHITE fSO&Si Vfnfc HEALTH RESTORER. USE IT! The waters of the Grand Falls of Labrador have excavated a chasm 80 miles long. Seems to Get KIpo. One complaint seems to get ripe in autumn, and that is neuralgia. To soothe the pain, strengthen the nerves and rid the system of it, use St. Jacobs Oil, the best known cure. Copra is a preparation of the cocoanut made in great quantities in tropical islands all over the world. When coming to San Franoiso go to Brooklyn Hotel, 208-212 Bush street. American or European plan. Room and board $1.00 to $1.50 per day ; rooms 50 cents to $1.00 per day; single' meals 25 cents. Free coach. Chas. Montgomery. Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder. There is a cafe in Venice which has never been closed, night or day, for 150 years. 100 UEVPAllD SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been ablo to cure in all its tages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The pro prietors have so much faith in Its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars lor any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The average weight of a brain is greater in China than in any European country excepting Scotland. If you want the best wind mill, pumps, tanks, plows, wagons, bells of all sizes, boilers, engines, or general machinery, see or write JOHN POOLE, foot of Morrison street, Portland, Oregon. My doctor said I would die, but Piso's Cure for Consumption cured inc. Amos Kelner, Cherry Valley, 111., Nov. 23, 1895. A scientist looking for microbes says there are absolutely none on the Swiss mountains at an altitude of 2,000 feet. In the fall cleanse your system by using Dr. Plunder's Oregon Blood Purifier. A novel cure for consumption, it is said, has been for some time in use by Dr. J. B. Murphy, of Chicago. The remedy consists in the hypodermic in jection of pnre nitrogen into the lungs. Iron Works... wann MB INCORPORATED 1865. Manufacturers of Marine and Stationary Engines and Boilers, Saw Mill, Flour Mill, Mining and Dredging Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers, water 'Wheels, etc Agents for the John T. Noye Co. Flour Mill Machinery. Huntley Mfg. Co.'s Monitor Grain Separators and Scourers. Dealers in Excelsior Bolting Cloth, Mill and Elevator Supplies, Cotton and Leather Belting, etc Send your orders direct to us ana get the bene fit of manufacturers' prices. ... STEAMBOAT BUILDERS ... PORTLAND, OR. Cawston & Co. Successors to H. P. Gregory & Co! 48 and 50 First St., 304 First Ave, &, Portland, Or. Seattle, Wash. EVER YTHINQ FOR THE PRINTER.... ENGINES We lead and originate fashions in.... TYPE Cor. Second and Stark Sts. 1RTLAND, OREGON