Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887 | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1883)
jurrcnf ifcrahtri. t "FUTURES" IN COTTON As in lh ilrill the std I boh-, To ma bright pictures cumo end go. As I, in thought, o'er land and sei, Go Willi tho crop that is to bu. I feci the dust, I hear the din, From groaning prtss and whirr nt; gin. I ee tin sv lftly aliding train, Thro' nwamis, o'er vnllijs.liill" and plains; The aeapoit with its rush and roar. The fore U of ma-ts that line the than ! Vhe stately ships that niijht and clay, Thr.,' tracUle-s'wators cltavo thur way. On their white deck" my wati h I keep 'Alongst all the wonders of the deep. I sec tho tempest's wr th burst out; I watch the writhing water fpout; And, driving headlong thru' the sto m, Leviathan's stupendous f am. I hew at tout the jojous call 01 "Lind hoi" from tho topmast tall. I see tho fjctory liukhina smoke, And pulsic g with tho engine's stroke; Then won br what the destiny Of this crop I plant shall he. The lint tint from these seidn shall ivprinp, , May clothe a beggar or a King. To bride or )ahe sonic part may fall; Some eWHthe thodcid for burial. As a paper, it may tidings bear Of glory, gl tdntss or despair. Thus as we toil anil fold our hand To fellow-won on sin and lau 1. For tho' our work, by detd or word, Like fairy ruck, the globe wo ginl. And what w e do for goo 1 or ill, It may thro' all the girdle thrill. Then let the mcssagis wo send Be ivcr those of friend to friend, And may no Chano'llor, Kaiser, King, Cut with a uword the inagio ring; But War's rut (lag for ayo be furbd, And L'.nco her liijiit hIici! 'round the world J. It. f'ljijlenton, in Planter' Journnl. A StrangeWild Story. "A diamond liuon fniKuirftli.il mow for ii living: I" The envy and Hiispk'ion that piomptcd this remark, mid othi'isliUu it, whs tinni-il into pity, when thu nuinuu of Mooms boro' luatiiid tlmt tho gimtti'l and w scrvod ti':mi;i'i-, who had nought n homo among thum, huh btinli'iii'il with .1 giunt jorrovv. This luily and her little gill woio hand- 80IIU clotlux llu-y liml nil thmi unit tltuir appoaiaiiLo ami initiiiieitf weio in atrangu contiast with their niiuouiiiliiigs (it Aunt I'olly Ciutri'ri. In I'xplanation, tho kind old uonmu told her iictlilKitH that Mm. Van Pitlo was hi'r gicat-nii-iv ; tlmt her own iiiLlty homo Inid been bio ken up, her iiumoy vvnmgfiilly tnkun fiom her, and hIio had eoino to hvo with lu-i, nd wit trying to gi't hi'i living by nnik ing lino hhhlrt foi a city ctoii1 VeaiHiiftor tliix, whongii'atlyik'pu'mid, and fciuing th.it sho was about to dio and cati liri little gill fiiondk'sw, .Mrs. Van Diilu told 1 ioi nloiy to ono wlio had mani fested xjmp.ithy without iilgni euiuwi) Ueing hi'i own winds as iic.uly as 1 ran after an iiitcivnlot moio than twculy-liM! ycrtlH, I will icpi'iit tho Mnry Iiimo. "Atlrr my mot 1km 'h death, I wont to ten twoMiyagrs with my mthoi, who vviin eciU'aptiiin onoo to t'akutta and tmru to llong Kong Afloi this, his hoalth failed, and lie gao up his plup, ami wo trau'lcd in om own eonntiy loi about a year, when ho died at Saiatoga "1 was left with a Miiall luopeity of About twelve thousiud dtilliiis, in ihaigo of his onl) lolutivo a half brother foi whom my fat hoi hud mmi) m his illness Of coun-o I was heaU'luoUon, for I was Alone in tho woild. Tho only per-onal friend and lolutivo I had was this kind Old fnriiUM llotook mo after my futlit-rV burial to bis homo "Tho moment I entered it, I miw that his wife, who bud no children, and who-e only pmH(o in life was to mivo Imth work mid money, was not gl.ul Iomv mo She did not even kis the jukir, foilorn little gill wlioso eommg had mi Miipii-iil her. "After a dull and uuhiippv jeai, my nuclo st'lit mo to a bo.uihng-ehool , and I went gladly, feeling miiv 1 could lind fhero morel of the lovo fur which my heart Wits aching than I bad found in my uneliiV home. "My hojH'K were tv.diisl, Tbopimil pal uf the ivhool was a tender, nuitherlv wonmn, and eucounigisl real friendship among tho gill-. When 1 bad I von Ibeio a year or two, mo luvinerot my itiotn mnto n graduate of a modnid rxdunil camotoisit her; niul the llna hour when WO two met, inv fate was interwoven with Ills. "My unrlo wax Nitislleil with tho young niim's family and proHHvts, and gave his content to o r mariiugo, and in fom months after that, bo gave me and inv tweho thousand dollars into Mntnge'i lin mis. "I was taken to my luii-kind'a homo, a rambling old houv, kiIiI to have Urn built befoiv the llevolutionary War Tlit'ro w cro "nuslei u Iioum anmnd it which vveie iHTiipidl b.v tho brothers of my liuhhand mugh looking men and bv a widowisl i-ider. The cisUr was the oldest of the family; and Mio was tho most foi bidding woman In pernou and juimuoi. ' "Tlio family called my liiitUintl 'Pr Thfid,' although he had never had a pa tient, anil tbej rsvuuxl very pniud o him niul of bis learning. an well tbevmmht bo. I wan told that homo of bis brother KCiv engaged OJ.tiM.iuly in tho oyster buinc, and others in chipping, 'down the co.o-t,' whatever that was. "I often heard loud talking between tho young men and the old people, who al ways -cemed pleading with them, for or against something, I knew not what. "When I had been in the hou'-e about ix month", I was Martled and distreei-ed, ono day, by my husband's telling mo that bo must lcavemo for pome time, and that, if I felt loncomo with the old people, 1 could go to Effie'B "Kflie, the widowed eisler, seemed more like a Htalwnrt man in woman's clothe" than she did Uke n woman. She nlwa looked at me as if reading my thoughts. I told my husband that there was n weird-lio-s nlwut Kllio's hou'-e that made my bkxsl urn cold; and added, 'I am nfraid of .voiir islcr.' "Ifu ak(d me if any one had been tel ling me f-tories about her "1 replied that no one lind spoken to me about hir, in fact I knew no one out of his family, and I pleaded with him to take me "w itli him. lint ho put me off, saying thut he was going to a lonely part of the coast on bu-'iin'-s, and should occupy a hut while there with two old negroes and several loimli nun with whom ho should not dare leave me in bis long alienees on hi" vientifie expeditions furtliei down the coa-t and into the interior. "That night two men came to the house and earned some non-bounil boxes from a locked elo-i t in my room room over to Klhe's house. My husband ic-ked me not to mention this to the old people, who were then ab-ent, and added, 'Doctors have many things that people ought not to see, you know, "I thought of skeletons and dead bod its, and turned pale; but he laughed, and said, 'They are tilled with surgical instruments, and such things;' and it was veiy natural for me to believe him. "When my ioung sitcr-in-law came home from school to spend her vacation 1 was vciy happy. Hut she seemed troubled She was gieved to find me still theie in that old house, and said, 'Thud promised me faithfully that ho'd never bring ion hcie. When he comes home, insist on his taking a house in town, nnd beginning paretieeof his piofossioii. liny a houe with your own money.' "I told her 'l had given all my money to him. She sighed, and made no leply. "My hu-band vviote me veiy often, mailing his letters fiom a Southern city. He winnlwajs'oominghonienet month.' J ii the meantime my littlo gill was born, and she could walk and say many words beforo I s iw him again. "When he did letuin, be said he would buy a pl.ue in town and slay with me, but ho soon bad a letter which he said contained intelligence that would ncce-saiily take him again away for sov- eial weeks at least. I then told him I should ceitainlygo hack to my uncle's unless ho m.iilo some piov iton lor a homo for mo and my child. "j fow bouts later ho came into the bouse, kU--cd mo and said that bo had just heard tho said news that .loll' ono of his Inothers had ls-on diowned at -on, but I saw no signs of giief in tho house, and I did not bohevo it. dell s place, liowovei, was bought for mo. It was under the a'nidovvof the widowed sister's bouse, and I felt as if she was set as a spy over me. "Kven in seivant boro tho family name. My husband was always si tender in his manner towards mo and out child, that although my confidence in his up lightness was veiy much shaken, I felt I would bo ei ntentonted anj where if wo were togethci. "I pleaded with him to take us, but ho said it was not piactieablo; it was a lonely region wheio he was obliged to bo, audio get to it I should have to damp ten miles through the cane-brako aftei leaving tho last conveyance. 'You will not bu liappv there,' ho said, At last, however, ho promised to mil i )ve his ac commodations and send foriis, but hudid not keep his word "With all theii iiehos and they wcio thought to lm wealthy the Van Dales were, for some icason, ostiacised in that region; and 1 glow so veiy netvous b.v tho (ontinual mstoi) that was always alxmt me that sometimes 1 was almost frantic. "One day I packed my ti links, when Kll'ie, the sister, was awav and sent them to u storehouse in Xow Yoik, and with a bag as my only luggage I sot oil' foi that undolhiod localits, 'Down tho const,' 1 knew tho name of the huge cit.v nem the place I sought, and of the locality of the hamlet where I knew m husband stopped, "1 triivoloit ilav anil night. Hie cars cariiod mo to within live miles of ni) dostiniitiou, and (hero I took a wagon My 'low white' dnver, taking mo for a nigger hunter, shiowdlv suggested that 'there was an old man and woman oil' in tho hi like that never came out, and that they might Ui my 'niggers,'' ud he )intrd out iirudopath which would lead mo to them. "When, after n ciuel trump of two or three miles, i fell fainting on the cabin lloor with my child in my arms, old liippvaud ToU), tho negroes who lived tin re, thought I win a ghost come to punish them for thcil sins. When 1 told thrm who 1 was they f-uly tinned white. They said that tho miis'rs wouldn't U homo for at least four davs, but that they would 'cherish mo nghl Minut them selves. "1 soon learned that Jell' who had U-ivn 'lost at son,' and Davo, who was m the 'West Indie,' wore Uuh with inv husband. Old Hippy asked me if 1 was'Mas'r find's, true and sarsin wife mairicd to him do way dat sticks?' "When I told her 'j es,' she iglnil and said: 'Pis jero'c a niightv wicked world! I wish that the good 1-onl would t tko Us all out on't! 1hs ou pmj, ooneylf "1 could not tell her that my humm-v had vet led me to Clod. "'I pmjs,' sho wld, -and ToU. he w are; but lUMtlitT way gets lis out o ith venv ib'.ilh ninn. Mns'r JolW wife die.1 hciMiif swamp fever, and she lays tight j.lar, tivhu do two great pines dat's been WILLAMETTE ABMEB: PORTLAND, OREGON, JULY skinned right Wonder is we lichtniiil' clean by de lightnin.' ain't all skinned by de "I told her I bad nhju his wife just be fore I left home, and she nodded her head and aid' Not disyere 6no! Shewasu pirate's wife fust, and she helped 'em in Je businessl' "That night, after a supperof rice and 'possum, we sat listening to tho howling of the storm, when Tobe remarked, 'Good night for business this. We shan't see dem ones back ; anyhow not for de present.' "These words of Tobe's half revealed the wretched truth to me, and they arouted a feeling not of weakness but of strength. I aked him to tell me what he knew of thu family, and promised that if he would I would help him to c;ape North. "Hut dee dogs is trained to chnse us, missus,' he said. "I told him to kill the dogs. That plan for escaping had never once enteied his bead. " 'Dey's a bad gineration,' ho aid. 'Dcy had trouble wid officers up Xorf, and so come dow n here to carry on do wrackin' business, w here's less law to watch 'cm. Doy lures vessels on to de rocks wid faKo lights nnd wracks 'em. Den dey robs de ships and do drow nded passengers. " 'I hasn't nebber heerd of one of 'cm washin' ashore alive,' he said in answer to my inquiry. 'Dey buries 'em in do sand. I sometimes peeps and I listens to 'em o' nights, and I know a heap! "'Hut dey isn't no wus dan dat gicat giant sister o' their'n dat takes de gold nnd de jew claries in trunks up Xorf, and hides 'em up ; oh, dcre's de hcut o' a pirate into her bussum! And, o, mis sus, dere's heaps o' buried gold and sich round here. V reckon dat dero's some onder dat harf-stun, de dogs watches it so' "I told him I would not touch it any sooner than I would a serpent. "We left the hut the next night, that wo might not attract attention, and started for tho North Tobe c.uijmg Anna, and Hippy carrj ing my bag and bundle and reached the car just at daj break, and a poor, bedraggled-looking paity we vveie. "The negioes, who declared they had been stolen fiom a kind master and pre ferred to go back to him, rode almiit a bundled miles with mo and then took to the loads to reach their fonncr home with more money, which I gave them from my small etoie, than thov had ever seen before. "I left no trace of myself, and tho sur prise of the men must have been great when they letiirned to their cabin to find the negioes gono and the dogs dead Of course they did not daro to pursue the blacks, for fear of it drawing attention to themselves and niako known their dread ful work. "When T reached New York I took my trunks fiom tho store-house. I knew that Kllio would seek me at my uncle's; and remembering that my father alwavs sent a Christmas gift to his Aunt I'olly Cm tor, I wrote to hor anil icieiveil a henity wel come to tho littlo faun a haven of KM and peaeo. "Tobe and Hippy had sixjken of mv hiisbuul as being unliko his biothers, Thov thought him onlv their tool. But my lovo for him had vanished. I io rolved that tho Van Dales should never have my child." About tlueo j ears after this iwcital by the pixr wife, the Now Yoik papers were tilled ono dav with the details of crimes of a ceitain family giving names and place of losidonie and hints vveie given of piracy, and statements of facts tespect ing tho wrecking of ships fm lobbery. A description was ako given of an amaon, who was taken and who would llgiuo at the trial The next day Aunt I'olly and Mrs. Van Dalo went oil' on a long jouinej In a few weeks the fonuer returned alone, saying that her niece had concluded to live in a milder climate. Mis. Van Dalo had evidently Hod lest she might in some way bo tiaeed and made a witness against thosof whom she stood in moital fear. Many poisons in mi Idle life can re member the tiinl of those n reckons and the disclosures mndo of their eiiinos; but none of thein know tho stoiv of this young life that was blighted by a hiistv connection with them, and was thus made a sutlerer for their sins. Youth's Com panion A New Departure la Education. Lascll Seminar) at ibunidv'o made qui e a new ib parture in tlio --iliicatioii of jourg women by establishing cUs-es in cooking, diesscuttug and inihuir-,, tluse brarches being taught m a pruned way by romrn tent cook, dtecsmakirs ami 'milliners. While there is nothine tu Ui said against the "Inch tHhicatiou" of wnmin, aud while we believe n atiording them till the opportunities for s'uey and ad vani-enu-iit that the other six enj, wo cau out Hunk tint a great many young wouieu vtould receive more real uenollt fiom lui'li studies as these at I. mil I tlun fro-il "ot trading" tireek r-ot or other study of the ilass'cs. I lie demand of the tunes is more and moro fi r luduttnal training fur au edu cation which can ho turned to practical ad vantage in alter life, ami wo shall very likely hear of iiumeruus-.other "new departures" in this line ere many j ears roll by, A Frightened Englishman. A story is told of an Kiij-liilimiu who was obliged to travel in Ireland a duty he ap ,rraihed with fear and trembliug. His atrnphted scuiawt-re startled on hearing a follow passings r in the radttiy carriage, re maik to another s "I'm lust atther boiii' over to Kilpatnck," "And I," replied the other, 'amalthtr bo u' over to Kiluury " "What murderers they rx !" thought the Knglish ' And to think that they talk nf their asasi nations so publicly I" Hut ths couvmation went on. "And fhare are ) ou gning uowj'' a.kul Mfaniu No. I "I'm sou.' home, ai d tiii-n to Kilmore," was No. .' rvply. The Kiigluhinau'ii blood curdled "kilmore it ll?'ddel Xo. 1. "You'd better be comin' along wid me to Kilumaule " It l related that the Kngltihm&n lift the trim at the next s'a'ion. Sriimtifii!. r ' v What Science is Doing for Modern Thought. One of the mo't important influences now at work is doubtless that of science, which is of course as old as human cur-io-itv , and is only new in its results. The effect of the great advance in scientific thought has been to modify considerably most forms of religious belief can not bo denied ; and, in spite of many attempted reconciliations of the two, it is not diffi cult to sec that some of the leading dog mas of Christianity are doomed. Fortu nately, one of the rewauls of the freedom that is given to science is a lack of venom in its attack, and, on the other side, there is nn absence of bitterness in those whoe opinions it unavoiilaoiy alters mere are, of eouisc, exceptions. Modern sci ence has not expelled arrogance from the world, and enlightenment has not wholly driven out bigotiy. Yet, in tho calmness with which the controversy h carried on, we see how widc-&pic.ul is the belief that dogmas arj less essential than the truth which all men alike ate seeking. As Professor Asa Giay puts it : "No sen sible pot son nowbolieveswh.it the most sensible people believed foimcrly settled scientific belief must control religion." It is ono of the time honoied jests which the late Lord Heaconslield tlnust into his last novel, that tho religion of sensible people is what sensible people never tell. They may not, but their tolerance of new tiuths and the altered position of ecclesi asticism declaie all that need be known. The present interest in science is dis tinctly pait of the lovolutionniy move ment vvhieh demands, with restless curi osity, why everything should boas it is This is the question that is put to every existing institution, and science often gives a serviceable answer. The answer is a leveling ono to all conventionalities, because science concerns itself only about facts, and it is heaid now because science can only e.i-t wheio thought is free, fiectloni of thought is a powerful solvent, audit is e-pccially dcstiuctivc to all the conventionalities which exist by means of tho common agreement that they shall not bo examined. We sec that in politics the divino right of kings is called in ques tion, and in tho uniform tendency of modern democracy tho assumption of gov ernment by those who aie governed. In social matters wo perceMve a similar move ment tow aids the emancipation of the conipiehciision of paiticulms, and as hu man being haio sueeceilcil m understand ing themselves they have thiown aside the convenient habit of dividing the rest of the woild into vast homogeneous classes, and have icconued the dignity and impoitance of each individual of the race Fiom "Scieneo and Conscience," by 1'iofcssor T. S. l'eny, in Popular Sci ence Monthly. A New View of the Earth's Evolution The assumption that the earth was at ono time in a fluid condition, as hold by Liplaco and by many astrohomois and geologists, w.u. disputed vv ith a suggestive anay of evidence by Dr. Houghton, of Dublin, befoio the Pcionco Association at Montical. Following are some of his reasons for doubting tho lluidity of tho oaith or any other planet at any stage of its evolution : 1. The possibility of the equilibrium of the lunges of Saturn, on tho supposition that they aro either solid or liquid, has been moio than doubted, and tho most probable hyjiothesis concerning them is that thoy consist of swarms of discrete nicteoiio stones, discicto meaning that they are sepaiate from each other in space. '2. It is difficult to undei stand the low specific gravity of Jupiter and the other planets on the supiHition that thov .tie either solid or liquid, for wo know- of no substance light enough to form them. If the outer planets consist of discrete me teoric stones moving mound a solid or liquid nucleus, thodHicultyiospeetiug the speeilio gravity would ilisapiiear. .(. 1 he recent '.lielies connecting tl 6 periodic showers of s-liootiiig tnrs with comets tuna in the direction of showing tli.it comet in cooling bicnk up into dis crete Niliil particle, anil that probably tl e olnr nebula cooled in like ni.inncr' into siarnto lieiy teai-s, which MXn modified by radiation into the cold of space. Mr. Hiiggins' recent comparison" of the spectroscopic np)HMi.inco- of comets nnd incandescent poitions of meteoric -tone siows the presence in both nf hulrogen and nitrogen compounds, continuing the conehiMon ilmuu from the identity of tho path of comets and meliwric shoot ing stars. From all these, and other considerations it is allowable to suppose that the earth and moon, when they separated from tho solar nebula, did so in the form of solid meteoric stones, each of them having the temperature of interstellar space that is, something not much wanner than 400 deg. Fahrenheit below the freezing point of water Scientific American. Importance of Small Thlnx In Science. Not long ago I heard this story, which miy serve as a sort of overture to what I "jnt to say: An excellent gentleman, on Tins informed that a certain scientific man was engaged in work upin frojs, replied: "Why spend his time upon such trivial work, when there is tho human tout to inves tigate!" The feeling which actuated the speaker U one which I repeat is not uucom. mm, and I may vld it is quite natural, bit it is certainly wrong in principle. H we analyte the uni'erlv ing thought of those who oav ii at ordinary investigation, we shall find that there are two distinct ideas contained iu it i Fust, that in ordir that aoy investiga tion shall I o of value or of imnortacce, it must War direct frui. The substance dia- cov ercd must im useful to some practical par- 20, 13b3. poj, either as a medicin- or as a dye s u, an fxp'oiivc r a poison no matter what, JO that it can be used for somthirg. A second idei is, that in order to solve the problems of nature, only those of the mo-t i vident inv 0 tance should be attacked. Such questions a x hat is lift ? Whatisilectiicity r What s 'the at raction f gravity 1 What is force? Wait ii nutter? Ihise are the subjec s w'n'ch, in the opieion if many, shouli occupy i ivestigators, to (he exclusion ot tne less i ipoitnt. , , ., As rewds the latter idea, it may be sid t .at there are a j.rtat many very strongly for tried ciiade's in nature. Sci- n lfio investi gafors have attacked these frm time to time .nd have been repulsed. A god commander having discovered that a stronghold is invul nerable from a given oint does not attempt it capture from that side, but looks around him from that side, I u lo iks aroutid him for othtr means of approach; h strengthens his forces, he collects moro ammunition, and en deavors to keep his a'my generally in eood condition, Btudlng the surrounding country and awaiting new revelationi. There is, fur t ler, a great deal of insignificant camp work tj be done, and if this it neglected, ultimiite s ccess cannot be hoped for. So. too. the scientific investirat r, finding that a certain problem of paramount import ance cannot I e solved, turns his attention to other, the solution of which miy, in the end, contribute to clearing up great mysteries. There are hi sts ot minor questions to oe an swered, and thse must be answered bcfoie tho fundamental quejtions of natuio can be. Through the insignificant lie the roads of ad vancement. A fallen leaf, a bit ot stone, a tiny flowir, a microscopic animal, may con tain within themselves the answers to the most important nuettious. It is not the leaf. or the stone, or the animal tlut is especially investigated, but the principles involved in theirexistence. Popular Science Monthly, There is hardly an adult person liv.'ng but ss somi times troubled with kidney difficulty, which is the most prolific and dangerous cause of a 1 disease. There is no sort of need to have a'.y form of kidney or urinary trouble if Hop Bitters is taken occasionally. Remember This. If ou are sick, Hop 1 tttcra vlll surel aid Nature In making )0U well when all else falls. If ou are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering from any other of the numcoous diseases of the stomach or buuels, it is our own fault if ou remain ill, tor Hrp Bitters are a sovereign remedy in all such complaints. If jou are wasting away with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting Death ttds moment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitbrs. If jou arn sick with that terrible sickness Nervous ness, vou will find a 'Balm in Gilead" In tho use of Hop Bitters. lop I lfv vou are a frequenter, or a resident of a miasmatic district, barricade jour sy-tem agnintt the scourge of all countries tualarUI, epidemic, bilious, and intermit tent fevers b the use of IIp Bitters. If you have rouirh.DimDh or sallow Bkln. bad breath. pains and aches, and feel miserable generullj, Hop Bit ters will glie jou fair skin, rich blood, and sweetest breath, health, and comfort. In short they cure all Diseases of the stomach, ogweiB, uiouu, i.ier, serves, manejs, ungnrs msease. SjoO will be paid for a case they will not cure help That poor, bedridUen, invalid wife, sister, mother, or augnter, can oe made tne picruie or health, by a lew ottlesot Hup Bitters, costing but a triHc, Will jou. Skinny Men, "Wells Health Renewer" restores healtn and vigor, CU cs Djspepdia, Impotence, Sexual Debility. $1. TUTTS PILLS SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of Appetite, Bowels costive, Fain in the Head, with a dull sensation In the back part. Pain under the Shoulder blade, fullness after eating;, with a dlsln. clination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some duty, Weariness, Disszineas, fluttering at the Heart, Dots before tho eyes, Yellow Skin, Headache generally over the right eye. Restlessness, with fitful dreams, highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer They Inrrmuo thr Appetite, and cause the body lo Tithe on Fleah, thus the sjstem Is nourished, and by their Tonle Aetloss on ths pimtlve Orfans, Brjrulnr Stools are pro. duccd. price 3 cents. 85 Murray HU, N. T. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. Ohat Raib ok Whiskers changed toaOLonay Black by a single application of this Dye. It lm- Earn a natural color, acts Instantaneously, sold y Druggists, or sent by express on receipt or II. OFFICE, 33 HCRRAT ST., NEW TORK. (Dr. TCTTI iSClt W T.lmbl. lafor.,Uo. .,11 CkAiI BmI)U TUlt atuX 1KII tnlituimj Stock Breeders' Directory. XiTUndtr tills head we will publish small advir- tlriementjl. likfi tha fnllnalnip fnr At im. l.rn. advertisements will be charged In proportion. WM. EOSS, BREEDER OP SPANISH or AMERICAN MERINO Sheep, rilot Rock, Umatilla county, Oregon, end fo circulars and descriptions ot sheep. Jlpd JOHN M1NTO, BREEDER OP ilERIXO SHEEP, Salem, Marlon Count) , Oregon. DAVID GUTHRIE, BREEDER OF LONG-WOOL and SPANISH rinoSbeep. Dallas Folk Count , Oregon. MI FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF CONSTIPATION. If o other dlaeow U so pro Talent In txnra. try j OonJUpjUon, and no remedy h&a ever equalled the celebrated Kidsey.Wort as a core. WhAMrer to cause, however obtUnat uim ctue, una rcmcay wm overcome It. all CQ THia dltreinir m. m I sSW Tjjjnt la Vrm nt a Ks oompUaatedwlthoonstlpatloa. KUnT.Waii Utrcnzthttca the makaned tarta tnd nniokiv ousvv u aiuiua vi m vcn vaea payaioiiUM uu suvuiuuin am vw ""t niiirrls a- wu you witb wur or thee troablea PHICHI.j DriJeUElsts ll UR. wnnvcoMBE, v. s. VMTEBIXART surgeon, rsrtlaud, Orecoa, WritM rreseriptlons 'or Dlseasesot all classes ot stock rice, II lorevch prescription orltten. SUU ijmp toms and if oi animals as near as possible. OSIre C P. Bacon's Blacthawk Stables, 91 Sscooc St., tx-t. Stark and Oak. Rraldeacc Cor Thirteenth and Tailor 8U. "Bacbapjilbs,-' CuUk, ccmplet curs all annoying KUner , B'aJde and I'rlnarjr DiMAsea, f 1. Dranrists- V-WiWOMAN CAN0EAl:rH OF.WOMAta SYMPATHIZE WITrjIp5 THE HOPE OW WOMAN.THE RACEM Struts t, ,Jg- aYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VE&ETABLE COMPOUND. A Snre Core for all FEMALE WEAK. MESSES, Inclndlna- Lencorrhora, Ir. regular and Falnfnl Menstruation, Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb, Flooding, PltO LAPSUS BTEKI, etc. tyPleasant to ths taste, efficacious and fmmetnato In Its effect It Is a great help ta pregnancy, and re lieves pain daring labor and at regular periods. ritTSICI15S CSE IT iVD rKZSCBIBE it rmiiT. tVFos xxx. WXiZXissis of the geneTatlre organs ot either sex, It Is second to no remedy that baa ever been before the pnblloi and for all diseases of ths EnmrrsltistheOmlMfJZnnedvnlAe TTorti, t2T KIDNET COMPLAINTS of Either Sex Find Great Relief In Ita Vac. 1.TDIA E. PtNKnAM'S BLOOD PLltlTlEU 1 eradicate everr Teatlee of Hnmors from the Blood, at ths same time will gire tone and strength to the system. As marrelloua In results sj ths Compound. 7-Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are pre pared at !33 and 135 Western Arenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, It. Six bottles for 5. The Compound Is sent by mall in the form of pills, or ot lounges, on receipt of price, tl Ir box for either. Mrs. Plnkham freely answers nil letters of inquiry. Enclose Scent stamp. Fend for pamphlet. Mtnttonthltraptr, rfrLrpu E. Prcsmirs lttxb Pnxa cure Constipa tion. Biliousness and Torpidity of the Liver. 29 cents. rSoId by all I)rngglata.-C W FARMER'S EXCHANGE f All Sorts of Merchandise Exchanged forfl COUNTRY PRODUCE. Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps. Everything a Farmer wants for sale, Everythlntr a Far - mer raises wanted. S. HERMAN, Corner Madison and First Streets, Portland Opposite Segman, Sabin & Co's Agricultural Ware, house. ort2S-t DRS. A. S. & Z, B. NICHOLS, Hoiheopathic Physicians and Surgeons. Rooms (9, 60, 61 a Union Block, Portland, O Specialties, Dr Z B. N. Diseases of Women. DR. A. S. N. Diseases ol Eje, Ear and Throat. USE EOSE PILLS. E. O. SMITH, OFFICE: No. 167 First Street, hereon Mor Srlson and Yamhill, Portland, Oregos msi.MSS rmrATio.v. u.u.u. COLUMBIA Commercial Colleee Jonrnal- Olving lull information relating to one of the most Practical Institutions for the Business Training of the Young and Middle Agtd of elt)icr sex, lent free on. application. Ctudenst Admitted any link Uay In the Year. Address- W. S. JAMES, Box 563, Portland, Ore. oct20y See that our Trade Hark " THE BOSS." and A. S. & CO., Is on every pair. Everu Pair Guaranteed. JanlmB AKIN, SELLING i CO. USE ROSE PILLS l'fiTiiT 4 T4liBWriTC Jl II rTSTTTj DrCUMsmlsaM. rataluiilTTl Un.la a-j avaar Ofiaaitta Ca-Vforctstse sJass. wma& nrv"i i .Tiiur,j isv roesculrmct: mmm nu M aiailad rxx to aU pulkanta, ani in cu t'r oi U year without ortierliig-it ltoontalna !J'.T,!,W', IstreUUe and Flonf boeds, fl5?fe aSSrrSlVorl?, "I O. M.FERRY at CO. OETBOlT MlOH. F. S. Akin. Ben Selling. II. E. Dosch. Sj taasw Ifilr wESMtLWLM " IASaassisB Eh a iu.asalH cq w awHaWslaaBH d KaaaaHlaS aasKasi abaaKflal pppiiPHn rt aLHaHSaf aaaHH aPPPaaS a aPmPmbaW a .aPmPmaaV sPM03ffnsaNM??r PH2SssssssM VpTW LJrHW WH& war