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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1896)
More . more kill, cure, nwuw.more .food's j Sarsaparilla B rure to get onljr flood's. p--Jjig"plll cute blllon.iieas. liidlitlin. I MADAME LAURIER. Vw Admirable Wife of the New Can jfflf. raurU'r. wife of Wilfrid Laii jjrf. the now rn'tiilt-r of Cutiada. Is aa flmlniMf example of the beHt type of r-eucb Caiiuilluu . Rt'iitlewoninn. For 'nitf j-i-nrn hIiu Iiii not only pi In rrtneh wx-li'ty at the oapltul (IuiIiik f .ii.,,,.,Mliirv sikhIiiI1s. but liliM fulfill. run"" w . - v -, v,rv fTz MADAME LAl'IUER. f,l Willi grunt? uifcuuj nn uiimt? uiuifr bmnlfold aix'lal oltltva which fall to the iit of the wife of hliu who Icticls IiIh fciarty. Somewhat younger than her din flnKiilKliel liusliaml, Mine. Laurler In a tmoline woman of about 45, with that type of pood looks which la 111 por trayed by photograph. Delicate fea ture, clear blue eyes, silvery hair, a fresh, girlish complexion In youthful contrast to the graying trewtc, a quick French smile, with flaahlng Impresslou 'cf white teeth and sudden dimple that In Mine. Iaurler as no camera ever Jean do her Justice. As Mile. Zoe Lafon tnlne, of Montreal, she who has become jtlie wife of a I'remler was a noted jlx-auty. As Mme. Wilfrid Ijjurler she ; a noted chatelaine and sweet help meet one as able as she In quiet and 'tasteful. The Laurler home Is at Artha- .. .1.. .II....I... ..II l .1 ios Itarllle, a small Quebec town, a qunlnt old house set In eight acres of 'land, where the statesman has quiet 'for taking his rest, and Mme. Iaurter (opportunity for cultivating the plants jsnd flowers which comprise one of ber .chief Joys. Mme. Ijiurier Is broatl tnluded and sympathetic to all. What ever burden of care and responsibility f' omes to the first milliliter of the crown a Canada, he Is sure of near sympathy, nd a wife to encourage, stimulate and trengthen him. Lesser virtue, per haps, but one which appeals to the mind .feminine, Is that Mme. Laurler knows how to dress becomingly and well. Her 'costumes are as quiet aa her manners are. t , WILL WEAR SHORT SKIRTS Brookljn Women Pledge Tbemeelvea to Reform Coetnme. J The first rainy day after the first Monday In October will be signalized in Brooklyn by the appearance of the Brook lyu Health Culture Club In t'.ielr new "common sense" costumes. The dub was organized only three week ago, with a charter membership of six pU known women. Already It has Ifcrtj-five members, and by the rainy day before mentioned It Is expected Hint fully l.V Brooklyn society and pru eeslonal women will have been en rolled. 5 The object of the club Is to set an ex ample of hygienic living and sensible dressing. The President Is B. Chris tine Lumsdou, the well-known portrait . CHRISTINE LCMSDOX. j. painter. Among the charter meinbera are Mrs. Cornelia Hood, the lawyer; Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Manning, all prominent In the Brooklyn social world. J The meeting at which the organiza tion was perfected was held In Mrs. I.umsilon's studio. It was made a 'rule that every member should pledgo .herself to wear, on all occasions, save those demanding conventional full Slress, skirts short enough to clear the ground by at least three Inches. For ,ralny or wet weather they have adopt ed a costume, consisting of bloomer or knickerbockers, a short skirt and leggings or boots, meeting the skirt at ! the knee. The waist Is left to the pleas ure of the wearer, and over all will J be worn a light gossamer or nuokln i tosh. French Witticisms. A lady, more famed for her looks than ber wit, complained In Sophie Arnould's presence of being beset by a host of admirers. "Oh," said Sophie, "It Is easy for you to get rid of them. You need only talk." A critic of Beau marchals' play. "The Marriage of Fi garo," told her It would be a failure. "Tes," said she, "so It will, but It will fall fifty times runnlug." She one day met a physician with a gun, on the look-out for game. "Where are you going In this wayT she asked. 'To ee a patient," he answered. "Oh. doctor," she replied, "you are evident ly tfrald of missing him!" i No wonder women believe In mar "jtlages for love; they know that few I Women ra n lui ,Bri.(ul mm ttl e 9 Bioney, - W 1MB, 1 IV, v HI f-.. YU'ttif . 1 brief A Resume of Events In the Northwest. EVIDENCE OF STEADY GROWTH News Gathered In All the Turn a, of Our Neighboring Bletei - I tup rot, nient Nuled In All ludutlrlet-Uregun. The smoke from forest fires in the Cascades is so thick around Pendleton that the Blna mountains can no longer be seen. Assessor Howell, of Llnoolu county, bai completed the field work of assess ing, and is now at work makiug up the assessment rolL Seven-year locusts are numerous about Canyon City, in Grant couuty. and the merry musio of their wings ean be heard all day. Mrs. Catharine Irvine, who died at Balem last week, was one of the first women married at The Dalles, having gone there from Indiana in 1853. The high water of last mouth in Un ion county is said to have destroyed many young prairie chickens, as the breeding grounds were in many places overflowed. Elmer Hansen, of Adams, brought Into Pendleton last week the first of this year's wheat crop in this county, and sold it to Mr. Byers for 40 cents a bushel. It ran 68', sounds to the bushel. A carload of fat hogs wss shipped from Elgin last week. This is the first shipment of hogs made from there for some time, because of the dull market Most shipped last week sold for two cents per pound. J. McCarty, in attempting to board an out-going freight train in Baker City last week, fell across the rail, and several cars passed over his left foot, which was so badly mangled that it bad to be cut off. The unusual drought has killed all the salmon berries, raspberries, and other wild berries along the Necan nioum, in Clatsop county, so that the bears, which in the summer time live principally upon these berries, bsve been induced by hunger to oome very close to men's habitations, looking for food. The Grant's Pass Courier says: "The isarlet fever, which carried off three patients on the Anton Rose ranch on Williams oreek, has been oorraled, and the danger of spreading the virulent disease is now almott past The citi sens petitioned the oounty court to ap point quarantine officers, but no law could be found justifying the measure. Superintendent Risque, of the Virtue mine, in Baker county, has let a con tract for supplying the mine with 5,000 cords of wood. The contractors are P. Basche and Cato J. Johns. The con tract prion is about f 30,000. The wood is to be delivered by January 1, 1891), and Basche & Johns will put a force of men to work in the timber without loss of time. The Willamette Hopgrowera Asso ciation met in Independence recently, and decided that at the .next regular meeting, which oomes on the 1st day of August, the members would con sider the advisability of picking bops and also the price to be paid this year. They also extend an invitation to all bopgrowers of Dallas, Buena Vista and surrounding couutry to be present at that time, and Join with them in dis cussing all matters of interest Washington. O. W. Corning, of Olympia, died in that city last week at the age of 81. He was born in New York. The Populist party of the state of Washington will hold its state conven tion at Kllensburg August 13. A. B.Weed, of North Yakima, says the Yakima bop crop will probably not be more than 6,000 bales this year. The oost of "exporting" the books of King oounty will be not less than 6, 000, and the highest estimate isf il, 000. The oounty treasurer and auditor of Thurston conuty have been directed by the oomimssionera to invest the sinking fund of $8,000 in state warrants. The county commissioners of Lincoln oounty will this fall submit to the voters a proposition to move the county seat from Sprague to Davenport. The farmers of the Kennewick valley j are busy cutting their second crop of I alfalfa, and the yield is good. They ; find a good market for their bay among : the shecpraisers. The Ooosta mill is no more. All the ' machinery bas been taken out and shipped to Cosmopolis. Over 175,000 j has been lost in attempting to operate i the mill at uoosta. The total loss by fire in the city of Spokane bas been less during the last twelve months than during any pre vious similar period since the paid fire department was established. The eldest son of H. H. Bpaulding, of Almota, was dragged by a runaway team throcgh a barbed wire fenoe the other day and bis clothing completely inn fmm him. He was scratched from bead to foot, but not so deeply but that his wounds will soon heal. Hogan Johnson, of Riverside, in Pa ciflo county, put a rope around a bull's neck and started to lead him home. On the way the bull made an attack upon Mr. Johnson from the rear, goiing him in the back and trampling him un der foot until he was nearly dead. One born penetrated the lung, entering me body about five inches. Mr. Johnson's right arm wss broken in three places, and from bis bips down be Is one mass of severe bruises. He is 63 years old, bot it is thought he will shortly re cover. A traveler through the Horso Heaven country told the Yakima Republic that the heat ii something terrible in that section. Orain has been badly burned, and will not go twelve bushels to the acre. He says he wss forced to drive thirty-three miles through a broiling sun and stopped at three or four houses to get a drink being refused each time. The water is so low that a padlock and chain is kept on the bucket, and the wells go nearly dry each evening when water is drawn for stock ilowly fill ing at night sufficiently to provide water for domestio purposes for the next day. A POOL TO SUPPLY COLD rine or New Yoik Hskr to Check ' fcieoru, New York, July 37,-The Evening Post says the committee of foreign bankers appointed at the meetiug yes. terday to formulate a plan for the checking of tht exports of gold during the next two months is not expected to report for two or three days. It is the intention to arrange a pool by which all demands for exportiug may be sup plied during that time. This morning there was a decline of one-half cent in the pouted rates for sterling exchange. The bankers present al yesterday's meetiug today referred all questions to 1. P. Morgan. An associate of those preseut said, in speaking of the result of the meetiug: "The report that foreign haulers have agreed to sell exohsnge not to exceed i'15,000,000, and have promised not to ship gold for two months, is hardly correct We have, however, been assured i'15,000,000 in the next two months, to be provided by a syndi cate comprising powerful local and in ternational interests, at a price lower than the cost of exporting gold to Eu rope. The details of this agreement have not been arranged." Heventeen Mllllnni ripoalll. New York, July 37. Tho subtreas ury officials and staff were rushed to day receiving and keeping tally of the, deposits of gold made by the New York banks in exchange for green backs. All indications puiut to an ag gregate accumulation of tho precious metal from banks and institutions in this city and from outside financial centers fully up to the estimates msde in these dispatches, $28,000,000. The corrected official total of deposits at the subtresaury from the inception of the movement to the close of business today was $17,765,000, the deposits bringing the treasury guarantee in the reserve up to approximately $103,601, 625. AFTER ORIENTAL TRADE. Chicago Is Now Working for a Trans l'acllle Llue. Chicago, July 37. The publication of the negotiations between President Hill, of the Ureal Northern, and Mr. Masujima, of Tokio, for a steamship line between Puget sound snd Japan bas developed the fact that Chicago men already bavepraotically completed arrangements for such a line of steam ers, which it is expected, will give them almost ooinplete control of the business between the United States and the Orient. In the venture of the Chicago men, it is understood the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad bas an interest and the oompany is ready, if necessary, to break its alliance with the Southern 1'aciflo and the Huntington intereata in order to carry out the new scheme, The value of the trade with the Orient is appreciated fully by all the trans-;,mt portation and ooinuierotal interests oi , the oountry, and there is no fear that there will not be traffio enough to make the new line profitable. San Diego is the present terminus of the Santa Fe road, and if it oould carry freight to the docks of a trans-Paoiflo steamship company there its tonnage would be vastly increased. SHOT HIMSELF IN THE MOUTH Suicide In Athena of Judge Edward Depeatt. Pendlotou, Or., .Inly 27. Judge Ed- j ward Depeatt was found dead in bis office in Athena at 1 P. M.. today, having committed suicide. He was missed at borne Tuesday night, and bis j family thought he bad oome to Pendle- ton. They telephoned here Wednes day, and, learning nothing of his whereabouts, oommenced search. To j day L. D. Leavely and Deputy Marshal Dbalson entered his office through a: window, and fonnd him lying on aj lounge. His arms were across his! chest, the right band holding a re- j Tolver, the muzzle of which was in , bis month, the bullet having passed j throush the roof of the moutb and lodged in the brain. The room was I qaite dark, the ourtains beiug drawn, At the inquest it was found that the causeof his destb was a guuhsot wound inflioted by bis own baud on or about the night of July 31. He was known to have threateuod to commit suicide several times, and bad been drinking1 heavily. I He was 60 years old. He leaves a widow and three children. The de-! ceased had been six years in Athena having gone .there from Southern Ore' gon. A Deathhrd MarrUge. 37. Howard New York. July 37.-Howard F. Benedict, a young Wall-street broker, the son of James H. Benedict and a nephew of F. C. Benedict, the banker nil narannal friend of President Cleve land, died yesterday, a few hours after he bad married Miss Margaret Lloyd, a society belle of Cincinnati. Mr. Benedict had become engaged to Mis. Lloyd in March. When it became known a few d.ys ago that Mr. Bene- diet's condition was critioal, a tele- gram was sent to Miss Lloyd. She reached the city yesterday. Soon after, in company with a physician, she went! to the bedside of Mr! Benedict He j was sinking fast, and il waa at his earnest request that the marriage cere mony was performed. Astoria, Or., July 27. Two fisher men named Hollatx and Laben drifted on the end of Sand island at 8.30 P. M. Monday night, and their boat wss swamped in the trapt A high sea was running at the time, and their lives would have been lost had not the Can-, by life-saving crew rescued them and cared for them two days. The boat was broken, but the life-saving crew helped them repair it aud recover the nets. The boat was one of Oeorge & Barker's. Canada FreveuU flllhuiUrlng. Ottawa, July 27. Tbo Canadian government bas given strict instruc tions to collectors of customs at all Dominion ports not to give a clearance to any vessels entering ootwaid for Cuba without first receiving authority for granting the same from the minis ter of customs. It has oome to the no tice of the Cansdisn authorities tbst a number of vessels have left England with rifles and munitions of wsr on board for Canadian ports, to be resha ped into another vessel snd thus sent to the Cuban insurgents. fifrn .i ii h rv- .I I' 'Wt mi s ' rhntngrephlna the Center of Honrs. French surgeons have siit'i-witcd, wltli the aid of X rays. In producing photographs of the Ixuies of a living person which reveal the existence of disease In the center of the Ik, lies, while the outer portions are sound. A Vanished Land According to views reivntly explain ed Itefnre the (icologlcal Society In En gland, the Islniul of Jamaica was omit connected with both North and South America by a strvtcli of iiioiiutiilnoiia land covering the region of the West 1 1 1 1 in ii archipelago. There are indica tions Unit thin ancient laud waa ele vated no less than two miles and a half iiImivc sea-level. A Oorilla'e I'ortrelt A curiosity exhibited at a recent meeting of the Zoological Society lu Loiiilnii waa a daguerreotype of a gorilla, believed to be the first animal of that kind ever brought alive to Eu rope. The picture was made aa loiitf ago as 1K.W in these days of snap shot photography It la easy enough to get photographs of animals, but the thing was not so simple forty years ago. Can Feer Be CnrcdT Professor Angelo Mosso, of Turin, in bis book on "Fear," which baa recent ly liven translated Into English, says that fear la a disease to be cured. Ho particularly condemns the methods which are sometimes practiced by par ruts and nurses, of governing and con trolling young children through a eeiise of fear. Even more pernlelom la the practice of awakening a sense of tenor lu children by stories of "bogeys." hob goblins and witches. According to Pro fessor Mosso, mankind can l made more courageous by proer cultivation. Insects end I'lowere. It bus frequently liecli asserted that the brilliant colors of many flowers nerve to attract la-es and butterflies to them. Experiments recently reported to the Belgian Academy of Sclencea seem to show that the crfumc rather than color of the flowers Is the real at traction. Bright colored blossoma were covered with leaves and parn'ra pin n,.,i closely about tl i; yet Hie Inserts only visited the hidden flowers. i,i ..iiileiivored to force their way mi- ,i,,r ii. miners In order to reach the blossoms which they could not ace. Molirln Milk. Ltilioratoi-lcH for modifying ami ster lllr.iug milk through scleiitltle proccaa- es have now been established, accord Inn to the Scleiitltle American, lu Bos ton, New YorV and Philadelphia, and others HIV to be opened III several Western cities. The mt!k la freed from Hiiiicralitiiiilnucp of fat anil from bae terla, and then Is so sealed In bottles that it cannot become contaminated until opened for use. It Is claimed that "modlllcd milk" has saved the lives of ninny children who, If Im properly nourished, would have hoc cuiiilied to the maladies of early child- lllnlll. Taxle and fine'!. Physiologists have long known that many sensations ordinarily ascribed to taste are lu reality due to ainell, but this fact baa lately been made clearer than before by the Investiga tions of liermnii savants. Air enters the olfa tory cliatuber, where the nerves connected with the sense of smell are centered, both through the iionI ills and through an Inlet leading from the inoulli. in consequence, a breath of perfumed air manifests Ha "dor not only when It la breathed In. but when It la breathed out. For this reason we are aometlmea deceived as to the source of the pleasure we derive from thlnga taken Into the mouth, the agiveablenesa of the Impression being due, lu aomo caaea, rather to a II than to taaie, Wonderful Huns. Astronomers are uot yet all agreed aa to the causes of the variations of color aud brilliancy which are exhib ited by many stars. In the constella tion Cephcua, lu the northern aky, there Is a star named Delta Cephel, which, lu the course of alsiut threo days, alteruately galna aud loses a large , part of Its light. The apectroacopii nas proven ni -.. of two stars revolving around one an- other in a very el Ip.lca orbit - though they never get far enough apart to be separately visible rom the earth l-vcn wneu in--..- their light la meiiueo imo a sunn- ami disk, aitnougu it enough to them we should fl t.d t hat they are, In reality millions of . li lies ai.arr When brightest, mo milieu light of the twin stars la two or three times greater than when faintest. One of the explanations recently offered by astronomers to account for these chan ges Is that one of the stars composing Iielta Cephel bas a very thick atmos pheric veil, consisting of clouds of con densed metallic vaiKira, and that when the stars draw near one another In their orbital motion the Increase of bent dissipates the obscuring veil, aud permits the star to which It belongs to shine with a splendor that It cannot obtain when Its rays are Interrupted by Its envelope of clouds. It la hard to M-lleve that Inhabited worlds could exist In the noighliorhood of such a pair of suns as that. A Hack woo Is I'oslortlce. It is doubtless true that business Is done In a very slipshod, unbusinesslike wnv In some small, niit-of-t lie-way sisl otllees, but most readers will probably .,i-ei a measure of exaggeration In the following story, which Is related by i. Detroit Tree I'rtss. It Is hnrd for u..wieii.er humorist not to exceed ..miewlint the bounds of truth. I bad din-di d that my letters should tie forwarded to the posioirice at Mouu ..mime ami I reached the place to l 1" 1 a U 1 ar va -m 4 I find It composed of a store, a black smith shop and three dwelling houses. I Inquired for the office, and was di rected to the store. There was no slgu of a postottlce In connection with It, but I asked of the old man who came forward: "la this tu poetotneer "Beckon 'tis," he replied. "1 don't see anything like post- office." "Meblie not. We ain't uever done a power o' business here as a postoffice. What's wanted?" I gave him my name and added that I expected some letters, and after thinking for a moment, lie replied: 'Theiu letters-three of 'em -done come several days ago. Lemiiiv see what I did with 'em." lie looked along I lie counters, up mi the shelves, and behind lines and bar rels for a long leu minutes, and finally said: "It's mighty huh re whar them letters haa gone to. We waa all a look In' at 'em yere fur two or three days, but I ilonu' reckon nobody carried 'em off home. Jest set dowu till I look fur ther." Mo made a pretty thorough search of the store this time, even gelling doun on hla hands and knees to ieer under the molasses barrel, but the letters could Hot le found. "Say," he said, aa he got up and brushed his knees, "that's my bouse over van. Mchhe the old woman's took the letters home." I went over and knocked on the door, but got no answer. I passed around the house, and found the woman smok ing her 'lc aa she minded the lire un der a kettle of soft soup. "LctteraT" she reeiited. "Yea, I brung 'em over and put 'em under a pan on tho shelf, and I reckon the pesky rata hain't got at 'ein yet." She went In and got them, and when I returned to the store the postmaster said: "Now, then, if yo' ar" gwlne to want a postage stamp this week yo'd better let me know to-day, so's I kin order It from Klioivlllc." Knew Lawyers' Ways. The sudden manner lu which the team that waa coming dowu the Mad halted was enough to show that the driver was surprised at something. He took hla broad brimmed straw hat off and waved It at a man who was work lug lu a field, at the same time calling at the top of his voice: '8 a a y t h e r e:" "What tin you want?" asked the man who waa working, aa he came and lean ed over the fence, without letting go of the line) over hla team. "IHdu l ye hear 'lamt Iff" " limit wliatr "It's goin' on." "What's goln' on If" "Ijind sakes! There's a man fur ye. Ye'll be sayln' next yer uncle didn't tile an' leave a will that mentions you ter have a hull lot o' money. If the other fellers don't succeed III bieaklu' II." " 'Course I kuowed that." "An' the case come up fur trial lhl iiiorulu'," "I kuowed that, loo." "Then why wasn't ye up to the court house laklu' an Interest Into It, saint ex the rest on 'em did'.'" "Will, ye see this here's a busy sea sou Willi me. If I hedil't llotlilu' el, ter do, I wouldn't mind droppln' In an hen rln' 'em argy back luf forth. Hill 1 dnmm's I care much which ' iln lawyers gits the money." I let roll I'rei Press. Marvel In Mental Arithmetic. Wolf llliiestlne, who died at Hot Springs recently, came to tlraiiiie a very poor tint is In 171. Il bewail iiierchaiiillslng, ami while here ac quired a capital estimated at between fiiii.iHM mid $".'i,issi. He could neiih-r read nor write, yet be iva it marvel lu menial arithmetic. I'linMloiia cor In- lerest hail any hard places in ihciii for III in. He offered the prim lp.il of tin clly schools at this place !' if he wisnld teach lil itt to writ,. bis own name within a year. Tic proicssor undertook the Job and worked with great energy, but discovered that on each Monday morning every I race of the previous week's work led entirely faded from the mind of his pupil, and after live months of close attention to hla undertaking, abandoned It as a hopeless casu. A peculiarly construct ed "li.XX" was the nearest iipproath he ever made to penmanship, but that signature Is attached to many valuable document now of record !u ilils coun ty, and has for several years passed current at the bauka In New York, Ualveaton and Orauge, often for large sums of money. It waa tpilfe as illifl cult to counterfeit the character aa affixed by him as It would he to suc cessfully Imitate tho algiiaMiro.- tial- veaton Dally New. lllai'kle, the Kntbualaat. John Stuart lllacklc's suMrabuud' ance of energy Is evidenced by tho ea gerneas with which he entered Into whatever Interested those with whom be came In contact. In his biography we find an extract from a characteris tic letter which he wrote while In Koine to a sister who had remonstrated with him for being so much addicted to verse-wiitlng. "You see I am verae-mad," he wrote. "But you know I am subject to various kinds of madness, and of frequent re currence. In Aberdeen I got religious mad; then I got Latin-mad; now I am verse-mad and drawing niad, and am fast getting aiitliiilty-mad. "Out of this never-ending fermenta tion may something good arise, that I may not lie eternally driven about by every wind of dm trine. Hut aa it la, I have no more command over my whims and fancies that a henpecked husband has over his wife." Cyollng Chap rons. 1 hsve la-en desired to Insert the fol lowing notices: "Wanted, by a dowager, too age I to ride a cycle iWi, an experienced lad.i cyclist accustomed to the very bos. society. Must be able to ride twciili miles an hour, so a to keep lu slghi youngest daughter, w ho Is agile and In Judicious. Apply to A. II. ('., II-' He) grave sviuare." "A lady, highly connected, In preparei! to chaperon (on a cycle) the ambition" daughter of a millionaire. I an ex pert In all pace (cycling). Can Is trusted to keep alongside of the a wlfles, detrimental and to lag discreetly in the rear of an eligible el ler ou." London Truth. TRAVEL WITH A MIICND ; Who wilt rr"t-t you from Ihuae eni-mlr i natui-s, Iii,iCiImi'. iiihUiIs si l (lie kit-sue irmltiiat tT iim kliiK mi His sn.ri. and ,,inH. I Itnn. by lulsiiil tratt-l n ovrr t!i rough IhmIi nl III lalil rllwa,la. ni li irl -to I ! llol-lt r ; StoltiNeb Hitler.. Ilreaii liinrllli-ra, ysrhU sell, rotnttit-r Isl ami tlieslflesl annuls nil I lunr.la. i lesllly In Hie ir tr-el'iv potrnry if thla ffm-t- lir knlf-itarl, whh-h riii,iit-r.siMi rliriimaliaui, ' urrvuu.urM and l,liliMi.n,-aa. In the days of (jueen Elizabeth each ' guest at a dinner party brought bis own '. knife aud spoon. I Plao'i Cure for Coiiiuinptlon is our only ntrdioln for oounln ami folds. Mrs. I', ! lielti, 4 C .Mill sve., Priiver, Col., Nov. H, ':,,. IIOITT'a SCHOOL roK HOV1 ' At Ilurliiifrauie, San Mateo Countv. Cat , is one of the moat tlioroiinh, careful and practical "Home (Schools" to he found on ; the I'noitio coast. It prrparns hoys for any university, technical snliool, or for active business; is accielitrd at the Slate and Hlanlord Universities, and uiiilsr the ahle niatisiietiieat of Kt Stale Superintendent : Ira O. Ilnitl. Ph. U., ranks anions the It rat schools in the I'nl el Stales, Ke-opens , Augilil 4. Jloiiio me Wnt"r i Tlierv U more catarrh In thu lectlna of the i country than all other ittirn.ea ml Inttether, ! and autll the IsM lew yeara waa aii,iHi.eil to I , ItH-uralile. Knr a treat many vi aia tlnelurs pro- tiniineed It a Iih-sI i!iene, anil riM'tltMd 1-.-nI I remmllea, ami liy iHinnlaully (alllus Inriire Willi 'local liealineiil, r inniitireil 11 Im-n-ali.e. K'-lem-e haa iToreit ralarih In lie a riiu.iltnltmi al dlneas.., ami therelure r jit-eetin.tittillnhal treatment. Hall a Catarrh cute, luaiiulactaml by J. I'neney A Co., Inleile, niitn, ) tl,e only cinilltilllonal t llrr nu the matki'l. It la taken ! Internally In ,lonea irotn 10 ilrui to a lerHiii till. It aela dlrevllv oil Hie bleu I asit miii-tiui , anrfai-ra n( llir ayalem. 1 hey eflr one liiimlr, d diillara Inr auy ra.e It f -1 1 to cure. Hvud for i-lrt-aisra aud l M'tmnutali Ad'tre.i. ' f. i l llbNKY 4C0., Ti.lrdn.O. I Sold lit ltumlt.,7 Haifa r'auilly till, are Hie iK-st. I never used so quick a rure at I'lto's Cure for Consumption. 1. H. Palmer, Box j 1171, Seattle, Wash., Nov. 'i K'X. riTS) All fl a lorpeil fiea by lr. Kline's I Greet Nerte Kealurer. No til.alltr II e aral !itay'au. Msrvelnna rurea. 'I reatue tn.1 $.' U trial bottle free to Kll rates. Send to Dr. Kllue, 3I Arrh St., I'hlla.lelphla. I'a. FT i L . : - '!, asBBaajtwi .-rVi I tktaitasj f t. ,; isii'..i! !.'. i. .. ' 'I f 1 " - -" if , j in, I, r" Blackwcll's Genuine BULL DURHAM Toe will flmt ona coupon Inside atrb 1 ounot bat and tare ooupoaa lnaMa eaeh t ounce bag. Dujr a bas, read Hit coumi aud ate bow to your (bare of fmi.uiw la praeaiila. AbsoluteJLu Pure - ' "Big as a Barn Dcxr" j I yi- o ii For 10 cents you get almost twice as much "Battle Ax" as vou do' of 9 other high grade goods. Before the davs of "Battle Ax'' consumers paid 10 cents for a small plug of the same1 quality. Now. "Battle Ax" High est Grade, twice the quantity. That's true economy. MRS. WINSLOW'S VW ton chilosin TiarHiNO reaalakralllncert. 'ava e kettle. on PI0PII THAT ARf SICK or 'Juar Don't Peel Well," muni, a urn Bin) atraovaiiLIILil rlLLw tha Oaa Tk l nc lv a Onlr One for a Doe. eoi hv rmieeiataaaaae. a eiao aiM free, aderaae eY.eetaaMiM.Ca.raUa. fa. T$ this what ails you?! Hara yaa e fcl!aa J I cl(t la tat SUaaik-HUatlal ( n.i ..Oaf Hake In.fla4 imlt- Ug f4 aUr- fcrak- aansara i Ha4 Taa la Ika Maalk la Ika Mate- 1 lt HalallatlM ef ' Ih Kart saatalMe. I Uet. a af kl.Ni ark - laakirae Maalk I (a. IB Ik. S . laa af rit.k- Fl. .1. Aaartltt . Ilre'raanl, lima. I Caaaillaa al tka , MlaS - llli.laan Hradatkt -taaMIs- t allaa ar Ularrkea, t DYSPEPSIA la m f lf Msir bim. Tht ) pMltltt cn) fw Uti 4UtrMinrla.(,t U Acker' $ Dyspepsia tablets. by vail, frtfsiiel. m rarrlpt f 13 ctatt I'ttklir K.tMtf, IMI lllrlrtl. VeW YltVi )Biy- "I rfrrt-.t h'tin.tr Iimh .tiii, I.iiIJ A ftri I ll.lr..U.'-li4Jir his .i.tj.hrtitji urrillM. Ullirn To any ed.livm., onr MAILLU rfltt Special I rl.. I.lat u( MOUSE HOLD COOD9. ITC. ThL I'lrenlar 1. iMtird fur tiielienelt el nur country i uaumrra wheraoimt avail Uiema, Ives of our I'aliy Hi,r al ralea, reml ua yuur aa-dlt-aa. Yuu will flinl 1,,'lh . i.o '.ami i ll eailgbL W II I. A KIM k CO., Ms X Market ilml Kan Kraneliro, Cal. "We will t eave It Knllrcty In writing to advertisers don't for get to mention this paper. iUTiM This is the very best Smoking Tobacco made. DGlieious - Nutritious - The Breakfast Cocoa 8 Tkra in kava t MIDI V Walter Baker & Co. DORCHESTER, MASS. COSTS LESS THAN ONE CENT A CUP. NO CHEMICALS. ALWAYS ASK YOUR GROCER FOR Walur Baker & Cos. Breakfast Cocoa made at dorch ester. m ass.it bears THEIR TRADE MARK IADELILCHOCOIATIERC ON EVERY CAN. AVOID IMITATIONS SURE CURE for PILES luhita: 4 mirt, iet4it.t w rriri'4if rnfcMi msmw DR. SO-tAN-KO't PILC fttMtotf. lk. Ilerb ( . A fa.if tut f K l srat fT. rfat Im. iiimuii Mi. U. UOIAMtU, I'hlisv, r- aJ- i a s. l4 ii'atfi'iis I J Seat sir T 1 In int. s e aap . m n a . trt Cvml. tirrup, tw ihL Vm ilai.t fkll.kit All US Alii. N. P. N. U. lio. 600.-B. F. N. U. No. 737