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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1885)
FOREIGN GOSSIP. .-Thero aro 93, 11)8 women nailraakers in England. Kx-Khcdivo Ima!l Is a rich man; more than flOO.OO.i.uoii hii boon paid into his account at various European banks, pnnc pally in Holland and llel ginm. A London firm o( pencil makers manuiacturei its rUiuv!nLrH and saw dust into an article which they call tho "Dust of Lebanon. It is sprinkled upon the lire to remove the unpleasant smell of cook ng not cealile in a room alter cooking. Parisians ate th'rtot-n thousand donkeys, mules and horses last voar. The Anademie de Medicine has awarded a prize to an essayist who strongly recommends a ruoro general use of such diet. A statement was leeentlv published that horsellesh is being sold in largo quantities to tho poorer inhabitants ol Manchester, Eng., under the name of beefsteak, and, further tlint many oi the slaughtered horses were believed to be diseased. The manufacture and sale of to bacco in Eranee is a Government monopoly, the supply of the weed being under tlio control of the Minister ol Finance. Within tho past year its use has so greatly increased that the Minis ter has lately added to hi supply by purchasing from three Amer'cau lirms upwards ot n.uuu.uw Kilogrammes. Young ladles in Vienna wear their Initials worked in s lk and gold on the front of their jackets. 'lotinp- ladies who are engaged." it is pointed out by the correspondent who sends this noa, 'may wear other initials than their own." Presumably it is meant that they may wear the initials of the favored suitor. The London Globe propounds this conundrum: "There were nine K. A.'g who bad to decido upon the pictures to be hung at tho annual Academy Exhi bition. They began on Monday and finished on r relay, working five hours a day a total of twenty-live hours. They had 8,000 pictures to examine, making 320 per hour, or 5 1-3 per min ute, which would allow 11 1-4 seconds to each picture. How did they do it?" In ikn Xtsiilifttl lir finantAn V tells of a young man who attended the Salvation Army meetings in order to be cured of heart disease. Eight or ten of the "sold.ers placed their hands up on his head, and the "Major" talked earnestly with him and crossed hisfore head with o'l. He was asked if he did not feel healed, and repl e i in the neg ative. Tne process was repeated, aud the bystanders shouted to liim that ho was healed, lint he was st 11 obliged to deny the fact, and was at last igno minioiisly dismissed w.tli the observa tion Ironi the Major: "You don't un derstatid fa th." Par s has a market fore gar stumps. It is ope-i lor business da ly from eight to ten o'clock. Th'.' stumps lire worth from fiffom to tweniy-.ivo cents pel pound, accord ngto length. The seller:) are mostly poor old men and women and ragged gamins. Much of the to bacco thus scraped together is sold to workmen, and much is also said to bo exported under the t.tle of Tabac do Paris. There was an old man in tho Maubert quarter formerly who becanm so r ch at th s humble business of sell ing cigar stumps that he had an annual income of $3,000. PERSIAN HORSES. What the AnlmiU Are Worth and Tlieli I'reul ml .lit of Cl . Railroads have never been built in rers a, and it may be some time beforo they are built The character of the country is such that it is diflicult to lay railroads from the north, and the char acter of the people and customs aru also such as not. to make them es pecially anxious on the subject, al though a change of sentiment is per ceptible. Until lato years carriages have also been unknown, and only in the viein ty of Teheran is this possible. For these reasons horses und donkeyf havo always been employed ta a large extent The Persians have from earliest timws been noted for horsemanship. Tho Persian horses, although full of spirit, are generally far more gentle in deposition than Ameri can horses. The usual paces are a very fast walk, a canter and a run. The trot is not a favorite gait in tho East, and I am quite of the op nion oi Orientals that it is a gait far more fa tiguing for long rules than the gallop, and only fit for carriage-horses. A strong horse six years old can be bought at Teheran for forty-live dol lars. A very superior blood horse can be bousrht for three hundred and fifty to four hundred dollars. The average price for a good and handsome steed ii sixtv dollars. The stables are generally very primi tive atta rs, each horse having a sepa rate manger composed of stone and mud, built against the garden-wall, with a few branches thrown over to keep off the sun, fordunngnine months there is scarcely any dew or rain. Each horse is also tethered by the hind foot to a spike driven into the ground. But the greatest care is taken, notwithstanding, in re gard to the health of these horses. They are always carefully blanketed, and in cold weather or after night fall hardly anything can bo seen of them but the ears and tail, they are so completely muffled with blankets ol felt Of course the royal stables are moro elaborate affairs. One gets a glirapso of horse life in Persia iu anc ent times when he reads in history of the way in which Darius Hystaspes was elected to the throne. 1 "will not tell you the story, because if you have not heard it, it will interest you to look it up your self. But the royal stables of Per sia have always been stocked with hundreds and thousands of Eicked steeds, fit for slate pageants, unting and war. The importance at tached to this branch of the King's household brought about the custom when existed from time immemorial, unt 1 within the present reign, that a fugitive from the wrath of the King could find ft sanctuary in the roal stables. So long as he remained there be was safe. The present Sbah ha two thousand mares in tho valley of tb i..r alone. This :s a remarkable wind ing depress on ,n the mountains, torty miles from Teheran und eleven thou sand feet aboio the sea. The donkeys of Persia play an inv portant part, n the alia rs of tho toun try, by far ihe larg'r part of tho trade of Persia b '.ng conduit ed on the backs of these long-Miller tig little bi as's. A one .trawls over the hard mountain roads ho constantly eneount-rs largo uroves of the in nute-t donkevs, wend ilifir their wav anion? Ilia rocks tn tin tinkle of little bells, bearing the exports and ni ports of Pcrs a on their backs. A peculiar ty of all the donkeys used for this business is the conformation of their nostrils, wh eh aro twice tho lcntrtli seen elsewhere. It seems the Persians have an idea that tho donkev breathes cas er in traveling over such an elevated country by hav ng the nos tnls enlarged. The nostr Is of tho Per sian donkeys are therefore si t up for turej to fo'r inches. In no country in the world can such a var'etv of the eenus donkey befound. The finest variety aro milk-white, and the size of small mules. They some, times bring the price of good horses for they uro in special demand for iron. tlemeu of u et disposition, and for women. Tho latter as well as the former alwas ride astide, and a groui1 of women riding to town on donkevs, mutlled as if in grave-clothes, is a won derful spectacle. These women are. however, not as solemn as ono m ght infer from their funereal appearance. Under their veils they laugh and chat ter merr.ly enough, and seem to bo full of fun. S. U. W. Ileiijamim, in lout ft i (join) anion. THE RED SEA. A Journey Down It Tmtrlirroua Waiters How the Kligllsh Secured the laliiml ol 1'erhn. To begin with the early morning, w were ottered the accustomed tea ami cofl'ee, under the namo of "chotn hazeri" i. e., small breakfast. Next we noticed that our luncheon was transformed Into "tillin," and that a' we sat in the cabin silent Hindu lad squatted on the floor, pulling punkaha to keep us cool, and at the same time blowing away all our papers, till somt kind sailor friends supplied us w th leaden weights. Evidently we were on the h ghway to some strangely new state ot existence. 1 he snip s company too, seemed to comprise, samples of till the Oriental races: I aineso quarter masters, Malays, Lusoars, splen d d Nub!an stokers. British otli cers. There were H ndus, M oh limine dans, Confucians, Buddhists, and Chrstians. Tho Captain's servant. who waited upon us. was a Kitmutgar of the true stamp turbaneil, wnitu robed, barefooted a Mohammedan o! course, else how could he supply u; with genuine roast beef? Tho fruits, too. at desert were new bunches of plantains, like creamy confectionery; euavas, I ke ma iterent pears, nut mite fnl to smell; pummeloes, like huge or- nnsres with pmk tlesli. and scarlet pomegranates, duly prepared w th wine and sprinkled with sp cs. The very rocks were altogether strange to us. Won lerful volcan'c masses, like giant heaps of tinder and slag round some ant -(liluvinn smelt ng lurnace. masses of red and green and black lava cut ting sharp against pale yellow earth. make these freaks of nature as strange in color as in form. Ono group bears tho namo of the Iwelve Apostles. Then comes Bab-eKMan leb the (iate of Death -of Hell or of Tears, as 1 heard it variously rendered. It was suggestive of all three as we first beheld it, stand ng out in purplo relet against a ground of fiery sunrise, while clouds and sea were alike somber and solemn. It received its very suggestive name from the Arabs of old on account of the dangers of its navigat on. So numerous were the shipwrecks between these cruel gates that when any man starts on tins voyage ho was held to have indeed en tered the laws of death, and his lam ly wailed and put on mourning for him as tliousrh he were already dead. Just opposite this headland lies the small island ot 1't r m, commanding me en trance to the straits. On it stands a lighthouse aud a small fort, both of very recent date. The story told concerning the annexat on of this island is curious. From the beginning of time nobody had coveted so ar.d a rock, till ono tlav it oo curred to France that it m ght prove a useful position. . So in January, 1HS7, the French brig of war N.sus. eighteen euns, was dispatched to take posses sion, and very naturally she halted at Aden, where Tier officers were invited to mess.' in the course of wh ch, wine be. ing in and wit out so far as to loosen toiicrues, thev divulsed their mission. No comment was made, but Br gadier Coghlan, (afterward SirWilliam Cogh- lan,) the commandant s lentiy wrote a few words on a sl.p of paper, which was at once d spa'ched to Lieutenant Templer, commanding tho Ind'an navy schooner Mahi, five guns. Not a mo ment was lost and the Mahi immedi ately sped on her way to Perira, and Vlw,,a Imiatart tha Hritiuh Hurr In thr no small amazement and (fisgust of the loquacious envoys on their ar rival thither the following day. Gen tleman's Magazine. A gentleman, scientifically inclined, recently captured asp.der. and by cat e f til estimate, made by means of actual ly weighing it and then confining it in a cage, he lound that it ate four times its we ght for breakfast nearly iiimi times its weight for dinner, and thir teen times its weight for supper, fin sh ing up w.th an ounce, and at e ght in the evening, when he was released, ran off in search of food. At this rate, a man weighing 160 pounds would re pi ro the whole ot a fat steer for breakfast, the dose repeated with the addition o.' half dozen well-fatted sheep for dinner, and two bullocks, eight sheep and fouf hogs for supper, and then, as a lunch before going to his club banquet ho would indulge in about four barrels ol fresh fish. A'. Y. limes. It is reckoned that the marble bus iness of Rutland, Vt, has trebled in the last ten years in production and in wages paid. The total amount of sales in 1884 approximated $2,000,000, and this year it is likely to exceed that Iron Timet. HELPLESS UPON A FRIENDLESS SEAI Who, in taking passngo In a great trans-Atlantic steamer, docs not feel a thrill of exultation over her magnifi cent power. Against her tho Storm King may hurl his elemental forces, nor pierce her armor, nor stop her onward course. But let mo describe a sceao when, one morning in mid-ocean, there came an alarm from the pilot house fol lowed by a cry : "The ship's rudder is lost!" From the confident expression, consternation came to every face. The wheelman being helpless to direct her course, the vessel was at the mercy of wind and wave. The captain had been negligent the hangingsof the rudder were allowed to woar wak, and suddenly it had dropped deep into tho seal Strong in intellect, in physical vigor, in energy and ;in ambition, man con fronts, undaunted, gigantic tasks and commands applause for his magnifi cent achievements. But.all unexpect edly, an alarm conies tho rudder of his constitution is gone. He has been careless of its preservation; mental strain, nervous excitement, irregular habits, over-work, have destroyed the action of his kidneys and liver. This would not occur were Warner's safe euro UBed to maintain vigor. And even now it may restore vitality to those organs and give back to the man that which will lead him to tho haven of his ambition. The Traveler. LONDON FIRE DISTRICTS. The Arrangement! In Knglanri't Clile! City for Kxtlnnulnlilng- Flrrs. London is d'v dcd for fire purpose inti four districts, each garrisoned with 130 or 140 men a force strong enough to deal w.th tho individual d s trct fires. Thev are the A, compris ing Westminster, Kensington, Hays water, and writing roughly, tho whole of the nest End; tho B, tho cenleri includ ng the city; tho C, the Fa End. ami the D, tho whole of tl south s do of the river, in wh ch tld headquarters, in the Southwark BridgJ Hoad, are situated. Over each (I these d stricts there is a huporiij tendent connected with headquarter by telegraph, and in most cases bj telcphoue, and himself connected wit! all the stations over which he ha' superintendence, for tho diso plin' and ellicieney of wh ch ho is d rectly responsible to his chief. No station, with one except on, is He graph cally connected with another: every oider passes from or through the Super ntendent. even it sent by the chief. The one exception is n favor of the two nearest stations of two dis trict . For instance, the stat on near est in District A is connected with tho nearest station in District B, and the nearest in District I), but the connec tion is never made use of unless there occurs a tiro on some point between, n which case both stat ous commun cate and turn out The i onnoction is, of course, also employed if there bo a break down of commun cat on, such as frequently occurs, between tho cilice of tho Superintendent of the district where tho stat on is situated and headquarters. This system ot communication by telegraph and tele phone, now rapidly apptoaclrng com pletion, is, as far at anv rate as the telephone is conocjrn,cd, the giowth'of only the last few years, for it was in the early pa t of lKKO thal the Kdison Com pany gratuitously established telo phonio communication between tho B, (', and D districts and headquarters. Tho om ssion of the A district (the West End) was caused by tho necessity of laying underground wires, an ex pense the compa iv could hardly bo ex pected to bea Tho telephone now in use is tho (lower-Hell, for the postal authorities, from whom the brigade rent them, do not appear to favor the Edson, notwithstand ngthat those who havo had experience of both describe the latter as tho better. Cornhill Magazine. A REMARKABLE DECISION. The Necessity of 1'hyslclans Keeping Abreast of the Modern Methods of I'rae tlce. A physician was reoontly btought to task by a (lerman tribunal for neglect ing to keep himself informed as to modern methods of praet'eo. A ser vant who received a wound in thechest in April last died from septicemia under the care of this doctor, who. de spising antiseptic dressings, treated his patient uccording to ancient usages. The Court held that "every niodical practitioner should keep h mself in formed on the accomplished progress of science, and have an exact knowU edge ot modem systems of treatment If these had been employed the pn t ent's lifo might have been saved, hence the liability for negligence." Tho Court of Appeal sustained the judgment Some ell'ort should bo made in this country to force physicians to pass examinations every few vears as to see whether they have kept informed as to the more recent medical investi gations, includ ng surgery. Xo pro vision is made in this country to pro tect the sick from be ng treated by in competent or ill-informed doctors. A would-be physician in Europe must undergo a rigid cxam'natlon before he is allowi d to practice, but diplomas in the United Mates are no guarantee of knowledge or skill in the treatment of disea-e. and then thousands of our older physicians in the rural d stricts aro unacqua;ntcd with the advanced methods in modern medicine and sur gery due to discoveries made within the last quarter of a century. VemoT' est'i Monthly. Farmers' Fruit Cako. Soak three cups of dried apples overnight in warm water; chop slightly in the morning, and then simmer two hours, or more, in two cups of mola'ses until the apples resemble citron. Make a cke of two eggs, one cup of sugar, one cup sweet milk, three-fourths cup butter, one and one-half teaspoons soda, flour to make a rather thick tatter, spice in plenty; put in the apple and bake in a quick oven. This is very nice. The Jloutehold. PILES! PILES! FOES! A SUKE CUKE FOUXD AT LAST R0 ONE REED BCTFIR. A sure our fur Mind, WmIIiji, lichens and Wrf eu-d I'llrt has Uwn diKxxrml lis I r William lan In il'.n Kenmlyi oultd If U.llm Indian I'll, oint ment. A atngl Uti hat enrrU the wuial ,-hrvtito oaara ot 'A or 30 j-ar auniltlig. tio im nevil itinVr Hva nun uim altar ..ljlu Una nal,rl.il xwililiii umluint Llluna tnalruiuvi.u and rlvrtnanmtlo nior hajtn than !.- Williani i Indian I'llr oinliurnl atowna Ilia tu mora, allaya Ui Ihtcnaa IUI110, lriirulail)f al lUjhl altar irtthif warm la W.1I. acta aa a poiilucv, iaa In laiil relief, and la prepared only l..r ruea, itcuuuj ol the prlf a te paru, anu fur nothing1 elae. Read what Die II . o J. M IVrlln!. ny. of Cletelaiut. aajra annul Ire. WUIiaia'a ludlan 1-lle Ointment: "I liar, luml amrea of rile Curea, and It affurib tna Iwuure In aay that I ban nam found anything which e inch lamiodutla and permanent rellal aa Dr. Willtaiui In dian Olnuneut." fur aale I.J all druggieta and mailed on raoeln of prion. II. t! T. rUrhanU a Ho., iij and S Banaomt lUtei ournar Clajr. Han frauouwo When Baby ni tick, ire jrare hr CA8TORIA, When the ni a Child, he cried few C ASTORIA, When ah became Ulaa, the clang to C ASTORIA, Wtea the hd ChUikeo, alio gavo tbeut CAST0IO4 Seven Cuban bauditshave keen executed at Matanzos. A LOVELY COMPLEXION. "What a lovely complexion," we often hear H-inonsnay. "I wonder what she does for itT In every case the purity and real lovliness of the complexiou depends upon the blood. Those who have sallow, blotchy fares may make their skin smooth and healthy by taking eunuKh of Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" to drive out the humors lurking in the sys tem. The volcano ot Cotopaxle, lu Ecuador, Is again In a state ot eruption. Many lives have been lost. THE ART OF GETTING VIGOROUS Is compriitcd In one very simple piece of advice, improve diKtwtion. No elaborate system of dietetic is neetlod. If you lack viifor, uie systematically that plcaaant promoter of it, Iloatctter'i Stomach Hitters. If you take this hint, and do not commit any exreufs, there Is no reason why you should not gain in strength, appetite and weight, llostsof whilom Invalid! are to-day building a foundation for years of vigorous health with this sound and thorough renovator of dilapidated Dhysique and falling eneryy. Dyspepiia It erail Icatcd by It and the constitution fortified against disonleri to whl.-U, LONGEVITY IN HORSES. How Sever Training Prolongs the Life ot the Thoroughbred. While the aptitude for living to a great ago is undoubtedly inherited, still this tendency to long living many times saows up in tho character of a spurt, as a single son or daughter from a given pair may attain to a great ago, all other scions from the samo stock being only moderate long livers. As to longevity, as we ordinarily meet with it, thero'are physical signs that, fully inspected and estimated at their worth, will always be found to tally with tho results. The thoroughbred has a firm structure throughout clearly the result of trans mission through an sgenoy rendered lirm of tissue by continuous und some wiimsuverc inimiug, ignoring accumu lation of fat. Tho latter substance in excess, or even approaching this, places tho horse, or the person with this pecu liarity, as though with a sword bus- Esndcd over him by a very weak thread, if is f rolonged by such repented ef forts as give vigor, short of sapping the vitality, and one of the agencies thrcngh which this is dono is curtail ment of tendency to fatness. We have in trees corroborative evidence that linn texture tends to long life. The hard wood trees are considered by naturalists to be long-lived in proportion as they grow thick and stout rather than tall. Slim plants are, as a rule, delicate and short-lived. Wo can safoly apply this similitude to tho horse, and calculate that the spindling, leggy horse will not prove hardy or Tong-fived The firm texture of the flesh and bones of the mule may bo taken as evidence that this concentration of structure may be considered to be associated, as a rule, with tendency to long lifo, and it is worth considering how far we can safely depart from the peculiarity referred to. Live Stock Journal. Never discard a variety of smiii fruit, nor vegetable, nor potato, which gives satisfaction, for au untried ono, no matter who says that it is bel ter. San Futuci'ci ChronwU: TUTTPS PBLL "THE OLD RELIABLE." 25 YEARS IN USE. Ihs Orsatest Medical Triumph of the Age I Indorsed all overthe World. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of appetite. Nausea, boyels cos; live. Pii ain the Heo4,vf ith a dull senr satlon )n thekpart!Pain jinder, th9houlderblade7"iu'nes aftej eat ing, with ajfislncHnationjoxeriioa of body or mind. Irritability of temp er, Lowjpirits,Lo8B lof memoryjwitS ajeeling of HavfjnegleqtedBone dnty. weariness. Dizzinesst Flutter Tng of the Heart, 6ot,8 before the eyes, YelTowBklnTfeadaoheiRe8tlesgnea3 at nTghtrhlKhly obloredTUrine. IP THESE WARNINGS ARE WHIEDED, IIII0U8 IEIABI3 WILL BOOH BI CSVSLOrlD. TUTTS FILLS are especially adapted to Snob caaeja, one doae efjocta such a Chang. 0 feeling as to aatxiuih the suffrer. TheylssercaM lb Appe-tlu, and cams the body to Tak. on t'l.sh, thai Urn sys tem is avartahad, and by their Tonio Aetloa on tb. IMfrsUrs Orraas, Beg Isr Wlwla nr. prmlncxl. prv-ei ar) rf nta. TUTTS HAIR DYE. GT Hare or Whiskers changed to a Glot line byaalngle application of this DTE. It Impart, a natmral color, acU lnstantanoooaljr, bold by bragglau, or nt by xprea. on reoalpt of 91. OfTict), 44 Murray St., Kow York. Absolutely Pure. Tills powilrr nevnr rli A mrvl ol purity, aronnth ami iiulrannieuiwa simiioiiiIcmI tlccui the onlinarv kliuls. anil oaHnot lw sotil In sniiit tlan wits the imiUiliiilu ol low toil, short whl, .tluin or iliiihitte )Mwilera. NoM only in auu Hot At KtsiKU l'oiu .'o., lid Wall rtrvet, N. Y. Cancer of the Tongue, A Case Rear tabling; that otUra. U rant. Rome, ten rears auo I hail ft scrofulous sore on tny rlt:!it hand which gave uie great tricui.lt). anil utiiler the olit-tline treat meiit healett un, but It had only bean driven Into the system Icy tlce use of potash anil mer cury, anil In March, lHH'J, It broke out in uiy thricat, and concentrated In what soma of tlce doctors called oancmr. eating through my check, lUstroyiug the roof of uiy mouth and upper lip, then sttacked uiy tongue, tialete and lower Up, destroying Uie palate and under lip en tirely and half my tongue, eating out to the top uf my ieft cheek bone and up to the left eye. I could not eat any solid food, but sulcslsted on liquids, and tuy tougue was ate far gone I could not talk. Huch was tuy wretched, helpless condition the Srat of laat October i I8e4l, when my friends eomroeuced giving ma Swift's Ipeclflc. In lees than a month the , atlng places sUcpiced and healing oommenocd, and the fearful aperture In my cheek has been closed and firmly kulttetl together. A Core i.f ft new under Hp Is progressing Bnely, and the ague wblrh waa altnnt destroyed la being recovered, and It seems that nature is supplying a new tongue. I can talk so that my friends can readily understand me, and oan also eat solid fined again. If any doubt these (acta, I would refer tlirni to Hon. John II. Trmrlor, Hut Senator, ol this district, aud to Dr. T. B. Ursd ncld, ol UHrange, a. MH8. MARY L. OOMKR. LaGrange, Oa., May 14, lsU. Tretttlrte on lllood and Skin Disease mailed fro. Thk SwirT SpKcina Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. N. Y.. 157 W. V3d 8L flANOM. OKtsAKlt, nTru.'iii 1 u d I Zl a W A I .tieblcr, kociilah l-ianoaj Burv oevans, band tnstninieiitii. Laryvst sUcrk .1 She. Music and Hooks. Bands suriclled at rstern trio l. (ill V wis rVwt Street, Han Knuiilro Orders for Sorts for all our NO. 14 SERIES of Body Type can now be filled by return mail from our Portland Branch. 1 12 & 1 14 Front St., Portland, Oregon. PALMER & REY. BUSINESS COLLEGE- IFoftBtnat r Clrcilar, BAN FHANCI8CO, CALlKOItNIA. A Business Edocatioa nOLUWBlA JOURNAL KKKK. I.OMMLRCIAL Addnws W. 8. JAMKB.I 1(11 1 PHP PQRTLAWlt, : : : : : i i : : i : ORKQQM , 1:. v. .toivkn, Physician and Surgeon, CAN BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE DAT and nittht Midwifery and dliwaiut. of women a apuc-iuHy. Ottlcc 13, Firtit HL (up stairs), POHTLAND, OIIKGON. uuni IIV 1 1 lin lill ilv..8 HI IK i un Chemically Pure. AMBER SOAP Chemically Pure. Don't loo a Clam and be natisficd with inferior articles, jimt becauno you havo used them for years. Wako up and look around, and see what aro tho latest and best Boaps in tho market. Wo know that you havo been using soaps for washing and cleansing purposes manufactured from goapstono, pitch and diseased fats, that givo all kinds of diseases, such as itch and salt rheum, and make tho skin full of pimples. You did not know that theso diseases wcro tho result of impure soap being used in washing your clothes. Wo know you did not. You thought that your blood was out of order, and you havo been trying to rid your ByBtcm of itB impurities by taking all kinds of medicines, and at tho samo time tho Byetcm has been absorbing poisons from your clothes being washed with impure Boaps. The "Amber," Washing and Cleansing Soap is Chemi ' cally Puro, and it is tho only chemically pure Boap in the market. It is manufactured from a recipe endorsed by tho highest medical authorities as a Pure Soap. FOIt KALE BY ALL GKOCERS. Chemically Pure. AMBER Many a Lady is beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. THE BISHOP SCOTT GRAMMAR SCHOOL, A Bordinff and Day School for Boyi. rPHK KIU11TII YEAH UNUKH ITH I'KKfl. L ent niiiaKcnHint hnuin BEHEMBEK . byt of any ot (Jrgnw of vlvuicfuitiii( nimlttL Ht)al.tUxl fur oollttn r biuiofita. Three Ykli(rnwl uU uiionff iUt tftuliert. HitwttU liitruotl in Vho nutnftlitp, l)rwing, Muilouid MtUrn Luntrutmra. li Cti'Hrw fttHut. No luul boya mIuihImI. For otiuU aud drcuUr or mi tfuntitiiiD. twlilrrM W, HILL, M. l , Html Muter, P. O. T ft a wen 17. Portlkml, Orritro. Th Portlanrl niistncM CollPiro. l'ccrtlanil. Orr- (on, otTi'n supcrtcir prlvuto and class instnivtloit to the younK and mliliUe-awd of txrth si'Xv who ileslre to oiciuin a pructli'itl euiu'ullun in tin! sium ost time consistent with IhoroiiKh work, anil attlie least cxponsu. Hht snd cvcnlnn scssiuns tliniiixli on' the year, .indents admltus! anytime. U luKUCon applloiitlnn. A. I'. Akmhtsono, rrinelal. WATSON, WRIGHT ts COH Wholesale Grocers mi Commissloo MercHantx 10 North Front St, Portland, ftao Franrlsm cmoe-18 Fmat Hi flaodieoa enninilMlnn-Wheat, Waal, Hurs, Heeds, Furs. Hides, t'lilekeus. Euirs. I.uniter. llc.rc-i.)lea. Kalmon, Mill KeeU, Hats, Hurley, Onions, PulakiM HaouD, etc. Aoocnint sales rendered ou day uf sale. tUnd for our market n-uult. JurrsioDUeno aud oonstauiueuta sulldted. R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillard's ClLnai Huff ISenrlnc a red Hnlitui llt Unll:irl1 Una l eaf fllceocct: that Ucrlllur.1 s ny t'llpplniia. and that Uirlllanl's huutUar the lt and chiwiiest, quiillly ecu. Mired I CaliWWirTWlks, 329 MARKET ST., SAN FRANCISCO, MAStrrAcrtmui or WIRE EVERYTHING IN WIRE We otter lor sale st lowest flfpira i 4 4 point regular and tlciek su(. Btiln( regularly lleonsed wt yruarantsrs ssw eustoioera against atciDaarat Baling Wire-;:' " fsrlflo brand ol Ttnr oest sImI, tiioa at luwoai market ratea. All meshaa h widths, ralvanlsed altar utada, lor poultry ysnls,4o. Uiro pflr(4snklrKlsfrliUdrym,thrls. ill kinds lor fnilt dryers, tl , harvaatura, rkldias, sto. Hop Wire! for tralnlnit hops, mad from stoel hi long kugUui specially lor Um purpon. Gopher Traps! and all other kinds ot traps fat nudes, squlmls, rata and uuua. Vineyard bnesy-jj -d-f ( for laylnir out vineyards, dl- Ornamental and Useful Wire and Iron Work. XOTK. W met Kmitrrm comprtitkn by bom mmnutketun, und swll jnm fcotfatr $oii al a fovwr prim Th I a G rn f HI wiwi ! Ina ttrmetiy auu xrrvti fonln reil mikosit nil. Norvccics arid I'byaieai llelccHty, Less oi vitality; Weaklier Vrtto Decltua, Iinitencj, thremmsltlv Ooudltions.PmsUUtla, Klar neyand Illadderthuitclsliita. Diseases of tlia llluo,(, Krup- Uous, and all the vllrnVcU uf yciuuirul iniiisa auu av cirsr.es I permanently pre ventluc all Inviduutar w.cakeiilni drains uikiU ilia) syskcm, however tliar ooeur rostnrlng It Mauuood, hnwever atinnclloattid tins case may be, and when all other remedies have failed. A I-rrnmnrat fore Abaolutrlrralrl. Price JIM per bottle, or five koUlea for lit Hen noilvt of .rice, erj b.O D. , to "'ifi'fi irmta.W 1K. ' ! HAlMfcLls. v . . . a, t ii. h a Mnelarss4 Ml. tJiiiiirlOUUWUIVJcX ( L ncca aimlrlna lev lettel. , mMrlt. srlllbasenttoan BsUtingiyiiiBtofiisandae-'e t iianiuiiuua, su mHy euuinlential Uf Jetlet 0 aa ofHce. ri THE SPECIALIST, Ho. 11 Kearny St., San Francisco, CaL TsjUTi au, Cnsosio. RrMUb xo pRiTin VuusM with VVoKUMrui, ejuocssa. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY I Is a certain enre for .VnrvorM IteMUty, Lout .tfunhoorf. iiwirfor knra, and all the evil effect Of youthful lolllre) and excesses, and In til-inking Intoxicating finons, Jn Nlutk, who is a ropilar ph y! jUiv (fraduate of the Ut.)er. slty ol Pennsylvania, wii. aa-ree to forfeit .'() fee a case of this kla,' tl.e Vltmt lttwtorutivt. (un- rierhil special advice and treatment) will aot ear II. M) a bottle, or feur times th quantity V', stnt to any addres on reorlrt of prlos, or 0. 0. 1). In private name if desired, by Jft Mlnll. It Ktun) S, l Cat Bend lor list ol question and puuolea, 8AMPLB BOTTLU FRKH will be sent to any on applying- by letter, stating symptoms, ex and sue. Ulrict secrecy in regard U all buslnes tnuisactlun. 3 CO CO a fa en Is 3 cr CO -n CO o SOAP Chemically Pure. !MenThink they know all about Mustang Lin iment Few do, Not to know U not to have.