MY l(ffl3HB0R ASD I. a nit my neighbor fwn the wy, 'hPn U Bo'htSg to do but yawn 11 day; J. littto lDJ, w t0,nb,e h1r b' ' l. J ..nuiwDoe" U) Tex her mlh can, JotbiDg U do hut ooniuU her own ease. rich neighbor, I am lorry for you- "r'v. u dT go by J?!!3! tn d w'ry ou. koo,r not why: Of nwny Tur lroud' fa,r To?mT rt la to "treadmill of life; f'htiog Kiftt-o w.at wjr gjt we're plenty of Ume to be eorry for you. -hr; t nuisance, plague end t Joy, But then, you wet, my own iweri boyj i have no time ir g So time to be Idle m the dayi go by: T.rmirefUllMthedayUlong, fillu my hw with iU happy eon a;. . Poor, rich neighbor, oyer the way, falling my end me at play; ir.. .mir wenlth. if vour heart la buret ( lore and be lorod that makes life ao lair, fa neiihbor mine, I eau tell you true, J.d. I d rather be I than you. v . Young Folk'i Rural. lit- Take the waist and begin lug-only, SUtor Mary, make me pro- Uie father waa killedfrom my breast be 1 RUSSIAN PRINCESS. ttw was I to do? Never was a woman nlaced in noh pitiful oondition. I had been brought to Russia by a New Eng- l.ml aewiDK mauuiuo uuuiubut vu ruu i,Air machines at an agency of theirs in street in St. Petersburg, where a t,.nBome-Bhop had been rented. One hinntarr cold day towards the close of VLiber. I found the shop door closed, ind learned to my dismay that our agent bad disappeared and the machines all ton seized for rent and debts. What w m to be done? All the money I had in the world was boom equivalent to ivs. What was uue me 1 bad leu in onr agent's bands, and I felt sure it was lost. t i,nnir)it of evervthiDff in the twenty fire minutes which elapsed between my hand in mine and put it to my lips. heart breaking when I found the shop door closed and my rapid walk to my lodgings. Fortunately my room bad been hired for the month, and had been raid for in advance. I had at least a rnnf over dot bead for a few weeks. An idea suddenly struck me. I had been making an evening dress on the machine for a Russian lauy woo spone n,ngii8ii. Rhi had some' idea of buying a machine. In order to expedite the work I had taken to my room the body of her dress, Iti, having a machine there, had sewed CD it nights.; That machine I would ceitainlv keep: it would go very little tovard t'ie payment of the debt the Mel 1 0Vid me. . I harried home. Per haps there was a letter with some money in it. There was nothing. I must find the lady but how? She had left no ad dress. She had hardly spoken to me. I thought I heard her Bay that she would come again, and I believed she had fixed on this day. ' There was bnt one chance in a thousand. I must stand in the street and wait nntil she appeared. I hastened back and took up my posi tion near the shop. I scanned every woman passing by. . It was bitterly cold and raw, and the wind chilled me. I was faint with anxiety. Had I only known more of the language, I would have asked a policenan to take me to the American Consul to the Minister. I was in despair. Suddenly, a carriage drove up, ' a footman opened the door and a lady elegantly dressed alighted. I tore across the street; it was the Russian lady. With my heart in my mouth I my irunit and took out an apron, my hand in her. I wu at a lose to ... 7. 1 ru" " ,UCI1 r0M bottom it know bow to reply. wm aononarm' . "We are to wbrk together for our "VnnaAnaA rp 1. - At fa i I . on that." "But it is quite finished, and any extra imping woum spoil this delicate crwtm oolored silk." "Give it to me," said the lady, taking np her scitsors and deliberately cutting mo wb!sv np me oaca. Aow sew me np tins," she oried. I took k, and as carefully as I could ran the machine, tewing up an ugly gash. ou oi coarse tue waist was spoiled. "Now I will try;" and she sat down, and under my instructions worked for an hour. Sue was wonderfully clever with her fingers and seemed to seize the peculiarities of the machine at once. "At this rate of progress, madame, you would become quite a good workwoman in ten days," I said, approvingly. She made no renlv. but wnrktvl u for another half hour, crossing and re ciossing the body with stitches. "It is not so tiresome after all," she said, "but i nave nau enougn lor to-day. To-mor row J will call, and then yon will take toe maonine to pieces and show me how it must be put together again. Yon will oblige me very particularly by not going out to-day. I have to thank you for your patience. Keep my visit silent. I nope yon have learned that in Russia it is better to keep a quiet tongue. Do not return to the shop. Pray take this for my first lesson," and she placed on the macnine table a piece of gold. "i am very muon overpaid, I said. it VTTI 4 ... wuereare von iromr mir imii nr tr o American? "American from New Hampshire." "New Hampshire! Where is that?" "One of the New England Btates." "I never bsard of it. You are a Mod n I 1 ' ... o - ivepuuiican, l suppose? ' i none so." "Well, adieu." I felt very ranch in clined to kiss her. She looked cold and naughty, bnt my heart ' was so full of thankfulness that, overcoming somewhat the iwe I felt, I ventured to take her She "Not love von mv sister! I loved mv husband he was sbot, I loved my only child; in the agony of my grief lccanse did not withdraw it. "Poor child." she said, "you do not look more than twenty and at your age to be in such troublel Ibis must be a hard experience for you, Good-bye, and nntil to morrow." Sho gazed at me steadfastly, as if she would looc me through, and then, bowing, left me. 1 did not. would not allow mvself to be disheartened. I sat down and wrote two letters one to my mother at Am herst, the other to a sewing-machine oompany at New York, I explained my piuiui conaiuon. Aext morning early there was a low knock at my door. I opened it. and a woman plainly dressed entered. She did not say a word. She placed a bundle sbe beld in her band in a chair and at once went to the macbine. took un the . uouice ana commenced sewing. "ion will kindly forget the lady of yesterday and know me as Elise simply, ur ramer, as jCiiise is r rencu, we will say Eliza. I want to learn your trade. It is a whim of mine. Do you think that in a month I could earn my bread '.his way? I offer you a partnership. I can find the funds. The contents of the shop will probably be sold out and you will be able to buy one of the machines , for me. Now, will you take this one sport? I had not a word to say. I brought a wrencb, a ' screwdriver, an oil can and unloosened the working parts of tbe ma chine. She ' took the oil can and bent over the machine, studying it. I notioed that sbe touobed with her white fingers all the grimy parts of the machine until told her my pitiful story and begged ber her hands were soiled to belp me. if sbe wanted a servant, would she try me? I had a sewing ma chine, and I would make her dresses for nothing if I conld only stay with ber un til I could write to my people at home; tliey would Bend me money and I could get back to the United States. My words must nave baa bnt little sense in them, 1 was so broken hearted, for at first she nardiy wemed to understand me. "I was without a friend in the world here; a poor American woman, thou lands of miles from her home." She looked steadily at me,then opened ner portmonnaie. "No, no," I said. ! want no money, I can not beg. ' I was not so poor as to sac aims, cat you do not remember me? The store is closed. Tbe man who kept ithas run away. I showed you the way the machine was worked." Then she scanned me quickly; next cns questioned me sharply. "How could a young girl trust herself slone in this strange country?" sbe asked. I am not alone. Two other young women came from tbe United states with me. Two weeks ago they were sent home, and the miserable man in oharge induced me to stay, promising to give me monsy enough at the end of next month f, r my trip home to the United States. Might not the police look up the matter? I have been outrageously swin dled." , "The polioe? and my dress am I to lose it?" the lady asked impatiently. ail VI it. i no Hairi u in lhh "It is by no means as complicated as a revolver, sne said I made no comments as I put the working parts together. She was very silent, working incessantly upon some coarse material she had brought with her. I sat near her teaching her what to do. Sbe worked on nntil past noon, "Is it not time to eat something?" "It is, I replied; "would madam par take of my simple meal?" juodam! 1 am JUiza and you say your name is Mary. Alary, l stall be very glad to snare your food with you, if you will let me. If you bave not enough for two, I will go out and bny what is wanted. What shall it be? I dare say I can shop better tban you. Will you lend me yonr shawl, yonr furs and your over shoes?" Before ' I could say a word she had them all on. Then she laughed for the first time and courtesied to me. "Sister Mary," "Sister May," she oried in great glee, "our co-partnership begins from to-day. I am capital and yon brains. Little sister, good-bye. I shall not be gone more than a quarter of an hour." And I was so astonished as to be speech less. In a trice she was back, loaded down with packages. She had a load of bread, a piece of oheese, a pot of pre serves, a breast of smoked goose, some salt cucumbers. "I have a somayar, bnt it was too heavy for me to carry. The man I bought it of will bring it here at once. It is seoond-nand, Dut as good as new. l see yon nave a tea-pot. my oniy floient I will be so diligent." "But, madam." "No-Sistor Eliza." "Sister Eliza,' how is it possible that a lady of means, whose aoquaintanoe I maue but yesterday, who awed me witn her grand manners, ber carriage, should wibq to become a sewing woman? "Ask ms no questions. This, however, I will promise you. Tbe story of the old man ape is partially true, but there is a limit to your endurance. In a month from now, I iwear to yon, your passage home shall be paid you, and besides (hut mere will be given you a handsome sum for you to start in life with in your own country; only, for God's sake, remember tbat just as you threw yourself on my morcy I now throw myself on yours. I believe you bave character and courngo. No harm will come to von. I want a refuge, and have found it. Teach me what you call the tension, how to tighten the band when it slips, bow to gauge the stitch, and what to do when the thread breaks. In a day I learned to love that woman. All tbe haughty .proud manner was gone, She waited on me. She was the first up in tbe morning. Bhe was always busy. i be porter of tbe bouse evidently mis took ber lor one of tbe two girls who bad been in the employ of the sewing machine company, for one or tbe other of thou bad often been in my room. Some small extra compensation bad been given him for the new lodger. She never spoke saye in English, and ber coming to me bad been so mysterious tbat I felt quite certain the porter was entirely Ig norant of ber oondition. Certainly it worried me a great deal More than once I ventured to ask for an explanation, bnt Eliza would pliwe her band on my moutn so tbat my speech was interrupted. It distressed me to see how hard she worked, for I felt sure that this new life was hurting ber. I conld see thnt from her pallor. If anything more than another made me feel sorry it was for ber beautiful bands. She seemed to take infinite puins in soiliug them "They are filthy horrible," she would say, "and still I ttunk I care lor them more than I should if I only could get a thick, rod, rongb skin ou them As she bad saul, the owner of tho storo wai only too glad to sail me a machine Eliza furnished the money. Work came to ns in a mysterious way loft down stairs wit n tbe porter, liy and by a fush ionable dressmaker, who made dresses for tho court ladies, sent for me and gave me work. As what we had to do was well sewed and were always prompt, in less than three weeks we were doing a good business. My companion, save for tbe daily purchases made in tbe lmniodi ate uoighborhood for food never went out. No one colled on bor; she never received a letter. A few days over the month bad passed, when one morning as I was running up a seam in a piece of cloth, my needle struck something. It was a piece of paper. "It is for me, sister Mary," suid Lliza. She took the bit of paper, hold it to the stovo, appenred to read something, and then opened tbe stove door and burned it. I did not question her. She worked on cheerfully all day, chatting on indif ferent subjects. lhat night when we were in bed, tak ing me in her arms, sbe said: roor Mary, your troubles, your anxieties, are now over, lo morrow early apply for your passport. It will oost you to go from here to Liverpool, say 4(1, and tbe passage from Liverpool to the United States as much more; that makes 80, and you will bave something to spare. I wish it oould have teen more, but you will bave altogether 300, wbicb, after deducting your traveling ex penscs, will leave you some money to be gin your life witb again, irom me who have learned to love a singularly honest and simple-minded woman you shall have this ring," and she slipped on my finger a ring, "bnt don't wear it; the diamond might betray me. So far, Mary, you have rnn no risk, but next week you migbt be ruined forever, lor you bave harbored " I was speechless with terror. "Only a woman," she continued, "whose own life or the life of any one else who stood in her way she would care no more for taking than would the cook who wrings a chicken's neck. Do not be shocked, Mary, I shall sleep as sweetly to-night as if death did not threaten me. My story, as far as relates to yon, is soon told. It became necessary for me a month ago to disappear. The simplest chance in the world threw you in my way. Had you been of any other nationality tban an American I would never have trustod you. Yon might go out now. Mary, and sell me Judas-like for a sum of money which would make you rich for life." I olung convulsively to ber and bade her be quiet. , "Tbrougb my veins, child, there runs the best blood in Russia, but every drop of it I will shed for the cause. Thank your God for your lowly estate.. Yon suoked poison and died. After them love you best. Then she bunt into paroxism of tears. "It is because I love you that I might be your death As she rung my hand she folt the ring onmynngcr. "Uffwitb iti Ion wore yonr mittens at the police office I If they bad seen it! Quick, lot me hide it. Sho took off my shoe, and hid the ring in my siocimg. "suonid you ever marry, sell the ring; or the stone in it, and you will not be portionless. Now, off with you I have made a bundle for you. The rest of yonr things you will give me. Here is a photograph of yours--you will let me keep it? I havo been happier with you than for vesrs." She took me bt the hand, gave me one long kiss, closed the door on me, and I never saw her more. My trip homo was without a siuglo in oidout. My dear mother comforted mo Still, there were some vague feelings of dread. My mind wandered, all I could do.towards my room companion. Picking np a newspaper when at home.some two weeks after my arrival. I read in the tel egrapuio dispatohos: "St. PtTF-iisnrna. Deo. 3d. An arrest of great importance has been made One of the chief actors in the Nihilistic plots, a Russian princess, was tuken, bnt only alter sbe natl killed one of tbe two police. Disguised as a sewing-woman sbe nau bamod tbe police. SUORT VI rs. wop; the body, the waist, is in my room and a pound of the best tea. Come, let almost finished." us eat. I can arrange anythinr. I am it seemed to me dreadfnl that in my to wait on you.' gony she should talk about her dress. Then came tbe man with the copper "Where do you live?" she inquired nrn and charcoal, and she made the fire swuptly. I told her. "Get into the and prepared the meal. "We don't Gttriage," she said. I did so. When we drink tea ont of cups when we belong to ere off the main street ahe stopped the the people, but swallow it in tumblers." carriage, got out w th me and we walked Tbougb 1 sat down at tne lime taoie two extravagances were some good soap mast go away to-morrow, and now good my lodgings. ' I opened the door. On ws table was her basque. It o id not to Interest her. She picked it np, fiowever, glanced at it a moment, then wro it down. She examined the sew mg machine. , "How long would it take me to become proficient in working this?" she inquired "she sat down before the machine snd "ed the pedals. "Is it fatiguing?" .o, madame.' Oh, wou'd you buy it? is mine by rights. The money for it might help me to leave St. Petersburg." 'How, lunj" did you aay it would take t become proficient?" Two weeks perhape less." Wonld it disfigure my hands?" She k ofjier gloves, showed her well wed-for hands, her fingers glittering Uh ringi.) t , . "Youi beautiful hands wonld hardly to poiled," "ell, then, give me a lesson at SiSP 1 pa. 7m tot 1 FXtrSU.l tnw imtStna mUi with her: I ate very sparingly; I was to much confused. Before I conclude my first day s les son, Sister Mary, let me ask yon some thing. Did yon ever read the 'Arabian Nightw?'.r Itisabooklsuppose all tbe world has read." 'It is quite well known in the United States. All children read it and 'Robin son Crusoe.' " "So I thought." "You want me to remember Aladdin?" "Not at all. The story I wish you to t! ink about is not half so pleasant. It is about Sindbad the bailor, and tbe old man-ape he could not get rid of. Ion are the sailor, Sister Mary, snd I am the ngly old man-ape," and she made so comical a grimace that I could not help smiling. "I assnreyou that is my character ana ... . i i . i j ou never wiu get na oi me uum ;uu break my head. Sister Mary, will you share your supper witn me, yonr uea with me to-night, your breakfast witn almost I me to morrow, not for Ibat aay, vui ior once your r n my eyes. "I bave no material the next day, and the day after that? here tptaiij thing will do," I said, as I She said this very quietly as she took I begged her to come to the United States with me. Sbe said: "No.my place is here. I should be use less there. Then she complained of lassitude, and presently went to sleep. I looked at her, her face pillowed on her arm, breathing as calmly as an infant, and thought her the loveliest woman I bad ever seen. Next morning, out of a package of soma rough material, sbe produoed, as if by magic, a roll of notes which, without counting, she banded to me. "Later in the day there ought to arrive some fnrs for me, for poor Mary must not got cold. Now, away with you. Her old manner had returned. "Get your passport. Go by Bremen to England, or the ice will delay you. Do not wait." 8'jII I was irresolute. I could not bear to leave her. I sobbed as if my heart would break. Then she knelt to me and implored me to go. At last I consented. My p Bsport was given me at police headquarters without a word. 1 returned to our room. As 1 stosd at the landing the cheerfnl clatter of the machine was heard. Eliza was bending over ber work, singing some plaintiff air. "Is it all right?" she asked, very quietly . "se, your fnrs bave come. Ibey are very beautiful, aud so warm.' "I have permission to leave. "Thank God 1 See my work. ' I think I could do now without you." ' - - "ion do not love me, tiiza, I cn A. A landmark A dirty face. An enormous swell A balloon. A goatee A man who owns goats. Friday is an nnlucky day -for fish. Household words "Shut the door." A water-color exhibition A glass of gin. A pair of slippers Orange and banana skins. "A Wintor'a Talo" The story of a bliz zurd. A close shave Two per cent per month. A derrick is a bivalve, because it is a bolster. When lovers quarrel the taffy trade weakens. Sleight of hand Refusing an offer of marriage. If "Urip" does not spoil Europe, what docs it spoil Good advioe, like vaccination, doesn't always "take," An anonymous article A baby before it is cbristonod. A woman nose bo much beoause she ears a. good deal. Sing of the postage stamp "Gum, ob, come with me. Nothing tells so much in the long run as a female gossip, Barbers make many frionds, but scrape more acquaintances. A fatal blow-out Extinguishing the gas with one s treat u. New reading: Whore the treasurer is. thore tbe rash is also. Tho man who bad a project on foot went to a corn doctor. Silence may be golden, bnt it will never borrow a dollar. Tho tower of Bubol was tho first con tinued story on record. . The proprietors of ice housos make muny a cool thousand in the oourse of a year. Tue average editor can sympathize with England in her trouble with the Boers. A down east girl, wbo is engaged to a lumborinan, says Bhe bos caught a feller. Ruler ruin," as the boy said when he threw the teacher's ferule into the stove. Where there is a storm in tbe nursery the mother will castor oil on the water in vain. Josh Billing says: "Next to a clear conscience for solid comfort comos an old shoe." A young lady at a ball called her beau an Indian because he was on her trail all the time. Shot falling into a tin pan "tumble to the racket," and bo do hailstones on a slate roof. Of whut complaint did your father die?" "The jury found him guilty, was the answer. A single swallow may not make one spring, but a small mouso win make woman jump. The rolling stone gathers no moss, but it gathers the fellow wbo rides tne bioy cle every time. Origin of a common phrase: It was the prostrate Persian subject wbo first said"0, Shah!" Private troubles are very much like infants: The more you nnrse them the bigger they grow. The uses of adversity may be sweet, bnt we prefer a little of the bitterness of prosperity in ours. "Sport." We have no opinion as to whether or not Slade can whip Sullivan. He Maori may not. Mixed society is like mixed pickles. All become of the same flavor if mixed together long enough. When Kansas papers rnn short of lo cal news the reporters write up an eighty- pound hailstone lie. Yon can't get happiness out of wrong doing any more than you waol by shear ing a hydraulic ram. People say lhat blackberries are good for the complexion; but who wants a blackberry complexion? A man always looks through his pock ets four times before handing his coat to bis wife to haye a button sewed on, and even then be is nuod witn a nameless fear nntil tbe job is completed. . - Many people die of fatty degeneration of the heart, but fatty dogineration of the head kills twice as many. An economical woman, after the death of her tenant, used the remainder of her soothing eyrop topoison rats. A well-clad and respectable man re cently created a great stir in London by promenading tbe streets sandwicned re tween two boards, which bore these pla cards: "General Post-Ofllce. Dis charged for not salutiog a clerk. Twenty-five years Her Majesty's servant." 1 5 Schenectady, Jic w Tork. BRANCH HOUSE, POHTLASIt AlaoUrnrml A (rut fcifTke WmiiitiHi tf aehlae fm.' New livable Cllm4r, "Inele ArllM.lh-ir.Coalata. T4 blM, I'Mteallra' far Koaanjr In ery parlk-olar, Skilled fb-alarcre unnrcra ary. No l'rklng, no Ailjui Im.tio I'oundlrn lu boxi-a. ....-..l)klU01 J J L JL G. P. DART, Manager. j-' MANl'KACTl'HKIW of THKKHIIE118, 1.KVER and THKAD nORXK POWKKH, PORTABLE and TRACTION KNUISIX. IiRAO SAWM, Ac. do nut cla'ra to have Hie ONLY TMKKMIKR InOnnon. But we'll ur we ran prov tbat w havt a niai hiue the brat adapted to tbe want ot the Fanurra of the dScCoM. We claim we can tbmh clraner from the'atraw.mve th fram brtter.and do more and better wok In (eneral than otliera. Neither do we have lo rebuild our machine In the Held at theTIMK and KX. PKN8K ol the FARMKR. We warrant all machinery anld by tin We KI'llTflEll Ol'ARANTKK that our Engine will do tbe SAME WORK with ONK-TIURD Lk8 KIEL and WATER than ANY KNUINE la tbte MARKET. Do not buy without teeliif our sonde or hearlnf from ui. For circular! or other Information addrcaal, S. WMlnho A Co., rait load, Orrfnl, Office rnnt at Mori-tana (. IlKTrril THAft OOLD CALIFORNIA FRUIT SALT. A FleaNtnl and Effli-acloiu itemed. H its 3 IF YOU HAVE ABUSED YOURSELF Rjr over Indulgence In eating nt drinking: have lck or nervnui headache; uryuewi of the nkin, witn a feveiiah tendency; nlxbt ewrata and aleeiiU asiicani by all nieaiie line Siaves'i California Fruit Salt, And feel Toun once more. It ! the wmnan'e friend, Try It; el pT iHilile; H buttle fnrtV Knraalehv all riniKiriata, HOlHtK.DAVlS A CO., Wholeaule Aiiviiu. 1'ortlanu, on icon. Ji 1 " jw?3 '4 ' AN UNPARALLELED OFFER! tut-flenta' Orlde n inn! : untinl Drlce. 7 t: nrlce. l! IW, t'ut reprewnte m -tlnn, nine. id-Elegant brilliant Hcarf I'm i regular price, a; w. Stl-tlenta' Ring: fit card over finger for ilie. 3; neuai price, ia. fill tn-MlM!i, a K.n, iimim .,, Mh-A beautiful Tloaoni Stud, very brilliant, it 60: Dmial rice, ft. oiu Ijiniei onuiani r.ar unii',?i w. ummi irH-c,fii We will return money on any 01 ineae gnoua u tney F 8 Akin, are not auii -rlur to your aullclimtlonii, knowing that nn fuich nm-r ban been made before Nend money nr. der If poanllile. and adiln-m Til K MORTON AilKNCY, Portland, Oregon. P. O. box U8. OREGON BLOOD PURIFIER. The ORIENTAL BAZAAR rivr MftfUeVfcw- Ko. as Morrlaon Street, between Third and Fourth Portland, Or Importer and Lenlcra In China Ware, Ja aueae LmiucrWar.-, J ew elry, Teai and Milk Uooilaof all kind. Mnnufuctiircraof i 'i Ijullea' and (Jeuta' -)f While (IihhU, La- eea, Neckwearand fauo) uooue,. ' Agent Han Fran rlwii Root and hhoe Factory. Ite tall at wlioleaale prk-e. P.O.Box SS, Onlera from the country HIM promptly. H. P. GREGORY & CO., Fo. 5 North Front St., bat ween A and II, Partlaa4, Oregoa. V a AMI HAWH, Woodworking Machinery, aicaaa Kactace tiad Hollers, Mining Machinery Belllaa-, rarklng and Hose, Floor Hill atacklaarr, Water Wheel Kic.. etc. LAND rLlSTEIt, Fer Sale by EVERDING & FARRELL, Aider and Front streets, rertlaa9. Ss CRS. FRFELAND I ROBERTS, nry UKNTIHTH, Cur. rirat At Yamhill ate., Portland, Or, (iMTldron'i Photograph Gallery.) ar-Flnt-clain work at the moat lesaouable nlM Hire both bad Buoy reariexptrleoca In Oregon and California. ;-, V f nciikinrD'cli XT r UlltL n o WW flKN Hltl.I.INO, IT. K. Doarn. KOSS BOOTS AHE BEST. THEY ARE ALL STAYED SEAMS, avv ao otiirr. But awbTte) I : ,-'.'laC.V Nw that Our Mitino Is on Every Pair. AKIN. KLLI Ot -0., I'ui-tlitiid. Oregon. - - hf4 Illii mm 111 fcr 'AX . 4Vi AIT VIIANCIBCO OALLKBY. i X hot ocr apher i Corner Kiret and Morrlaon Street, PORTLAND OUKUON. NEW YORK JEWELRY MANUF'Q CO., 1Y Ilrat it., be. Waalitngiva aad tarfc, rimann, ure, Irejon enU for the Ko-kford Railraad Watchet, and ry. uoontry onlera nnea with dlapatch. Oood. aenl C 0. 1). with privilege ol Are dealera In all kind of Jewelry witn ainueicn. uooa eeni eiMmlnlng before buying. J0H5 A. CUILU. WALTER A. GBADOX. John A. Child. & Co., DRUGGISTS, ' luuu m Fine (hemlcals, Toilet Articles, Babaar Oaael aad . ABi'oeiaTV Special attentloo glr an o CASH OKDEK By MalL 11 AWaad at,. Portlaad, Or. I 1 AXD Q iTICELL tO 000 Pianot l.UUO Organ. Ha-i(aJi:j.,f f tlBxBfteCtlirvit rroiDfatJ,uu Cawh, BBtor IliaVlllnnl. -trim Ft, r HvWuinmiH Ji.t f'.fj i,l t Af 'S3 H Iiurrn or ihy, PRirit jion: "atmo-pttfrio J inKiifttjuorm," prlcf Vk. Pry Curt In lr mnili-d on rT1( f pric, wfth full tltrv fi'n f a-,-ic. K. it, hKIhMOKK at In., Jn.i)iA 111 "nt trwM. PnnlMiil. Or, -: Awn fir r-vin USE ROSE PITLS.