I I EUGENE Cm GUARD. rroprieter euoene crrr. Oregon. A NtWRfcCIHt. Do yon with a new recipe tlmplo, delightful nmklHt, dinner or supper appropriate (or, Whose component uaa always be found la ttai pantry, Requiring no rlilU to cellar or store f A bleulng 'twill prove wbon you're late wltt your DreaKraai; Vi'be.m children are fractious or fretful, or Wll Brings home a choice friend from the city, V dinner, And tbe partridge won't brown, and the kid Beys won't icrlU. Take gill of forbearance, four ouncei of pa tlenve, A pinch of lubmiiilon, a handful of grace; Mu well with the milk of the beat human kind ness; Serve at onoe, with radiant imlle on you face. Pray try tbia new recipe, much burdened housewives, It' ture to turn out a most perfect success. It's name! why, "Oood Temper" O, rich booi from Heaven, Our aouli and our iplrlti to comfort ta( bleu I JJiUn Chat, in Oood Ifiiutkteplng. A SAUlilANPET. elves from being eaten. Tholr food consists mainly of flies and the smaller insects of the air. There is about tiie same appearance of reason for the statement that cha meleons live on air that there is for the story that they partly hide them selves by making their color confonm to that of the substance next to tbeni Certainly they do make a tremendous show of devouring air. borne of the African and South American varieties inflate themselves clear to the tips of their tails, so that their shape Is some what like that of a kid-glove finger blown up. But the r lorida chameleons do not put on such airs. When they are inflated, they simply look as though their tonsils were badly swollen. V hy the chameleons of the tropics inflate themselves in such an extravagant way nobody knows. Perhaps it is a precau tion against getting bruised, if they should fall while doing so much climb ing around. But, although there is no basis for the two most extraordinary claim made in their behalf claims so extra ordinary that if they justly could be ERICSSON'S DESTROYER, Some Interesting Facts About tbc Florida Chameleon. The Old Notlnna Eiploded About the Mttlt Animal Changing- III Color at Will, nd Living on Air Desperate right. The Florida chameleon is tho gentlest and pretticNt of sauriar.s. It Is a saying in the South that this little creature it an exact reproduction of tho alligatoi on a very diminutive scalo, but this if not true. Tho flat head and leaden eyes of tho alligator are not reproduced in tho chameleon, though in othei rospects the likeness is very close. The chameleon's hoad is narrow, its mouth innocent-looking, and its eyes sparkle like diamonds. But if tho chameleon and alligatoi aro closely similar in shape, they arc widely different in size. An alligator twelve or fourteen feet In length, sun ning himself on a sand-bar, and a cham eleon threo or four Indies long, taking a siesta on an orange loaf, afford a con trast so striking that they aro not likely to bo mistaken for "twin-brothers. Sometimes, however, chameleons aro iRtjikou by strangers for young alii- -gators. - - In a railway car that was whirling through tho Florida pine woods, last winter, a rhameleon awakened a great deal or curiosity in a number of boy and girl passengers from tho North, by descending upon tho window-pane to the cherry-red sill, and looking them ivor with iu sparkling brown eye's. By accident or design, the little creat ure's color was at that moment a qniut drab. After discussing It for somo timo, the young peoplo came to the conclu sion that it wus an infant alligatoi1. Meanwhile, the chamoleon had darted across the panel to the next window, where a little "Cracker" girl had taken it in her hand and adorned its neck with a bit of red yarn from her hood. "What is it, littlo girl P" one of the party asked. "Yarn," said she. "Ho moans what's the animal," an jolher pf tho .young Northerners ex plained. - "This ycrP" she asked, with surprise, pointing to the little creature "Why, that's cr cumeelyum!" Tlu interest of fiio young Northerners now bocamo greater even than it had been. They had always regarded cha meleons and salamanders as among the most wonderful things In the world chameleons with their giftof beingable to change their color to that of the ob ject on which they happened to be rest ing, and salamanders, with their fond ness for skipping about among live oals and darting liifmcs. Yet hero was a genuine chameleon that did not become red when it halted on the cherry window-sill, and did not turn green whou it rwsted on the Cracker girl's frook, but with an ap pearance of disregard for the most triking thing told about it in the story books, preserved its motlwt drab tftrou-jh all these vicissitudes. But, however useful as a sanitary precaution, or appropriate from au artistio point of riew, it might be for chameleons to change their color to match their Im mediate surroundings, there is no sutll clent season for believing that the fac ulty of doing so Is possessed by them. Naturalist favor tho theory that the changes of color are tho result of ten sion or relaxation of tho fibrous muscles In tho skin, by which the minute scales are so arranged that tlu pre dominating tint reflected from them is red, green or neutral, according to the arrangement Whether this muscular action Is vol untary or Involuntary, nobody knows. Bo it can not be settled at present whether a chameleon turns green for the reason that he prefers to bo green, limply Wuuse he happens to have done something that Incidentally makes chameleons green. But alter all the theorizing, it Is a fact that a chameleon found on a lily-pad is more lilwly to be preen than red, and that one found on the bark of a tree is note often of a neutral tint than either red or green. There Is another thing told about shameleons that would be very inter istlng If it were true that they eat nothing but air. But it isn't true. Chameleons are not heavy eaters, and they are very Irregular about taking their meals. It is fortunate for them that they have to devote but little at Usntioa to their eating, because the are able to give all the more attention to the important work of keeping them- made with respect, even to so high creature as man, they would make him a vastly more interesting object than he is chameleons are looked upon with a good deal of curiosity by strangers visiting in tho lands where they live. Boys and girls soon learn from the young natives how to make pets of them, and keep them supplied with tiny bright-colored neck-ribbons both for the purpose of adornment and identification. A chameleon will stay all winter on a sunny window if treated with proper consideration; and there is where he shows his good sense, for lie can sleep witli both eyes shut, and need not be continually on tho look-out for black snakes, lizards and other murderous monsters. Occasionally a Northern girl so far overcomes her innate prejudice against things iff tile-formed that she adorns tier nair with a tiny diamond-eyed chameleon, held with a thread of gold, after the mannerof far-Southern belles. As is often tho case with creatures that are very timid with respect to others, chameleons are desperate light ers among themselves. On a bluff overlooking tho St John's river is a deserted shanty, built and abandoned by a man who entertained and dismissed the notion of becoming an "orange king." Chameleons have taken possession of it, and their noise less occupancy is in harmony with tho quietness that lias prevailed sinoe its builder departed. One day in June a tiny chameleon looked dowu from a beam and spied another tinv chameleon looking up from the floor. Tho two littlo croat- uros cyud each other for ten minutes without moving even so much as the muscles that tip up their scales and change their color. Then each darted toward tho other for the distance of, may bo, a foot, and there was another wait It took them half an hour to como together, but when thoy came it was with wide-open jaws. It was to bo acatcli-as-catch-can com bat and their first hold was meant in last They locked jaws, and remained apparently as motionless as in the in tervals when they were eyeing each other from a distance; but soon the tiny muscles in their neck began to throb, and the thin skin on their sides began to risp and fall with their quick heart boats. A ray of sunlight fell upon them from tho opposite side, and as the blood shows red in the lingers of a hand held before a candle's llama, so did their blood show pink through their almost transparent sides. Tho battlo grew more desperate; tho throbbing of tho tiny muscles bocamo stronger; tho heart-beats became faster than tho ticking of a watch; tho pink blood seemed to boil. Then, just as tho sparkle iu their brown eyes began to die out a stranger, who had been watching tho battle, took tho two small combatants in his hand, and in their fright they loosed their deadly hold. For a moment they lay panting in his palm, and then they leaped to the side of tho shanty and disappeared in oppo site directions. A'. M. licwey, in Gold en Days. Price of Tobacoo In 1849. Some one nsserted that tho common soldiers could not have pulled smoke luU the face of Charlos I. because to bacco was at that time too dear; but in "A Perfect Description of Virginia," published in 1611), the author says "that the inferior inhabitants and ordinary sort of men cultivated tobacco, and in tobacco they can make i'20 a man at 3d. a pound per annum. And this they find and know, and the present gain is that that puts out all endeavors from tho attempting of others more staple and solid and rich comoditiesout of the heads and hands of the common peo ple." .Yof. x (en Queries. Description! of the Iron-Clad and It Pow erful Submarine (inn. Outwardly the Destroyer Is simply an unarmored iron-clad vessel with wedge-shaped bow and stern. It if briefly described by the inventor a follows: J ho Destroyer Is an iron vessel 130 feet long, 17 feet wide, 11 feet deep.'pifjtected by a wrought Iron breast work of great strength applied near tho bow. The submarine gun, a formidable piece of ordinance of 16-inch caliber and 30 feet length, is placed on the bottom of the vessel, the muzzle projecting through the opening in the stem. Tho projectile expelled by the submarine gun is 25 feet long, its weight being 1,600 pounds, including an explosive charge of 300 pounds of gun-cotton. The Destroyer attacks bows on. and discharges the projectile at a distance of 300 feet from the ship attacked, The explosion of 300 pounds of gun-cotton against the lower part of a ship's hull will shatter it so com pletely that the expedient of employ ing water-tight compartments will be of no avail. It may be added, for the clearer comprehension of those not ex perts, that the water is prevented from rushing through the gun into the bilge by an out-board valve, opened and closed automatically. The body of the torpedo is of wood, shaped like a huge cigar. The point or dynamite end is made of copper. Tho initial velocity with which the torpedo leaves the gun is at the rate of 250 miles an hour, or 250 feet a second. With a minimum chargo of powder in the gun the projectile trav. crsed tho first 300 feet in three seconds. In the experiments made by a nnvnl board two years ago, common cord nottinjrs wero used to determine whether there was renlly any trajectory in tho travel of tho torpedo. At filing distances of 250 feet tho course of tho torpedo through the water was in a perfectly straight lino. Tho tido currents had no effect on the course of the torpedo, nor could its course bo detected ns it traveled through the water. Tho tor pedo is exploded by concussion, and is calculated to strike a vessel at any point below tho water-line. Tho ma chinery of the vessel occupies a spaco less than eight feet square, and is en tirely below the wnter-line and below the lutei mediate deck, so that it is im possible for the boat to becomo dis abled from the shots of tho enemy. An important feature in the construc tion of the vessel is nn intermediate, curved deck, extending from stem to stern, and composed of plate iron strongly ribbed and perfectly water tight This intermediate deck sustains heavy, solid armor plate, placed transversely to tho line of the keel thirty-two feet from tho bow, inclined to an nnglo of forty-live degrees, and supported on tho after side by a wood backing four and a half feet deep at the base. The steering-wheel is behind this wood backing. A deck cabin seventy feet long above this interme diate deck affords quarters for the offi cers and crews. Tho helmsman occu pies a pit in tho forward end, from which he not only steers the wssel but discharges tho gun by an electric buttery upon signal. Ho watches tho vessel's course and tho position of tho enemy through a small port-hole of heavy plato glass, and is protected by wrought-iron invulnerable armor plate sixteen inches in thickness. Toledo Blade. A rat aid ovk sparrow had a pitched battle in Oil City the other day. The sparrow was the aggressor, and attacked tho rat viciously, striking at It very much in the style of a game cock and then flying down and picking at it Once it struck the rat in the eye, and the rat spun around and around before it could get its Waring. In the end, however, the rat got the best of the battle, and the sparrow flew away, having lost many feathers. m s m A politician, in soliciting rotes, came upin one of the opposition, who aid: "What! I rote for youP I'd sooner vote for the Evil One himself!" To this the politician gently answered: "But in case your friend should not be a candidate, I shall then hope for your assistance." JV. T. Ltdgtr. WHAT'S' IN A NAME? It la by No Means the (.rant Important Fao- tor In a Man'a Career. A namo is certainly not tho least im portant factor in a man's career. How much more ditlicnlt would it bo for a Muggins or a Fiuigan to gain neeent- aio as a poet, however great his tal ent, than for a Tennyson or Milton. No matter how great a man's energy, talent or courage may be, an odd or ridiculous name will be a clog to him through life, and add immensely to his difficulties in making his way upward. Of what avail is a man's aristocratic appearance, correct dress, coat of the most fashionable cut and satisfactory balance at tho bank if his visiting card condemns him to pity or to ridiculeP What a consolation it must be to a lady afflicted with n disagreeable name to know that sho may have an opportu nity of changing it for a better in a way at once gratifying to her pride and her affections. This pririlego of tho ladies has Imtu assumed by tho Popes, who change their names when they are chosen ns successors to St Peter. Tho introducer of this Papal custom, Sergius II., may well bo excused for tho innovation, seeing that his own name signifies hog's mouth. Mclane tlion was not alntvo this weakness, and ho adopted the Greek form of his proper name, which signified "Black Fai th." and tho learned Erasmus made a similar transformation of his Dutch namo Gerard. In tho time of Louis XIV. a distin guished writer, who was a member of the academy, a councilor of stato and a friend of Richelieu, had tho misfor tune to U'ar tho inappropriate name of Gueux (beggar). Can we wonder at his adopting the name of his patri monial estate anil calling himself Bul lae? Many other instances might be quoted of men of talent and eminence heing dissatisfied with the names that were borne by their ancestors. Some people, in their anxiety to com pensate their children for the vulgar or ridiculous family names which they have inherited couple with them what they consider aristocratic, euphonius Christian names. Hence we have such Jombiuations as Gladys Beatrice Higgs, Constance Aurelia Smith aud Victor Augustus Jones. One can sympathize enth the fact that many pleasing hours if consultation and discussion are riven to the young mother and her husband In deeming wnai mime win sound mellifluously and assort most fittingly with the iterling and aitract ive qualities which are so susceptibly packed up in the little cherub, their first-born. The ancients had many superstitions as to names, and even elevated the study to a scleuce under tho title of ononmantia. When the Romans raised an army or numbered the citixens they were always careful that tho first name taken should be an auspicious one, More than one Emperor owed his ele vation simply to his name, and Ctesar in his expedition to Africa gave a eon mand to obscure Scipio because the people believed that the Scipios were invincible iu Africa. Similar influence weighed with the French envoys who went to negotiato a marriage between one of the Spanish princesses and Louis VIII. They rejected Urraca, the elder and more beautiful princess, who was intended for their royal master, and preferred her sister because her name, Blanche, had a more musical sound. The Spanish Ambassador to the court of Elizabutn considered his dig nity slighted wlvl'n the Queen ai- pointed a wealthy citizen to receive hun because his host bore tho very short name of John Cuts. Ho soon found, however, that if Cuts had a i;hort namo he had a long purse and a right royal way of dipping into it for tiie sake of upholding the English namo for hospitality. All the lear Hound. GIVING A LIGHT. ' WEALTHY NEGROES. The Manner of Hpanlah, German, English and American Smokers. There is a certain variety in the manner of giving and taking a light for a cigar that is interesting to all smokers. Tho Italians and French successfully copy tho Spanish style, which is tho most graceful and ele gant of all, the only possible objection to it being that it may sometimes curry politeness beyond a reasonable range. But, after all, it is simple and friendly enough. The Spaniard bows and asks his neighbor for a light. The latter, returning tho bow, immediately pre sents him with his cigar, holding out tho lighted end at a slight angle be tween tho Ihumb and second finger. The other takes the cigar and, after procuring the needed firo from it, re verses it skillfully and returns it, the entire operation being accompanied by another graceful bow, and each raises his hat as ho turns to go away. The Spaniard always smokes through his nose. Ho considers it extravagant to wnsto any good smoko through his mouth, and inveterate smokers in all countries agree with him. The German is more polite in asking for a light than ho is in giving it Even with tho best Intentions, in tho latter case his efforts have all tho appearance of reluctance. Sometimes, when his cigar is smoked down nearly far enough, he will throw it away imme diately after granting a request for fire. This among tho Latins is considered rude and boorish in the extreme, and is sometimes regarded as positively in sulting. The average Englishman hesitates before he gives a light, and finally nets as if he had achieved a mighty feat in condescension. Instead of lifting his hat, his hand is more likely to go into his pocket, and he is apt to give a part ing puff with an air of indignation as he stalks away. Possibly this comes from the fact that ho never nsks for a light himself, and is always well nrmcd with matches. The American, of late, seems to be somewhat averse to letting anyone take a light from his cigar. He takes it for granted that it must bo much better than his neighbor's, and not wishing to contaminate it. he answers nn appeal for lire with a match. Some times he politely lights tho match, and in such cases ho presents it with nn air good enough for any Spaniard. But this somewhat new custom may possibly be of Irish parentage. The Irish peasant always strikes a match for his tireless friend or fellow traveler, and even in a gale of wind he will hold a lighted match in tho hollcw of his hands and humorously issue orders for the capture of the precious flame. 1 ho giving or taking of a light for a gar is a small affair, but littlo things often reveal a great deal of the charac ter, disposition and breeding of men. It should always be ottered cheerfully and taken politely. In this country it need not bo dono with that extremo politeness and elegance which may be said to bo tho exclusive property of the Latins, and which is probably beyond tho reach of colder and more sober races; but it should be accompanied by that good fellowship which is governed by common sense, tho foundation of all politeness. X. Y. Sun. A Russian peasant employed ns watchman on an estate near Odessa aroused the ill-feeling of Jews by im pounding their stray cattle. The Jews decoyed him into a barn, where thev immersed their victim several times in a caldron of boiling water, and then flung him out into a neighboring field. The unfortunate peasant lingered three days in great agony and then died. Chicago Times. i a s, i A Concord school philosopher makes it as plain as the noonday sun when he says that there are many; that there is one; and thtir unity by the oneness of tho many enables us to firmly grasp the manyncss of the one in the threefoldness of its totality. A". 1. Graphic. The true boundary line between Connecticut and Rhode Islaud was onlv settled recently, and Rhode Island gets from six to nine feet of nutmeg land iu the act Detroit Frtt Frts. Material Profreaa Made by Represents. ' tlvea of the Colored Kace. John W. Cromwell, a negro journal ist in Philadelphia, has compiled an exhibition of tho business condition ol his race in American. Tho Carolinas take the lead in the number of wealthy, negroes. North Carolina has twenty who are worth from lUO.OOO to 130,000 each. In South Carolina the negroes own $10,000,000 worth of property. In Charleston fourteen men represent $200,000. Thos. 1L Smalls is worth $18,000, and Chas.C. Leslie is worth $12,000. The family of Noisettes, truck farmers, are worth $150,000. In tho city savings banks the negroes have $124,986 35 on d.t osit One mail has over $5,000. Ho recently bought a $10,000 plantation and paid $7,000 in cash. In Philadelphia, John McKee is worth half a million. He owns four hundred houses. Several are worth $100,000. The negroes of New York own from four to six million dollars' worth of real estate. P. A. White, a wholesale druggist, is worth a quarter of a mil lion, and has an annual business of 8200.000. Catharine Black is worth $150,000. In New Jersey thj negroes own 82, 000,000 of real estate. Baltimore has more negro home-owners than any other largo city. Nineteen men are worth a total of 800,000. John Thomas, thb wealthiest, is worth about $150, 000. Less than 100 negroes in Wash ington are worth a total of $1,000,000. In Louisiana tho negroes pay taxes on $15,000,000 in New Orleans and $30,000,000 in tho State. lone Lnfon, a French quadroon, is worth $1,000,000. Tho Morcer Brothers, clothiers, carrv a stock of $300,000. Missouri has twenty-seven citizen worth a million dollars in amount, ranging from 8200, 000 to 8260.000. The richest colored woman of tho South is Amanda Eubanks, mado so by tho will of her white father; she is worth f 400,000, and lives near Augusta, Ga. Chicago, tho homo of 18,000 col ored people, has threo colored firms in business, whose proprietors represent $20,000 ouch, one $15,000 and nine $10, 000. A. J. Scott has $35,000 invested in tho liverv business, aud is worth $100,000, including iv well-stocked farm in M.chigan. Messrs. John Jones and Richard Grant aro worth $70,000 each. A. G. White, of St Louis, formerly purveyor to tho Anchor lino of steam ers, after financial reverses, has, since the ago of forty-five, retrieved his for tunes and accumulated $30,000. Mrs. M. Carpenter, a Sun Francisco colored woman, has a bank account of $50,000, and Mrs. ..'Iary Pleasant has nn income from eight houses in San Francisco, a ranch near San Mateo, and $100,000 in Government bonds. In Marysville, Cal., twelve individuals are the owners of ranches valued in aggregate at from $150,000 to $180,000. One of them, Mrs. Peggy Bredan, has besides a bank account of $40,000. These statistics show that the brother in black is making some headway in tho world. Ho is learning to "tote his owu ski let" X Y. Witness. PUNCH AND JUDY. The Original Version of a Story Familiar In Many Lamia. The romantic story of Punch and Judy is. in its ori.inal form, as follows' Mr. Punch, a gentleman of great per sonal attraction, is married to Miss Judv, bv whom ho has a lovclv daugh ter. To tho baby no namo is given in tho piece, the infant being too young to be christened. In a tit of horrid and demoniac jealously Mr. Punch, like a second Zeluco, strangles his beautiful offspring. Just as ho has completed his dreadful purpose Mrs. Punch outers, witnesses tho brutal havoc, and exit screaming; sho soon returns, however, armed with a blud geon, and applies it to her husband's head, "which to tho wood returns a wooden sound." Exasperated by jeal ousy and rage, Mr. Punch' seizes an other bludgeon, and lays her prostrate at his feet; then seizing tho murdered infant and expiring mother, he flings them both out of tho window into the street Tho dead bodies having been found, poli officers enter the dwelling of Mr. Punch, who flies for his life, mounts his steed, and tho author, neglecting, like other great poets, tho conflicting unities of timo and place, conveys his hero into Spain; where, however, he is arrested by an officer of tho ter rible inquisition. After enduring the most cruel tortures with incredible for titude, Mr. Punch, by means of a golden koy, a beautiful and novel allegory, opens his prison door and escapes. The conclusion of the affecting story is satirical, allegorical and poetical. The hero is at first overtaken by weariness and laziness in the shape of a black dog, whom he tights and conquers; dis ease, in the guise of a physician, next arrests him, but Punch "sees through tho thin pretense," and dismisses the doctor with a few derogatory kicks. Death at last visits tho fugitive, but Punch lays about his skeleton carcass so lustily, and makes the bones of his antagonist rattle so musically, that Death hit death' blow then receive! Last of all comes tho devil; first un der the appearance of a lovely female, but afterward in his own natural shape, to drag the offender to the in fernal regions in purgatory to expiate his dreadful crime. Even this attempt fails, and Punch is left triumphant over doctors, death and the deviL The curtain falls amid the shouts of the conqueror. Irish Times. Malaria is tbe name of a new post office in Mecklenberg County, Va, Millionaire FtoodhaTTZT5! " oau rrencuco palace iX fence which cost f lo.ouu ali h adding two hug, ? brWzeaal ft welithinn 4 000 pounds i wm $15,000 more. V ' whlch wK'nmntf. ol disease U,,.,' I or disorder of eome of the. vh.1 M atomach, the U ver or the bowel. J areayepepue imptoma, tue eome, the skin urowi Uwny ,.h S looking, there are p.i. , k through the right ahoulder blade ti often an utter prostration of the bh wkic lruns a ratal UigU. u,,,,.'". cufty Is met In time wltTlw?,?1 Y Hitters, which is always etfl?t.r,',C and its hould bewsorted tort A 5 there will be no reason to annrr often enulled by entirely ....V?, n. U. ...... I. i. .. 1 . " . i ' U UllU..., ' ' kouv iii lever ana ague, anil ik complaints, than quinine driiim. whli'h. noii i. .u ? 0Hr Th TTnluJ C.. hbeen ordered to the (32 THE "FAVOKITJS tTLVwvn Dr. R. V. Pierce, of BuW,T whose name hna hnwm. l. ' I . . .. . . . -"" uuwnn. worm inrouKn ttls success as a nh,.T and especially through the remit;?' hia "Golden XIpHI.I HI- " ..ep.u.l'Ht i a pood work in preparing an eiJt" edv for the man iuti. .LeV,ifc euy xor me many distressing classed as "fem.ie weaknesses " n known as the "V vnri, u' . "i Under it administration all S ffaiiH are Htruno't htMipM anA t, . . u ""u lurwrnr... comes that embodiment of hehk beauty which God intended her tout 1 The city of Atchison Kan., lack of funds, in without either pol S? uxuuu or street limits. Junus ;ietzkia was shot dead bTf- Turner, a wealthy man, in Spirffi county, S. C. GREATEST DISCOVERY BIBCI lift For coughs, colds.sore thmt u i laryngitis, and consumntlon (n i,. r' stages, nothing equals Dr. Pierce's cl Medical Discovery." It in also a j blood puriner aud strength-rentom TJ fnn n nnrl frtw una -Ia . ' IV4UV. mm 101 ii vet cut m mniM inrt a... condition of the bowels it hasno Sold by druggists. 1 T PnKtnann ..-1. KITtAJ m. i - liams Bt Onnprtnn W 'a i ALWAYS SAFE AND SURE, It is safe to take Bhanduktus Pun any time, but to get the best resulu Hr slioulU be taken on an empty BtomieU fore going to bed. For Constlpatiot 9 Dyspepsia one or two taken every tip will, In a short time, perform an ibtolr. cure. It Is well to take a Durmtin, least once or twice a month as a prnnii tivft nf rliRPARA Hn A vnti"ru'a Unt... - - - . ........... a .ikur Pnt.irwlv VPiratnnlA Anil tho uafuut . etl'ectlve purgative ever Introduced tot puunc. a ney nave oeen used la thiitmi try for over tlfty years. Muddrn 1'liHiigCH of the Wntbt Otten cause ruhiionarv. llronrlml Asthmatic troubles. "j3rmvn'$BnmU Iroche8 will allay irritation which duces couahltifr. u-ivlnu imiiioiliiite n4 Sold only in boxes. The Adrnnce Thresher Is tbe tr. Write Z. T. Wright, Portland, for par. ulars. Aa-rnte "Wanted everywhere, fmillw ble article. II. M. Ktevcna, 638 Jewett rim, ML apuiit, AllIIQ. No Opium in Piso's Cure for Consul tlon. Cures where otherremedies fill t WOMEN lSttdlnf reaewMl trencthi or whtnlwlni InlrmltlM peculiar to their tu, tktUvi SJil EI El Kl B- SO Tears liecord THE BEST TONIC - This medicine oombinea Iron with pare" tonics, and ia invaluable for DiaMum paciw Women, anal all who lead aodratan lira, lit rlrbes and Fnrlflea the Blood, Mlml" the Appetite, Mrenidhena tbe AluM-ln" Nerves in fact, thoruuichhr InTiaoratrfc. Clears tbe eompleiion, and makes the fluo saw It does not blacken the teeth, causa hMic produce oonatipattan ofW Iron awdioM Mrs. M. A.PBETO!t.Fori0roTe,Cw.eJ " I euttereJ for yeara with Wenknene. Bro; BlttHra haa made me well. IwouldnotbewiUWH Mrs. Chas. A. bcmnkr, l:W Ninth . Oakland. 0l saya: " I have ned Brown'l u ten for Headache and Weakness with mucn ""J Before uaing the second bottle I felt stronger 1 reoommend it aa s moat valuable w Uua Umvltn..!-! Ull.b At K.n FriOC Ca.,esTs: " I uawl Brown's hun Bitten faK Headache and it cured me. 1 Genuine has above Trade Mark and croeeefl r! on wrapper. Tnke no other. MadeootfJ UltOWN CHEMICAL C0 BALTIMUa" SNE1L. HEITSHTJ & WC0DABD, Wholesale Agents, PorUsj LYDIA E. PINKHAM' VEGETABLE COMP IsaroKrfu' ., . .i hi" T'j uencau v.i"K"" - ' r. i. ....J .(rtUBW YA...L to ...WiwkMoS' rf n.i..-ht,r. The Woman's 9ure Friend duitnr": " IT MoT FKkftlHM Sl'RtilCAI. v CAXl-SIl, BUT IT WILL Tjxpra aix eutcT'rw isHtRMoN-TwnnTHKLiwsorxiTTits. rrn"''U o seabixo nowic, carawo rjra, wiiobt axs l JS A1.WT8 PTJlSl1jrn.T CTOXD BT IT! US. v ..w ifiinUL.n. i..- -. i. er wr - , .RHl.lh , i. Mrs. I'lfthsm's Liver lMllscurTOitinat!i, r i - if. r. i.j .sasasWB tssv :wvx tinr aw . ki' , v -v-v. r. HALL'S SARSAPARILL1 Cures all Disease! originating & disordered state of the BLO0I 1IVEE. Sheumatism, SeurM Boils, Blotches, Pimples, Scroft Tumors, Salt Ehenm and txCTL Pains readily yield to its punff properties. It leaves the Blood P the Liver and Kidneys healthy w" complexion bright and clear. J. R. CATES A CO., Propr!0 ' 417 Sanaome St, Savn Prune!