Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1885)
9 'fifteen thousand more. aYawthrr Wlaacr 1st the LoalaUaa Lottery. It appears that two of the ono-tenth eupona of the ticket No.51,10C,whicb won the 150,000 grand prize in the June drawing of the Louisiana gut Lottery, were held in thi city. The Woodwardi Garden performer, Naoni, who held one of the coupon, made no teeret of hii good luck, and let several of his friends share liberally the result of his fortunate investment. The bolder of the second coupon, however, prefers to remain unknown, and no efforts to discover his identity have thus far been successful. The coupon was sold to an employee of Well Fargo, named B. W. Tucker, about a week before the drawing. When in terviewed yesterday, Mr. Tucker said : "I collected the (15,000 yesterday in this office for the person for whom I bought the coupon. He does not de sire bis name known, and consequently I am not at liberty to furnish you with it" More than this Mr. Tucker would not say. An amusing Incident of the collec tion of the (15,000 was furnished by the man who sold Mr. Tucker the coupon. He was out of the city when he heard of the fact that the coupon held by Mr. Tucker had drawn the (15,000, and hurried to the city in order that he might come in for any ef the gifts which the lucky owner might be inclined to give to the seller of the coupon. The agent hung around the money counter of Wells-Fargo'e eiprees ollice all day Tuesday, and at last saw Mr. Tucker present an order which was cashed with an imposing Jile of greenbacks, which counted up 15,000. Mr. Tucker, observing the agent's expectant looks, informed him for the first time that he was simply acting for a third person, and the bunch of money was methodically stowed away in a safe. The agent watched the big pile of money disap pear, and then turned away sadly with the remark that he might as well have stayed up in the country. Son Fran maeo (Col.) Chronicle, July 2. A NEW SEAL. TtM New Device Whloli Authenticate All OovernraiMitttl Dunurrutnt. Tho now die for th great seal of the United States, wliii-h was received at the UniU'd Status Department of Statu on April 21, and has boon used on cotu roirsions since then (the lirst on which it was used being that of Mr. Jordan, the new Treasurer of the United States), lis only thu third one necpUul for and wed for the purposes desigirated by the taw which ordered it in 11HJ, and wliieh readoptod the do4igu first ordered in 178-.'. since the hitler date. The new die which conforms more strictly to the letter of the law desolating what the 'national noat-of-nrms slioultl be than did its immediate successor, which was ma le tnl811, and is more aristocratic than thai, of the first die made, all three of which are now in the Department of Suite, and which I have lately com pared, cost. Including the massive ma hrfgouy case, and the press for making the impression on papers, and the d e itself, one thousand dullars. It was or dered a full year ago. and was made by Tiffany & Co.. in New York. Its case if live feet eight inches high, and about half as wide nnd deep. The original riki had thirteen arrows in the eagle's talon. n. the law expressly stipulated, but when, in 1811, the old one having somehow it happened that onlv six ar row were put iu the eash' s talon. Nevertheless, the seal was accepted and used until the new one arr'ved, with all the arrows the law required, on April 21. So now we have our national quiver full of arrow. Hut, better still, the new seal can, by a spi c!al arrange oient of thu machinery, cause the eagle's head to turn in any direction a treaty may require when its impression is to be stamped upon one. ith the Id one great dilliculty was often expe rienced in attaching our still-hacked national bird to cumbersome documents such as a treaty, as it would sometimes be found, after the impression was made, looking west, when he should look east, or north when he ought to tlx his unter rified gaze on the south, or. worse still, he might come out in the treaty literally standing on his head. Now, thanks to the mechanical ingenuity of the manu facturer, we have a patent reversible tiuadruplex, hack-action, fan-tailed American eagle, warranted to gaze at amy point of the compass our foreign poliev or dimiesii interests may de mand. Whether this symbolizes the rolicv of the State Department under this ailiniu Htration or not is to bn seen. Wii.hinqlon font. From recent surveys it has been ascertained that the entire city of Vir ginia, Nev., has moved over thirty inches to the east since the big lire of 1876. TheMaynard block, in Golden Hill, is known to be gradually sliding down in the direction of (Jold Canyon, and has moved nearly two feet since its erection. This movement is so gradual that it does not atlect in any manner the safety of the building, as Iho ground to the depth of nearly one hundred feet to the bed rock is known to be continually sliding. His a well known fact among practical miners that the ground on which Virginia City is built is what is termed a slide, and that it is necessary to sink nearly one hundred feet before finding the natunl bed rock. These slides are caused by the constant crumbling of the rocks on the mountain sides. San FranciiCO Chronicle. The latest freak among the young folks in New York is the "electric party." It is held at any bouse where there is a heavy carpet, and the fnn consists of shuflling rapidly over the floor to generate electricity in the per son, and then discharging it through tho fingers, nose or lips against some other person or a metallic object ben two wll charged persons kiss the -nap" may be heard in the next room, and when a young man holds his nose near a gas-burner sparks fly from it and Unit the am, A'. T. Trxbunt. THE "TRUMPETER" SWAN. A Fin Frwr'mrn "fa Klnl Tlial Flcnm I aritrly In port mid Sons It bit ami Ilabltnt ef III au l.vr of Nuturil Isla. A fine spec men of the tr.nnpct.er swan, we'gbing twenty pound, five feet fro'n end of In 1 to em! of I II. and ex ent of wing seven feci has been hang ng In front of a eoiinu ion house ou Delaware, south of aching tin, for several days. It wis hot ni the Kankakee niar-hc. This is the largest American bird, sometime at taining a weight of forty pounds. North America has two species of the wild swan. The whistling swan, rare in the interior but common near the coasts, especially of the Arctic region of the continent The whistlerwcighs twenty-four pounds. It Is common on the Chesapeake from November to March, then going north to breed. I'nder five years olu it is cons dered the finest eat ng of any water-iowl on the bay, hav ng the ilavor of the finest goose, and the 'ong of the swan," which is aud bin several miles, varies from the lower notes of a tin horn through the var ous modulnt ons of tho coruet On the bay they are taken bv ns.il.ng down on them as thev rise hard aga nst the wiud and shooting them through the long neck. The downy body is shot-proof. Hunters also pad dle into the flock, wear ng whito dresses, and with boats covered w.th lee. then knot k.ng them down with poles. These birdi molt in July and can not fly. At that t me the Indians about St. Michael's, Alaska, spear them w.th bone tridents. Thev lay four eggs in Jul v. four and one-half by two and one-half inches n size. Thi eggs of the trumpeter are a l.ttle larger. Both 8ec es. as is the ca-e w.th the "hooper'' or "whistling swan" of Ku rope, also, have been tamed and do mest cated. The Kuglisti swan has been taken in Greenland, a id both our spec.es have occasionally Wutulercd across the Atlantic to Scotland. Tnry fly rapidly one hundred miles an hour before the wind -and. as with geese and ducks, in an angle, an elongated wedge, the old swans' taking the leal with loud and sonorous screams. Both the trumpeter and tue wh stler have been domesticated in the ceme tery at Cincinnati the former species from young cygnets taken lrom Oak land Valley, Iowa, in thespr.ngof 1HHI. Three of these were purchased for Mount Auburn cemetery. Thev showed no fear, eating out of the hands of strangers. A pa r of trumpeters were sent irom the Cincinnati cemetery to tho London Zoological Gardens. Au dubon kept one for two years; it knew its name and took food from h's hand, and drove turkeys, dogs and hogs about the yard as 'i it owned tho prem ises. The trumpeter winters in the south from lllino s to Mexico, and is frequent ly exposed for sale n the niarkeU of New Orleans. They go north in early spring to breed, both speoes are stncily nionogaiU'iiiB. the trunipeier br ngiiig fonh live to seven young in late, lone or early July. It is quit) likely tney still breed in" Northern In d ana. Trumpeters are shot oa thu marshes within a"few in les of Chicago, and are sold on the markets for from 1 to 2. They are shot by r.Uo through the head or neck, when sitt.ng on the water, as shot has no more etfeet on their th.ck down than on a feather-bud. Swans tat about the same quality of food as ducks and g"ese, their shorter necked alt es; thev feed in the same way, the r bills and necks in the water and their feet in the air to koep their balance. They e it roots, leaves, sued i, iusects laud snails, small fish, etc. Tne specimen brought to this c.ty last week was well filled with snails, and the solid bulbs of a water plant about an inch long, which were as hard as wood, except the just sprouting cen ters. The breast steaks, each wo gh iug about a pound and a half, were very tender, and. when bio led. were excellent eating, as the writ ;r can tes tify. ' it is hardly necessary to add any thing to the well-known history of this bird. When clean, they are grayish white, tinged with yellow, except a red d sh-brown sullus.on of the head and cheeks. Our spec.es have black feet and bills, with dark-brown eyes. There are eight or ten kinds inhabiting the var ous cont nents, among them the celebrated black swa.i of South Aus tral. a, and the black-necked swan of South America, niamlv in Chili. Nor is it nee ssary to add that their fancied mus cul ability, either in health or at thu close of l fe, is not confirmed by l stening to their vocal etlorts, and is eon trad, ctod by such common names a-t "Hooper" for the European, and "Whistler" and Trumpeter" for tho American species; nor are their musical abihtes confirmed by examination oi the r vocal apparatus. The wind-pipe is three fret long, and is coiled up in a horizontal coil iu a cavity in the keel of the breastbone, doubling on itself and then emerging to return to the lungs. There are no laryngeal muscW or other apparatus for modulat ng the voice, as With the singing birds. The sexes are colored s.nulariy, and there are no seasonal or sexual plumages as with many b.rds. Tho extreme length and flexibility of the neck, their movement and att'tndes in the water, nrj pro verb:ally elegant and graceful. "Her neck was like the swan's," says Burns of Annie Laurie, while "graceful as a swan" and "soft as swan's down" are common figures. The swan was the especial favorite of tho gen al Charles W aterton. the En glish natural st who tamei th 'in and studied their hab t. At his island home. Walton Hall, h-i had a hike of tweut-l.ve aen-s, whe.e hV'ks of over fifty wild swans often niado iong so journs. The whole estate he i-ur-rounded with an cght-fo jI wall, co-ting .'iii.O '0. s'mply to keep a natural wiTd for b.rds and b-osto. Thousands of w.ld water-fowl could bis seen from his windows o.i the lake. There w:is no place l.ke it in England for .U natural and art.ticial advantages, and ibis nat ural wilderness was welojnu to the Visits of all who "loved the flower and left it on iu stalk," or tamed the birds without a eun. His -snys on natural history take rank with "White's Nat ural History of Selbourne." and there U nothing on tropical natural history which can offset Waterson's "Wander ings In South America." His pr.s translation of Ovd's "Trans ormi t en of Cjciius into a Swan" from the "Me taniorphoscs," snd h's comments' ou X as coupled w.th his ownexper vn e. are inim table. One of hs swhiis left th.i lior-e- ond and died in the barnyard, and through a Ion afternoon Water ton watched and I stened until it d ed. but there was un song but s lenee. I'haeton, the well-know.! ncendiarv, had burned every rice corn in Earth's farra- ard and. as a punishment, Jimi tT feiied h'.m dead .nto the Kiver 1 o. His sisters, out of sorrow, took root in the ground a id became weeping wil lows, wh le h s near relative Cu-uus be came a voluntary wanderer on the river which held Phaeton's moist remains. Awakening from h s sleep "down amid the rushes," l' cutis found, one morn ing, his vo co had become a sipieuk. his neck elongated, webs betwixt his lin gers, andfeatherssproutingnnhis back, ns mouth a beak, and so became a swan, and to this dav be frequents swamps and lakes, as being the most secure aga'nst tire, wbch had done such mischief to b s fam ly. But there is nothing to just fy Ovid's remark, usuallv good orn Otologist as he was. that the swan warbles its owu funcrnl song upon the near approach of dentil. Vurtnina tain marmn tanit negunt Ha efw." ."Like a black swan" was once a well-known proverb, akin to the "horse marines" of the present, hut since the black swan was d.scovered in Australia and domest cated In Engl sh parks, the saying has lost its fo:ce, .he truth being stranger than the fict on. The expres sion "Swans with two necks" arose from the fact that in England swans that were the property of the Dyers' and Vintners' Companies were annually marked, as they were taken from their homes, with two nicks, one on each side of the bill. Nick was corrupted into "neck." The common swans of European and our own park lakes and streams weie introduced several centuries airo from Eiu-tern Europe and Asia. They are known as the "mute" or tame swan; also as tho "red billed" swan. It is to be hoped that our own whistlers and trumpeters may be domesticated for our own parks and rivers. But. except tho turkey, America has furnished few birds of value to the world. But the turkey is the rival of any for the table, snd our mocking-bird is a good oflsct for the lark and thu nightingale. dianapolis Journal, I N expensive" EONNETS. IInw a Little Money fan Ha Made to Ac o tinpllsh Wonder In the Matter of IIvhU Gear. Very cheitp straw bonnets are not always worth buying, though ono of navy blue rough straw costing only ten cents has been known to do good ser vice on a European tour, and to look rery pretty w.th Its ribbons of dark red and bluo velvet A dark straw bonnet that does not crack when rather roughly used in tho purchaser's hands will doubtless wear well, and a cream white rice straw (which is only slightly rough-surfaced) kept its color through three summers, and was worn through cuo winter besides by hav, ng the crown covered smoothly with a b.t ot figured velvet the front and strings being already of velvet For this reason of do ng Jong ervico, velvet is one of the most economical trimmings, and for other reasons too, as it furnishes well; its thick, heavy p le requires only a small quantity; and because nt the end of wmter velvet ribbons lined w.th satin can be bought for eight or fifteen cents a yard in nice oualit.es and choice color. Thesn ribbons, from one to two inches wido. are cho.-en in white velvet poopy red. or bright yellow to form the "donkey's-eur" bow that is now po.ntcd in a cluster on the front of the bonnet slightly to the left It is also used with fewer lorps and many notched ends for ap parently tying a bouquet of flowers di rectly on top of the bonnet Strings are also formed of these inexpensive ribbons. They beg n each side of the center of the crown, and are folded narrowly, pass down to tho point on each s tie, and one string is left as a short notched end, while the other hits a small bow of the velvet set upon it and an end. This Is cooler to wear, and much easier to make than the leaf bows cut from bias velvet For dress bonnets ladies now use odd b ts of mater al so well combined that thev say they can wear the bonnet at any season of the year, and appropr ately, too. Some cashmere hico of many colors, or else some ecru Egyp tian laee, that is. embroidery on not, some velvet either creamwhite. poppv red, or pale blue, perhaps a little gilt lace, and a good bouquet of flowers, w th nn aigrette orsonieshorttipiof ost rich feathers, make up a bonnet capable of beingoften varied by merely changing the laco or tho velvet strings at the throat. For a round hat scurf, of winch there are muny nt small expense, may be passed around the crown careles-lv. and tho pointed ends stood upward against the crown in front; then a bunch of daisies, sweet-peas, th sties, or ragged sailors mav be placed there. The brim must he faced w th velvet For a very s tuple straw bonnet for either old or young get a good black Belgium straw of i-tnall size, and have t bound w th a full puff of velvet black, Lluo or brown, w.th a throat bow to match, beginning the ribbons in the center of the crown. Then buy an ctam ne or a str ped scarf of any of the varied kinds thai cost from fl to frl in the shops, and ninke it in a large bow on top, and the bonnet is complete The long-looped Alsatian bow made of such a scurf is bi coming t tunny, wh le others look better in a higher bow with all th i scarf itiased on top of the bon net i.i the most etleet ve manner. ,The human face should l e oval,' and t'ie diess ng of tin ha r and the arrange ment of ihe l Htiet t.' mm ng shoiil I 'w done with regard to produc ng this ef f c'.. Before buy n; a new bonnet the purchaser mu.it d ctlo whe;h'T her hair is to be worn h gh or tobc brough' down in a Catogan braid. Harcrr Lar.ur. Massachusetts is one of the mos th ckly settled States of the Union, yet it has almost a million and a half acroi of unimproved land in the commo l wealt .Boston UloU. , "O, LOR' HIT 'IM AGAIN I" In the early days of Methodism in Scotland, acertain congregation, where there was but one rich man, desired to build a new chapel. A church meet ing was held. The old rich Scotch man rose and said: "Brethren, we dinna need a new chapel ; I'll give 5 for repairs." Just then a bit of plaster falling from the ceiling hit him on the head. Looking up and seeing how bad it was, he said: "Brethren, its worse thon I thoucht; I'll make it 50 pun'." "Oh, Lord," exclaimed a devoted brother on aback seat, "hit 'im again I" There are many human tabernacles which are in sore need of radical building over, but we putter and fuss and repair in spots without satisfactory results. It is only when we are per sonally alarmed at the real danger that we act independently and do the right thing. Then it is that we most keenly regret because we did not sooner use our judgment, follow the cdvioe born of the experience of others and jump away from our perils. Thousands of persons who will read this paragraph are in abject misery to day when they might be in a satisfac tory condition. They are weak, life less, full of odd aches and pains, and every year they know they are getting worse, even though the best doctors are patching them .in spots. The origin of these aches and pains is the kidneys and liver, and if they would build these all over new with Warner's safe cure as millions have done, and cease investing their money in misera bly unsuccessful patchwork, they would bo well and happy and would bless the day when the Lord " hit 'cm" and indicated the common-sense course for them to pursue. London Pmt. . JAPAN. Th Change That Have Oeenrred In that Far-off Keg-Ion Sine It Wat Ouened to t'lvlliiatlun. Some of the changes are good. Cre mation said to be popular because it is cheap we may mark us doubtful; and vegetarians will cry out against the in creasing love of llcsh-meat which as joints can not be cooked in tho tiny house-stoves is provided in cook-shops. Certainly tho light-houses .are a boon around that mist-wrapped, typhoon swept coast; and so is the humanor criminal code. Ti 1 the other day tor ture was a thing of cour-o among a peo ple who yet will buy a caged bird in or der to "perform thu good work" of setting it free. Good is the rose furore, if it does not run to such extremes as the Dutch tulip mania. Before ro-es rabbits were the rage, and tho result wits not always good. A man lost a pair of the most fashionnble breed, and actually sold his daughter to replace them. The second pair died soon after, and then he committed seppuku, vul garly c tiled harikarl, the proper form of suicide for one who has disgraced himself or brought discredit on his can. Good, is the steamer-building. The Japanse, savs Sir Kuther ord Alcock, built lk steamer without ver having seen one, wholly from the plans iu a Dutch book, and much belter it was than the rotten old things which En glish and Americans have too often per suaded them to buy. Distinctly Lad is such women's work as the coal-shipping at Nagasaki. Good again is the change in underclothing the use of woolen jerseys, aud comforters and blankets; aye, and beef-lea, and milk, and cod-liver oil, in a country where chest complaints are common. Infant icide is being stamped out, snd so is small-pox; cholera is manageable, though it will never disappear till the ooen drains are done away with. All the Year Hound. Mr. D. C. ftobbins. in his "Annual Review of the Drug Trade of New York," states that in 1881 we imported l.'2G!),7H2 ounces of quinine and 2.fi88. 807 pounds of cinchona bark. We are importing more quinine and manufac turing less every year. In 1884 we im ported twice as much quinine and half as much bark as in 1882. In 1883 more opium was imported for smoking (2J8, 153 pounds) than for all other purposes put together, xneiarge auty piaceu upon this form of opium reduced the Imnort lor ihh y.rv considerably. An old landmark, the building owned by George Swords, in the heart of the city, was torn down in Steuben villo, Ohio, the other day. It was the oldest house in the city, the lost of the log houses. It was built in 1810. The lot was originally purchased in 1808 for fortv-five dollars, sold in 1814 for 205, the 'following year for $700. in 1816 for $1,7.50, and in 1872 for .5.0X). It was weather-boarded forty-five years ago. PiUshurah rn-'f' Newspapers are appreciated In Washington Territory. The Weekly Stgnal, at Old Yokima, was about to remove to the new town called North Kakin, a distance of four miles, and the ollice was placed on trucks. That night the whole establishment was blown up with dynamite by the residents of the old town, who wore opposed to the re moval. BESET OS ALL BIDES By malaria, bow ulitll we csrspe th dread In fection t Is tbe question wblch tbe denizens of fever and ague district uk tbemtelvea. Ths answer comes from former sufferers wbo for years have escaped the visitations of the periodic rcotirKC, tbrouKh Die protecting Infla me of IIiMtulters bUiuiacb llitlen. When the neccmity for mlnif preventive measures arises, use nils means or prevention at once. It rrtculatea I lie liver, facilfutca diKestion, and liberates immiritirs from the syMtein, when such exist, by promoting healthful action of the bnwrU and kiilneys. Act early, in all regions where miasmatic vapors breed dlxease, it is ahtoluU'ly necessary to be provided with a safeguard, and Uns is (run, (."ougn a sojourn In such localities is destined to be brief. No one ran sffiird to breathe malaria for a short Uuie. The bitters is a sovereign specitlo for rheuma tism, debility and Dei'voiuuera.- Keep it on band. ling cholera Is prevailing to an alarming extent in portions oi Illinois. CATARRH A New Treatment ha been dis cover? w hereby a permanent cure is effected in from one to Uirea applications. Particulars and treatise rree an receipt or stamp, a. a. uixoa fc Hon, 106 King tit. west, Toronto, Canada. KTtryoo i duty to sat Oragaa Bleed Porlflar FILES! fILES! PILES I Jl SURE CURE FOUND AT LAST X0 ONE SEED SUITES. A stirs nn fi r Wind, HlMdlni, luhlni smt V)crf strd t'llM DM Won SiMe'rvl l.y l)r W llllan (sn In dim Koiuwly) aulml Dr. ntlllsiu t Imllsu I'll Dint nHNlt. A !)! tail tisa etirml Ui wurl rtin.hls MM of tb or 80 pmn tUjjdiiic. Ns on umI niffrr flv no vtim afwr applying Uilt ,otlsrf til snullilng sivdlcliM. Lwtions. IntlruuiM.U fcntl rWtusrtM do stoivhsrui Hits IuoL WIIIikiiii IihIUb 111 Otutmmt slxorla tlw ta aiors, slltyt Uis lhtUM tfehtu (particularly at slfbt aitar netting warm la brctl, acta aa a poulUoa, gtvaa Iu sual nllal, and Is prepared only for TUm, Hating ol tnv private parts, ana li nothuig alas. Kwl chat tlx H,. 1. M IVrtinberry. of Cleveland, aajra about 1 William loslan Pil (HuuiMWt: " 1 hav um! aoorra of Pita Curat, aud It affords ma pleaaur to say that 1 bavs navar fouud anything wtih-h tva aueh lauiMMitaW and sanuanvnt rviiaf aa lir. William's In dian Ointment." Vor sale by all dnigslats and Dialled on raoolpt of pries, II. (I t. Hloharda i Co., ttf aud C Bsnaoni stmt, surotr Olay. Saa Vraaalaas Whan Baby was sick, we gave her CABTOIUA, When ska was a Child, aba erlad for C ASTORIA, Whaa ah baaam Ulsa, aba elung to CA8TORIA, Whoa the had Chlttraa, so gava than CASXO&U Mand'S. has lowered ths trottlas: record BTFTUKE, BREACH 0B HEBH1A Permanently cared or no par. The worst cases guaranteed I Tamphlet anil refer ences, two three-cent stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, CtBMaln Street, Buffalo, N. Y. A Chinese leper has been discovered at Baltimore. DUFFY'S Purt Malt WHISKEY Ibstlultlf Pnra. Entlnlf frtt fnm ftatt Oil. xuxxmm it in KICC, $USO prr ilotU Summer Complaint, DIarrhoM, Mala ria, Pneumonia, Consumption, Dya popsla, Fevers, and all Bowel Troubles. WOK8T CA8E9. prevented, cured snd relieved by Duffy's Pure Mult Whiskey, ndorasd by th leading Physicians and Intuitu ef ths world fur in purity. Sold by Druf.iali and Crocm. Factrie Coast Aocnts, A. P. EVANS & CO., MY f HA SCI SCO. CAU R. U. AWARE THAT Lorlllard's CUmax Plug rearing red H his ,- that lorlllard'l Na l.f fine suit that Lorlllanll Navy Clippings. aud that Lorlllard's HnaUa.ar the lieM and cheapest, quality uunahlCTsd I ClforaiTWirrrWorks, 329 MARKET ST., 8AN FRANCISCO, axvrscnnuM op WIRBEYERYTHING IN WIRE D n r h n rl lAi r n ) We elrclr for "1 lowest (rur DalDcU nilCtttSpulntrsk-ulsrsiidUuoksBt. Being refc-uUrty llcensod w tusrsnbM our customer against 6amat Bslinj Wirs I ukinj' WirO NfjttinoJ AH rnsshesfc widths. galvanised If llC llBllingtstwrnus.lorpoulU-vanl., Wire, PI nth 1 01 klnla ' Mt ,7ra thrwW IIIIC UIUllllr, harveatars, ruldles,lo Hop Wire! for training; hops, mads from stsol is king Isngtli pecisu' (or th purpose. Gopher Traps! snd all othsr Vlnds at trep lot mot, squirms, rsu and mica. Vineyard Lines); tor laying out vineyard, dl- vided i n itutanos and mad ll win. Ornamental and Useful Wire and Iron Work. XOTK W nHft JXsYvra cotnpntitltu by home anaaukK'ratw, amf mrll wat better food a a lewnr prtoe. B. a. JOKES, kt. B. t. 0. BRYANT, M. V' DRS. JONES & BRYANT, Phyalolans and 8urgeona, CAN BE FOUND AT THEIIt OFFtCK PAT and ulitlit. Mldwifnrr and disease of wsmen a spoviultr. UtUce 131 Vlnl Bt. tup stain), PORTLAND, OREGON. flANUM, OHWAIa, CTCiai'UlAV HitAXU'lI dt UAf'i. O I LI (1 11 A I .Oablsr, Hasntsh Pianos; Bunut Organs, band Gutrunnnt. Largest stock ef Htxe Musis and Books, Band supplied at Katie rn trtoo IL UIUV. Vi ie Post Stmt, San francitoo. H ilK -'rij Chemically Pure AMBER SOAP-Chemically Pure. f Don't to a Clam I a- 5 and lo natisfied with inferior article", just because you have used thora for years. Wake up and look around, .g and ueo what are tho latest and best eoaps in the market. j We know that you havo been using soaps for washing and g (5, cleansing purposes manufactured from soapstone, pitch fr1 j and diseased fats, (hat givo all kinds of diseases, such as 9 itch and salt rheum, and make tho skin full of pimples. f You did not know that theso diseases wcro tho result of pg j! impure sonp being used in washing your clothes. Wo jte 3 know you did not. You thought that your blood was out sv of order, and you havo been trying to rid your system of 8 u its impurities by taking all kinds of medicines, and at the 3 same time tho system has been absorbing poisons from 6 your clothes being washed with impure soaps. The "AMBEn," Washing and Cleansing SoapisChemi- cally Pure, and it is the only chemically pure Boap in the tS market. It is manufactured from a recipe endorsed by S3 the highest medical authorities as a Pure Soap. FOIt SALE BY Chemically Pure. AMBER Did you Sup- pose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for inflamma tion of all flesh. sWALflflfN J Absolutely Pure. Thb powder never vsrlse. A ssarvel of ?, strength and whslesomewia, slur seoBonOnd tuaa th ordinary khi.la, and oaanot be bJ In onupsti tlon with th multituH) of low teat, short wa-lght, alum or phaihats powder. Sold only in can ttovAL aUiia .'uwps Co., It) Vail street, K T. ST. HELENS HALL, roitTI.AXD, OKF.UOX, A Boarding; and Day School for Girl, OONDl'lTKn IIYTHK MIHHKH ROHKKT, Under th uiparvblnn of Th Kt Kef. U. Wtaraa Hokris, I) D , BIiiIiob ot Oregon. TWoofh InatructHia In Kngllah. Art, Unm, Vooal and Inatnuueutal aliule and Booalausviie. A rp of tlilrtarn lescliars, l'u.lli admitted as says aodlntosnv orsll of the dermrtmenta. Thesewterva kglnsonthsFlltST WEDNESDAY f BKITKMJUIH Catalog sant oa aii.lloatioa. THE BISHOP SCOTT GRAMMAS SCHOOL. A Boarding snd Pay School for Boy. THK KIOHTH VK.AU UNDKK 1T8 I'RKS. ent tnanairement begin SEPTEMBER . rlov of anv ag r degra of sdvaneement aihmttwl Hon Sited for otllr or btuineaa. Three Yale rraV sates among ths lesehsra. Sneetal tnatmotto i ran. manehlp, llrawlng, Muatc sod Modern lanjrsas'a, Lrkv elpllna atrtov ho had bove admitted, for ssUlugu and sirsulsr or any Information, sditrvss W, at ILL, it 1) . Head Master, r. O. rtSAWS 17. Portlaad. Oregon. The Portland Ruslnoss College, Hortland, Or, gon, offor superior private and clas instnuttlou to the voting and middle-aged ot both sex wh desire to olitsln a nrnctieal vidiivation la the short est Unto contlsteul with thorough work, snd attlie least exiHinso. Iv and evening sessions tlmnigh ntt the year. Students admitted anytime t.'ata logtieonupplleatlon, A. I'. Armwthono, Principal Tbl Crest trniirt Her fng Kemedy unl Nerve ITonle HT M Mhawt rail.norvouaanu i iip, Debility, of ViUlltf, Wsaliuw, Virll Ihwlln. UWHIMI'.V., - . tier and llladder I lomplaluta. DlKSaes of me dwi, nif tloui, snd all thesvllf Sect OI fllUUIIUI ,,,n,rw " eesee psnasnentlf pr Tenting all lnviJuntary weakrutng drains apon th tK.,aenue Irestoclng lost Manhood, nnwevar ooni,iw- rase mar bs, and when all other romsuiss hav faQed, A rermaaeat CM re Absolutely iitutrantee Pno W W rer bottle, or nra aotues ror si J npm. rooslot oi pries, sr fa .0 U , to W sddre strk lurlvat,oy DK. I,.1 M. . anltloient to allow It 6AiSSV?oSASll SIS awlvlng "bj WU?. w .l.tlnatvmttUtTngllUMl gsAftl l ..tiSUiltAUullA. AUlUiiV figl.i4WUl U7 MIISrTI.'lii, THE SPECIALIST, Ho. 11 Kearny St, San Francisco, Cal Tsjun u Cusosro. Braotii xxa Psnrari Duaasat wtru WosnaRrvi, Stocia. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY I lm a nmrinn enra fop KrrvvaN ItehlMjr, Lent ffMuaowf, i'lixratorw noea, and sll th evil effect of youthful fnllle snd excesses, and In fiWuJkuiar totoxleutrng Ihiattm. IfV Mimtle. f?i wliolsaretrulsrphvs'.jUn 7j gradual of mis uu- . u '1 slty of Hennsylvsnla, wh. I agre to forfeit J Ir 1 a ess of thi !.' i. Jl Pltml llritttimtin- f un der hi special advice and treatment) will not mn 11.60 a bottl. or leur times th quantity l k.'it to any address on receipt of pries, or 0. 0. P. In prlvat nam If desired, by 7ft Mlntki. 11 Kearaj ., k y. Ott send for list of question and psaifUst. BAHFLB BOTTLB FHEK will be sent to any on applying by letter, stating Smptoms, ex and ag. Strict secrecy la regard to 1 basin transaction, N. P. N, U. No. ga-8, t. S. V. No 164. 3 tr co CI ca ALL GROCERS. SOAP Chemically Pure. A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it is a part Every lady may have it ; at least, what looks like it Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies.