Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1883)
RETROSPECT. IY VKDTK! MOW. Hold my hands in your own, u you heM mem 01 old. This hour of twilight has power to weave All threads of lb pad Into -fabric of gold. It immMU of von? with ill odor of flowert. With prodirul richness of dwpljr-5recn Ira rot, Xbts queen-monm ui suinnij r it uouies, iuuiu houn Of twilight are thoie to which my nul cleaves. lad pleasant it l for the hour to lie hero, I'nrMtttii of ills Lh.t have been or mar be: I think, Genevieve, but for you I would (lie here, And so cud the contest betwixt Death and mo. For tha fi,?ht hat been long aud naiuful and weary , , , Ah, love, could I only have borne it alone I The dyt ladon-hourcd, the nights tad and drearv. The anguish of body and mind I have sown Do you sometimes think, mv sweut Genevievo ' Uow brightly IkI'uto us the future once learned? Hare we sat in Love's tweet silence ami dreamed i Of all the beautilul things that should be: Of the wonderful deodj I should some ihv do, When every honor tha: came to me Should be a loyo-onVring unto you? Fair, oh fair was that sunset vision, ioen through the diamond lens of Love; Forever we wandered in fields of Elvsian, A heaven around us, a heaven above I And this is the end of nil our dreaming 1 Ah. sweet Genevieve, the hot tenia start- How bitter the real as compared with tho seem ing, How black the To day which was once a part 01 that roseate Future that opened before us ! God pity us both, and pity all Who sre stricken thus, for now hanRS o'er us . Kaught save the shadow of the pall I And yet, Gencyicve, though Misory has found us, We, likewise, have found how mighty is Love; . If faded forever the heaven around us, Forever awaits us the heaven above I THE STOKY OF All ORPHAN (UR1 Mattie's story was simple enongh. Tbe orphan girl of- a former servant in a wealthy family, Muttio had shared the lessons and the play of the younger daughter of the house, until a time camo when It was convenient to tarn the hum ble companion adrift to work for herself. It may have been a pieeo of ill-luck his neighbors ascribed to Drew, that it should havo been to bis farm the girl came as help to his sister, or it may hare been a pieee of bis good nature that made him agreo to tako under his roof this pretty lass, untrained for service aud educated for above ber station. Drew's widowed sister, Mrs. BankH, who lived with him, and whoso child it was Mattie had come to nurse, amongst other duties too numerous to mention, .for there was but one s rvant kept Drew's sister exclaimed in despair when tho farmer brought homo the young, ladylike, delioato-looking girl: " We want a strong, bard-working lass! This ono doesn't know hor right hand from her left. She is as good as a lady, or as bad, aud has never milked a cow in her life! What were you thinking of to bring her here?" "Abl that's my luck; well, we must do the best wo can with hor. If the stow ard bod never mentioned hor to mo now - lint then he did mention hor, and here she is." There she was, aud there she stayed, ; . apt to learn, willing to be taught, grate ful for tho real kindnesn she mot with. Mattie wits soon the best hand at milk - ing for miles around, and soon devoted to baby. Three years passed qniotly, ' and then came the romance of Muttio's life. She was twenty that summer. Adam Armitage, a grave man, was fully ten " years her senior. A great traveler, a ' member of the world-renowned scientiflo society, a student and a discoverer he was between two scientiflo expeditions, refreshing heart and brain by a walking tour through the boino countries. Adam's walking tour ended at the farm Drew had taken ouly a year bofore, and the dwelling-house it had been found mora convenient to inhabit than the smaller building on the old land close to the road. . Mr. Armitage found the pure air of the dons good for him. Ho made friends' with all the family. To Muttie it was delightful to meet once more .some one with all the tricks and manner of the more refined society among which ber youth had boon passed. Little Harry followed his new friend whorever be went. Harry's mother called him a right down pleasant gentleman. The farmer culled him n good man. They all missed him when he went away, Muttio most of all; but the next summer found hiin there again, a wel come old friend this time, and no stranger. Drew, a keen observer of all that went on around him, was not so much taken ' by surprise a3 his sister was when one day toward the end of this second visit, Adam and Mattie were both mysterious ly misaiDg. A rtrong-armed lass made ber appearance before night. She was the bearer of a note from Muttio confess ing that she aud Mr. Armitage were mar ried, and hoping the servant sent might supply ber place, so thai no one would be inconvenienced. - Drew might shake bis head aud look thoughtful, but Mr. Armitage was his own master, and it was not the first time a gentleman had married a country loss. Besides the deed was done and past re call. They bad gone quietly to one of the cu.nrcb.es in the town, and from whence the sound of bells fioated np to the farm, aud bad been married by special license. Adam had taken a lodg ing for his bride, and there they passed one brief, bright week of happiness. then one morning they walked quietly back - together, Mattie Hushing aud smiling, and looking so lovely and ladylike in a simple dress that she used to wear before h came to the farm that they hardly knew her. Adam explained that be meant to leave his wife for two days no more in cire of ber old friend, at the end of that time be would return and fetch ber. There Were arrangements to make with regard ' to the scientific expedition about to tort immediately. It wojld sail with out him now, but ft behooved him to do bis best that bis place should be as well filled as it might be. There was also. kii mother to see, and prepare for receiv-1 ia? Mattie. ' J Mattie walked a little way with her ' husband and the farmer, along the breezy uplands, and then Adam sent her back, and battened bis own steps in the direction of the little siation at the foot of the downs. When be same again, be said, laughing, it wonld be from B station, and that he wonld drive in a fly through tho Stoncdene gate along the track, the only approaoh to a carriage road leading to the farm. Mattie went away smiling, as be meant she should do, and only paused now and then to look after the two men as long as they remainod in sight. It was natural that she should feel a little afraid of this unknown lady, Adam's mother, but that fear was the only shadow on Mattie's nntb. It was an idyl, a poem. as true a love story as the world has seen, had written itself here in tuts out-of-the way spot on the lonely Sussex Downs. On the third day they might look for Adam to return, but that day passed and many another, until the days were weeks the weeks months, and be neither camo nor wrote. Mattie remembered how whon she had turned to look back for tho last time upon that homeward walk she bad seen bis tlxure distinct against the sky for an instant, and in the next lust it entirely as he passed out of sight over the swelling linos oi num. Jnstsoshe seemed to have lost him in ono instant of her life. And yet nhe never lost faith and trust in him never ceased to watch for bis coming again. Drew, after a time, either goadod to the step by bis sister's loud-voiced argu ments, or prompted to it by bis own seuse of what was due to Mattie, not ouly took pains to ascertain that the marriugo was real enough, but the fur ther pains of searching for aud Sliding the address of Adam Armitage of Lon don. It was strange how this girl aud hor former master both trusted Adam in the face of bis inexplicable silence; in the face of even a more ominous discov ery that ho had never mentioned Mattie's name to his mother, or alluded to Muttio at all. As for Adam, Mrs. Armitage had declared he was not with bor then, that she oould not give an address that wonld find him, an assertion that confirmed' Mattie in the idoa that ho had so often spoken to hor. As autumn passed and the evenings grew chill with the breath of tho coming winter, Mattie's health seemed to fail. The deep melancholy that oppressed her threatened to break the springs of life. In crdor to escape Mrs. Lanks tho girl took to lonely wnndoriugs over the downs; wanderings that ended always at Stonedene; util, with the instinct of a wounded animal that sockB to bear Us pain alone, or from the ever-recollection of the last words of Adam, when be said that it was by way of Htouedene that he would return, she besought tho farmer to send away the woman in charge of the house and allow her to take her place. Drew yielded to the wish of the wife whose heart was breaking with the pain of ubttoneo and the mystery of silence, and Mattie, on this foggy day bad al ready lived at Stonedene, on the watch always for the coming of Adum. The fog increased instead of diminish ed with the approach of evening. Drew could not see his own house until he was close to it; as he bad rcmarkod, the tap tery of Mattie's affairs was not more im penetrable than the veil hiding all nat ural objects just then. Whon he had put up the horso and gone in to toa, Mrs. Banks, as sho bustled ubout, preparing tho meal which Mattie's deft little fingers had been wont to set with so much quietness as well as colerity, did not fail to greet him with the question: "Well, how is she?'1 "She" hud conic to mean Mattio in the vocabulary of the farmer and bis sister. "About as usual in health," Drew re plied, lifting the now fivo yoar old Harry to his kneo, "but troubled in mind though to be sure, that is as usual, to." "Sho is out of her mind," exclaimed Mr3. Banks, irritably. "Every one hut yourself knows that; and if you did not know it, it is only because you nro as mad as she is or any one might think from the way you go on." "Nay, nay," said Drew gently, as tho buttor dish was set on the table with a vehemence that made the tea onps rattle. "There are no signB of madness about Mattie unless you call her trust in her husband so harsh a name." "Husband! A pretty husband. Indeed I've no patience with him; nor you either. As if it wero not a common talo enough! It would bo batter to persuade the girl to coiuo home and get to work again, than tcj enconrago her in her fancies, while you pay another servant hero and times so hard as they are." "I was thinkiug to-day," the farmer went on, softly passing his broad palm over the blonde head of the child upon his knee, "I was thinking us I came along as how it stands written; 'He that lovetli not his brother whom he hath seen, how can ho love God whom he hath not seen.'" At that moment the shadowy form of some one going to the front door passed the window against which the fog pressed closely. Drew sat littlo Harry on his feet, and rose slowly, listening with m tentness and a surprising look that made his sister ask what ailed him. "Rover! tho dog docs not bark. Who by the mercy of hoaven, it is tho man himself!" oried Drew, as the door opened with a suddenness that caused Mrs. Banks to drop the plates upon the brick floor. For Adam Armituge stood upon the threshhold. Adam pale and worn, a shadow of bis former self, but himself unmistakably. Adam looked around the room as though seeking some one, Broiled in his old-fashioned way at Harry, gave a half enrious, half-indifferent' glance to Eliza Banks, as she turned toward the farmer. "Drew," said he simply, "whore is my wife?" "Mrs. Armitage is waiting for yon at Stonedene, sir. There was somo talk of your coming back that way." "Waiting?" Adam threw up bis hands with a passionate gesture. "What can she have thonght?" k "She has thought you were gone, after all, npon that voyage, and that your let ters miscarried. Sometimes she has thought yon were dead. Mr. Armitoee. but neyer " Drew broke off and held out his hand. "We knew you eonld ex plain what has happened, sir," be con cluded. Adam drew his hand across his eyes in the way a man might do who has been lately aroused from a bad dream, and has soma trouble to collect his thoughts. "That has happened," he said, "which if it had not befallen me, myself, and be come a part of my own experience, I should find it difileult to find it possible. A strange thing has happened" here the old smile they remembered so well broke the light over his face "and yet a thing not more strange, as the world goes, than that you I say nothing f Mattie but that you should have trusted me throughout. I detected no distrust in your voice, no doubt in your byes not even when they first met miuo just now. They called mine a rare case, friend ; thoy might say the same of your bolief in me. But Stonedone, did you say? Walk with me tuoro and hear my tale as we go." "This evening, and in this mist, and yon looking far from well, begun Eliza Banks. "Mattie has waited so long al ready that one night more will make but little difference."- "One night, one hour tuoro thau I can help will make all the difference between willful wrong and a misfortune that has fallen ou all alike." Ho would not bo dissuaded from Bet ting out at ouce, and in another minute the two men were pursuing their way through the driving mist; Adam talking as they went. After parting from Mattie he had taken a train to London, where, arriving in due course, he drove iu a cab to his mother's house in Orosvonor street, within a few j-ards of which his cab over turned, and Adam was thrown out, fall ing heavily on his head. After a long interval, however, bo opened his eyes and recovored consciousness, and, as he did so slowly at first, but after a tiiuo more fully the astounding discor iry was made that bis memory was - en tirely gone. However, this Btate was one from which, so said his friouds, seionce could at will recall him, and the operation necessary to restore Adam to himsolf was deferred only nntil his health permitted of its boiug attended by a minimum risk. It was while Adam was in the state above described that Drew had soeu Mrs. Armitage. A proud woman, she was ill pleased to hear that he had married a farm servant; for that was the ono fact that, stripped of Drew's panegyrics upon Mattie's superior education and refiuod manners, alone stored her in tho face. Hastily resolving there was no need to embitter her own life by an attempt to recall to her son this ill-fated marriage, she did not hesitate to deceive the un welcome visitor. Change of scene had been orde -ed for the patient, and before Drew called at the house in Orosvonor streot for the second timo, Adnm and his mother were gone. It was in Paris, mouths after thut, that the operation was filially successfully performed, aud the first word of Adum was Mattie's nauio. The first effort of his newly recovered powers was to relate to his mother the history of his marriage, aud to write to his wife. "God grant the suspense has neither killed nor driven Jior mad," he ex claimed. It was to his mother's band the letter was confided, and with that exclamation ringing in her ears, Mrs. Armitage stood besido tho brazior filled with charcoal aud burning in tho ante-room of their apartment in tho Champs Elysecs. Sho was not a bad woman, but tho temptation was too great to allow this affair to un ravel itself, and what would turn up? If tho girl were dead, why no harm has nbeen doo, and the tcrriblo mistake of the son's was rectified at onoe. If tho other alternatives were to prove true, and Muttio had lost hor senses, Adam would bo free from her, or measures could be taken to insure so dcsirublo a result. Mrs. Armitage tore the letter into pieces, and waited by the brazier until the frag ments wero charred. ,Adam askod no awkward question, and was not even sur prised at recoiving no auswer to his opistlo, sinoo it had announced his com ing. Tho first day his health admitted of it ho set out alone for England. Suoh was the story. When Drew told of bis efforts to seek Adam, aud had men tioned that no letter had reached Muttio, Adam was at a loss to understand the part bis mother bad played. But ho never spuko of it then or at any futuro time. Tho bouse door at Stonodene stood ajar; evening had olosed in now, and the chilly fog was still abroad, but the figure at the gate was dimly discernible Adam hastenod his footsteps. "For heaven's sake, air, bo careful; the suddenness of it might turn her brain," cried Drew, laying a dotaining hand npon the arm of bis companion. Adam pcntly shook him off. "Suddenness," ho repeated. "Aye, it is tnddon to you and to Mrs. Banks, but fur me and Muttie whose thoughts are day and night and night and day, full of each other, how can it bo Btiddon?" D.-ew stood still, and Adam went on nlone until his footsteps became audible, and Mattie turned her head to see him standing at her side. Adam had been right. No fear was there for Mattie's brain. All exoitemont, all surprise and wonder came afterward; at the first supreme moment, and with a satisfied sigh, as of a child who has got nil it wauts, Mattie held out her arms to him with one word "Husband!" As Adam drew her to him it was not only the mist or the darkening evening that blinded Drow, so that for a moxent or two he saw neither of them. People say Drew's luck has turned. From that day Stonedene found a ten ant. It is newly d ne np and prettily finished now; Mr. and Mrs. Armitage coma down here once or twice a year with their children for a breath of fresh air and to visit old friends. Made a Mistake. A very estimable woman, so far as character is concerned, was rent with a recommendation to Sena tor Vest of Missouri for a place in one of the departments. Understanding that a clori-al post was what she wanted the Senator told ber to make her application in writing. Next day the good woman brought her formal application. Th Senator and a friend looked it over and concluded that it clearly showed the writer incompetent for the position sought. She was informed of the ver dict and said, with tears. "Now sec how easy it is to make mistake. That was written by a person high np in the department. As (or myself. I can't write at all." "Blood will tell," so be careful how job make confidants of your relatives. UKNCRAl AM) I'iKM ITKIS. Iowa has more than 600 creameries. Russia prohibits military officers from oil connection with the press. The Tope pr.ties the piety of Mexico, and trusts sho will renew her relctions with the Vatican. The new capitol ot Texas is to cost 83,000,01X1, and is to be paid fur by 3,000, 000 seres of land. It is roported that in parts of Switzer land there bad been 200 rainy days last year up to the end of November with only 50 days of sunshine There" aro some marriages that remind us of the poor fellow who said: "She couldn't got any husband, and I couldn't get any wife; so wo got married." O ill oo holders constitute on army in Now York city. There ore 20,000 Fed eral State and municipal officers and tho prospects of additions instead of sub tractions from the force. The hoof print of u grazing animal should nover bo found upon a clover field, or even a rod of good availablo land. It should only bo found upon hillsides, rocky or low unavailable land. Every care and atteution shown to horses, no matter what their condition is, will bring its reward. Tho kind in fluence thrown around a young horse will havo its effect on its character iu nfterycurs. Mr. A. Fuller, of Iowa says young pigs just weaned aro sometimes overfed iu the desire to give them enough. When their sidos distend they have too much. Hogs should not be overfed just because they aro hogs. It is a fact perhaps not generally known that stamped envelopes, when spoiled through misdirection or other causes, can bo exchanged for a postage (tamp of the sanio denomination at tho nearest postofllee. , A vigorous plant of corn cockto has about sixty pods and blossoms. Each pod has about fifty seeds, tho total number of seeds to each plant is nbont 300. At this rate of seeding it is not surprising that weeds get tho majority of the soil. Iu feoding sweet milk to pigs, trials made at the Witconsiu experiment furm showed that on an average four pounds of corn moal wero equal to twenty pounds of sweet skim milk, or ono pound of meal equal to five of milk if fed sep arately. It is ostimatod that thoro ore 200,000 vagabonds and boggars iu the Herman Empire, including thieves, pickpockets andothorswindlois, and tho authorities estimate tho annual loss to honoit peo ple by their operations at the enormous sum of 825,000,000. Tho cigar industries of York and Lan caster counties, Pennsylvania, is some thing remarkable Lancaster county manufacturers produce 125,000,000 and York 120,000,000 oigars annually. The revenue from cigars alone in theso two counties amounts to SI, 300,000 annually. Tho population of Manila was being decimated by cholora, says a colonial paper, whon a tremendusus hurrioano swept ovor tho island and acted as a meteorological cntisoptic, for on tho fol lowing day not a single additional case of choloru broke out and nouu have been reported since. Onions, to be deprived of strong odor, should bo boiled iu suited water for ten minutes, and then put in cold fresh water for half au hour; after thnt thoy should bo put into a stewpan with just euongh cold fresh water to covor them, and boiled gontly tril tender. Drain and sorve with melted butter. Lambs can bo made to sliour from two to four pounds moro wool by a little ex tra care and feed during the winter. The extra wool will moro thun pay for the extra feeding, and tho result will bo u much larger and Btrougnr sheep. For this purposo feed good clovor buy, with brau, oats and corn mixed equally. Evangelist Barnes writes to the Stan ford, Ky., Journal that he has becomo convinced that the Anglo-Saxon raco camo from the ten last tribes of Israel. Ho also loarns that "Quoon Victoria to day prides not horsolf on befhgofthe bouso of Quclph, but on bettor lineago still a lineal descendant of David f and thut Disraeli's policy was shaped by a knowledge of the sumo fact. Tho lutost instance of Yankee ingenu ity is the manufacture of artificial cloves by machinery. Tho bogus cloves aro mado of soft doul wood, piuo or poplar, stained a dark color and soaked in a so lution of essence of cloves to givo them tho required uroma. A recent ship ment to Zinzihar was tracud to the United States. Kucp on tho sufu side and take a few grains of coffee. A single thoroughbred mulo intro duced in a farming section for purposes of improvement adds moro wealth than any other investment that can be mado. Though worth but very littlo in tho shape of so many pounds of animal mat ter, the value of the progeny niaj reach away np iu the thousands. Farmers Bbould learn this fact and take it into consideration. Farmers' Magazine The commissioner of tho general land office states, in reply to an inquiry mode by an ex-soldier, that when a soldier's declaratory statement is filed to a tract of land, the soldier is required to make an actual entry to tho hind and also to establish his resilience and common im provement within six mollis after the dato of filing, and that ho is allowed six moths more within which to commenco residence improvement. An oaic whose rings showol it lobe ono hundred and twenty years old was cut down in Buckspor, Mo., reoontly, and imbedded at the eightieth ring, u point which was at the sttrfaoo forty Years ago, the wood chopper found to Lis amazement, a diamond pin containing twenty-four brilliants in a silver setting. Nobody knows whose it was, or can imagine bow it came to be whore it was fonnd. Chicago Times. The winter season is very important in the management of fruit trees. Sonio believe tuat if the foundation of a tree bo properly laid in yonth there will bo no necessity for pruning an adult tree. This does not accord with the writer's experience. An intelligent examination both with, the saw and knife in hand should be made every winter. Ileal, good, largo, healthy leaves in every part of a tree-it of vast importance, and these cannot be had when branches are close together, smothering ono another. Prairie Farmer, Schenectady, Ken York. BRANCH HOUSE, FOHTLASD ORKUON G. P. DART, Manager. H'j-TvvX ik v. Jc TiX-T I asatwrvATr ,,, , , i , if' MAM FACn'UKHH of TIIHKKIIKlm. I.KVKII and TltK VI) IIOItHK IMWKIIS, IMHTAII1.K ami TRACTION KNUINKH. DIIAd HAWK, Ac Wr do not rlulm to liavi- (ho O.NI.V TIIRKKIIKII IllOn-nnn. Hut we'll wy v ran irnvntlit wi riavi-mi'hlm'ililMit adapted lullia waulanl ll.ir farmers ill llil"a cIIIoCom'. Wvrluhnwmwu llirenli cleaner Iruin tho ulriiw, mive tin ktomi better, and do more and WUf r woik In general than utlirn. Neither do we have to rebuild our ninchl in In thenVId ut tlu-TIMK and KX PKNHKnf tlM-KAHMKIt. We warrant all mm lihiery mild by us. We Fl'KTIIKIl OUAUANTKK that our Knglne will do the HAMK WOIIK with ONK-TIItllll l.rH Kl.'Kt. and WAT I' It than ANY KXIIINK In this MAUKKT. Io not buy without wring our gl or bearing tnun m. Kor elreularn or other Inhrniatloa aildreul. S. WettlMghovteiV ortlana, itrrgon. sirnre root oi wnmwm nrrrini than uoi.n. CALIFORNIA FRUIT SALT A Pleasant and Fflb-ai loiu Itemed)-. IF YOU HAVE ABUSED YOURSELF ny over Indulgenee In eating oi drinking; have nick nr nervous headache; dry s of the skin, with a feverish lendeuc ! nlglilaweau and aleepli mums; b 'all means use Slaven's California Fruit Salt, And feel young once more. It Is the woman's friend. Try It: SI per Imltlc: S hollies for tV For sale bv a'l dnigiilsts. 1 1 ( ) I M I K, I) A V I N dt CO. , W llolesale Agent . l'oltlaud. On gull. sax rnAxciNio gali.khy. Photographor, Corner First anil Morrison Htreots, IDIITIAND OltK.OON. uai U-J NEW YORK JEWELRY MANUF'G CO., 10t First l.,hrt Wnshliigtun andBtark, Portland, lire (on. ... . Agents for Hie Itockluril llallrosd Watches, anS ili-iilem In all kinds of Jewelry. Country orders Slled wilb dlKpiitrh. Hoods scut ('. O. 1). with privilege of eiiilllllllilg before bliylllg! $1000 JtEWAIU) WILL II B PAID TO ANY I'KHHON VHOWJU In (r ft ninrt' cfTfH'ttjfll rvmetl y ttmn Pr, Keck'H Sure Cure for Catarrh. WhlcbhMirtiMMi thfttMt for fourteen yvmrn. I'liyri Harm, J)ruKKifiU, ftnd all who liavn luwd and liior Oil K lily ttu-il It, pronouiiri It ipcflAc tor tliff rurc of that lit.iFWwd('sW, Trg IU Your druggUl hun VrCK'it thnronnhty undemUndi. and la amliifntly itr'-fMful In tlie irvatniont of allhrnl aix. dim calt Jmw of Irnih and nil , hkvlric Dwl a niMi't&Ky of Ihdr ireni merit fur fourlf year JHh tnaU'ancrwtthijUtUHlnK thn kitliV. Ills favor. tt1 iirnw ription la ftirnlnlicd In ludy pMllrnU Free No lady aliould tw without It. Young , inldlf-Mid or old, ruoloor frmalf, litMuilty or ft I iff of minVrliiR la your IncvltnhlH donni iiiilcua you apply In tlui to tho frhynlrlon who undvrNtatKtii, and lit rompHcnt t) treat yotirrajw. Wuio no more lime nor money within competent phy nit-la im, Allrotiiinuiilcatlniift attended tu with UnimU'h, and are utrlctly confidential. Medl d;i aent to any part of the country. Cin-ulara, teatl moniaJa, aud a lint of printed nmtlonn furrilfetied on application. HI l,TATIO FHKK. Inclofve a tfint-cent llamp for Hot and add ret" UH iJLMkJi Kl.CK. Sq. Mb find auetd. i'ortiand. Or. EYE & EAK JNFI11MAHY SANITARIUNI.OR HOME FOR THE SICK Morn4 Iftiiil, bet. Porter nnd Wood Hta,, Hum la I'orili.od, ttr. Tr. PlUclnffton, lat I-mfitwornf Kyf A Kor Piaeaaen iMheMi-diiHl U.Mmrtliieni of WHIametlft I'nlveralty hah rref-lifl u flue IhiIWIjik. on a h-antlfnl elevation In thew.nih part oft I if rliv, and Ii pre.wred to fMcoii.ii rtiite pullw.uaiitTi rinif from all dWuMHi of tint M K, K Uteri HhOAT. Aim will pay himm-IhJ alientU.n to Ihhv.ui la'H.rl'.if under Chronic Nt-rvoua alTertlonft, Hnd to diteu-vM jMi-ulUir to wuuif ii.nnd receive aJIrnl ted iiuinhernr ciwen 4Xmln(f, cnnlllienieiit. Thelfiieiittnit In t pn.vldf a llot.ie for alien iaen with nil the -H-it hTtftenlc aitenclea n.mMned with tin h.l medleal Nklll looe had In the natron-Jin. Wjjipmi Utnar phv-hk'tanaml aura-eon Hr. Hhillp Harvey. Prof, of dlrVRtiW of women and ehlldreu hi ttt D.t;dlsl department Willamette I'.ilveriUy. A li r. J. M. K. Browne, Wot. of Phnolofy md. d-p'l. Wtllamcttff L'nlvemliy. 'urany amount of referein-ea and rlrrnlar, addm UK. J. H. FILKIftUTO. Car, tatMtf WtMhlaglo Mta.. 1m-U4, Or "J. Iiqrm or vry, piiiffini"ATMOHPHFi. J lnsnmstnrs," prle MM. tny Cure and InsudU. tors DikUeO i,u r-sjeipt of prtrp, wlih full direU,n for uslc. II. HKIHMilllK A Co.. llrnicr 1 I First tireei. Po-Uaiid, Ur. Hoi Insa lor tlwN. Fselfli OoA '"" USE ROSE PtILLS. Ml tU'iiu . sa ,, , lu UtusrsJ Aaruu ("r Ta. ' WtMUiksan alaakla. ('.' New DabU Cillsutar, Mll AelUn,H(U-4MlaM . 4 bllH, I'MuclIra far tuajr In every particular. MkllTwl Keaiaem unuecw wry. No l-Mltlng, no Adjust ing, no Pouit-IIng In boxes. PERUVIAN BITTERS. i. w''.r. '.": ' if-V Tha uet 11111 tCBM la the WOBLIl THKV KFFKtTUALLY fl'llK MALARIAL DISEASES, VUitlla In flvatrm und nrrrat th rta the II rend ml Alcohol llubll, JIII'rtOJIAltlA. Aftk your IlramrUt or Win Mercliunt them. WILUEBDINOtli ., A vent. Baa Fram ed aro CHARM KttllM rO.. Not Acntt KoHtt western kluut, Au. 44 Krwul ttlrvai, rorlluittl Or, K0SS "BOOTS ARE "BEST, THEY ARK ALL STAYED SMUS." Ill'l M OTIIKU. ; ' 1 : . s Sec thai Our Auiiifi In uii tverj fair. AKI.V. ar.i.l.l.tiu .1- CO., ' Prtlnn4, Ors-aoa. JOHN A. CHILI). UALTLlt A. (iKADO.V John A. Child & Co., DRUGGISTS, siAiaas Flue thcmlcalg, Toilet Article, Knbbw Ssaala imui DKl'dOiaTV CMDaisa. Bptclal attrntloa ts a to CAJiH OKBKB Mt Malb i 3TI2ELL 10000 Piinoi 1.000 Org am. eallalt. U. f el tttte'ifart'inra frrmil. '5 1011,000 Cti.h, Hraiut ANTISELL, or HarWfUCuwaii RMTAHKANTTHK BEST IK THE CITT All Modem IniproTMii.nls. Opi-n all day. .i. ii. usirwsirii. PiwiMir CRS. FRFELAN0 t ROBERTS, , DKNTIHTy, Cur. riral V Vamrilll Ms., Fortlaad, Or. (Duldion'i Phototrrapb lisllcrr ) -flnt-JM work at lb neat iiaaonakl rami Har. both bad soanr Tears eiperlcnst In Orrfoo and Oallfornls. USE ROSE PILLS. pi m-mi v I IPIIIMllTIII fl ' sl ,; , ' I'SIvV.'''1':.'- mm b -. I W IIS i f ' V f AW) I . UKK MM. M Piis IB fl m " suriswlm w sj v m mM m m