1CA3ARRH
COLDS
GRIPPQ
COUGHS
CROUP
SORE-
HOARSE!
THROAX
NESS
A French statistician has calculated
that the human eye travels over 2,000
yards in reading an ordinary sized
novel. He has also estimated that the
average human being reads 2,500 miles
of hand-writing and print in a life
time. DON'T GET FOOTSOUE. GET FOOT
EASE. A powder. At this season your feet feel
swollen, nervous and uncomfortable. II
you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try
Allen's Foot-Rase. It rests and comforts;
makes walking easy. Cures swollen and
Fweating feet, blisters and callous spots.
Kelieves corns and bunions of all pain and
is a certain cure for Chilblains. Sweating,
Damp or Frosted Feet. We have over 30,
000 testimonials. Don't get footsore gel
Foot-Ease. Try it today. Sold by all
druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial
packiisre Frke. Address, Allen S. Olm
tted. Le I!ov, N. Y.
The commonest of all trees is the fix
tree, which flourishes in every part ol
the wot Id.
TO CURE A COLD IS ONE DAT
Take Laxative Brotno Quinine Tab
lets. Ail druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's sig
nature is on each box. 25c.
One wineglass of strong borax water
in a pint of raw starch will make col
lars and cuffs stiff and glossy.
The Best Prescription for Maltoria
Chills and Fever is a bottle of Groves.
Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply
iron and quinine in a tasteless form,
No Cure, No Pay. Price 50c.
The Chicago Historical Soeiety has a
line new building that cost $180,000
and a library of over 26,000 bound vol
umes and 60,000 unbound volumes be
sides many busts, paintings, etc.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth
ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their
Children during the teething period.
A new household implement which
will delight those who have suffered
the aunoyance of putting down a mod
ern carpet at home with the old-time
carpet stretcher and tack hammer is a
combination stretcher and tacker. By
i s means the carpet is stretched in
place and tacked at the same time.
A Frenchman has discovered a leme
dy instantaneous in its effects for the
horrible burns caused by the use of oil
of vitrol. It is a soft paste of cal
cined magnesia and water, with which
the parts barned are covered to the
thickness of an inch. It alleviates the
pain almost immediately, and when
the paste is removed no scar remains.
cancer
There are
never any ex
ternal signs of
Cancer until
the blood is
polluted and the system thoroughly con
taminated by this deadly virulent poison.
Then a sore or ulcer appears on some
part of the body ; it may be small and
Harmless looking at first, but as the can
cerous cells form and are deposited by
the blood near the sore, it increases in
size and severity, with sharp shooting
pains. No matter how often the sore is
removed by the surgeon's knife or flesh
destroying plasters, another comes and is
worse. The real disease is in the blood,
and the treatment must begin there. The
poisoned blood must be invigorated and
purified, and when this is done cancerous
cells can no longer form and the sore will
heal naturally and permanently.
Mrs. Sarah V. Renting',
041 Windsor Ave., Bristol,
Tenn.. writes: "I am 41
years old, ant for three
years had suffered with a
sever for-i of Cancer on
mv jaw. which the doctors
Kid was incurable, and
that I could not lire more
than six months. I accept
ed their atatemen as true,
and had given up all hope
of ever being well again,
when my drugaist, know
ing of rav condition. recom
niended'S. S. S. Aftertak-
-.rr a ino hi ' r'.-a tll sore
.began to heal, to the surprise of the physicians,
snd in a short time made a complete cure. I have
fanned in flcfh. my appetite is splendid, sleep is
refreshing in fact, amen joying perfect health."
overcomes t n 1 s de
structive poison and
removes every vestige
I of it from the system,
makes new, rich blood.
strengthens the body and builds up the
general health.
If you have a suspicious sore, or have in-berits-d
any blood taint, send for our free
book on Cancer, and write to our medical
department for any information or advice
wanted ; we 1 ake no charge for thisvser
vice. Your letter will receive prompt and
careful attention, and will be held in
strictest confidence.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, OA.
Bast dough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I
PWl In f tmft. Sold bT draSMtett. i
in time. Dr aragsisiR.
HfJH
!
Says: "Besides being a S
I ffood tonc Peruna is an ef- S
fective cure for catarrh, t M
recommend your remedy, B
w SUP
fea
VoST
A schoolboy at a prize examination,
says the Woman's Journal, furnished
the following biography of the patri
arch Abraham: "He was the father of
Lot, and had two wives. One was called
Ishmael, and the other Hagar. He kept
one at home; and lie turned the other
into the desert, where she became a
pillar of salt in the daytimo and a pillar
of fire by night."
J. M. Barrie's story of how a tele
graph editor, receiving a dispatch that
the Zulus had "taken umbrage," head
ed the news, "Capture of Umbrage by
the Zulus," has been paralleled by an
editor in the West. Shortly after the
anti-Semitic riots in Austria, a slight
shock of earthquake was felt in the vi
cinity of Vienna, and a cable dispatch
put it tersely that there had been "seis
mic disturbances" near the capital. He
headed the item, "Down with the
Jews!"
I'aine: "You will move for a new trial,
I presume, Mr. Paine." Paine rose with
a demeanor that was painful in its
solemnity. "I thank your honor for
your suggestion," he said, "but I am
oppressed with the gravest doubts
whether I have the right to move for a
new trial in this case. Your honor, I
have already asked for and have re
ceived for my idiot client the most pre
cious heritage of our English and
American common law a trial by a
jury of his peers." The judge then or
dered the verdict set aside.
Haydn had a peculiar way of deter
mining the time in which a piece of
music should be sung. On one occa
sion, a female singer in high esteem at
court had been appointed to sing one of
Haydn's compositions. At the rehearsal
she and the conductor differed as to the
time of the music. The matter was to
be settled by referring It to Haydn him
self. When called on to decide he asked
the conductor if the singer was hand
some. "Very," was the reply, "and a
special favorite with the Prince."
"Then she is right," replied Haydn.
Not long before his death Henry W.
Paine, of Cambridge, one of the most
brilliant lawyers of his generation, be
came Interested in a case, as a matter
of charity, in which a lad of some fif
teen years was charged with arson.
Paine defended the boy and offered
conclusive evidence that he was, to all
practical purposes, an idiot and totally
irresponsible. Nevertheless, the jury in
the case, after a charge from the court
which was virtually an order for ac
quittal, brought in a verdict of guilty.
The presiding judge then addressed
A plumber who was sent to the house
of a stock broker to execute some re
pairs was taken by the butler into the
dining-room, and was beginning his
work when the lady of the house en
tered. "John," said she, with a suspi
cious glance toward the plumber, "re
move the silver from the sideboard and
lock It up at once." But the man of
lead was in nowise disconcerted.
"Tom," said he to his apprentice, who
acompanied him, "take my watch and
chain and these coppers home to my
missus at once. There seems to be dis
honest people about this house."
Anthony Hope Hawkins believes very
much in men of letters standing by
each other, and he has worked tremen
dously hard to help on the fund which
the Authors' Society of London is try
ing to accumulate, from which pen
sions are to be paid to authors whose
literary merit has not brought them a
corresponding income, and who view
increasing years with fear. Recently
an unfortunate writer, who visited Mr.
Hawkins at his rooms In Buckingham
street, by the Embankment Gardens,
exclaimed on leaving with something
in his pocket: "Oh, sir, I feel that Provi
dence must have sent me to you!" And
the reply came with a twinkle in his
benefactor's eye: "Let us hope, how
ever, that Providence will not acquire
the habit of doing so."
LISZT'S "YOUNG BEETHOVEN.
A Reminiscence of Rubinstein. Half a
Century Ago,
Dr. William Mason was a pupil of
Liszt's, and while studying at Weimar
met many famous musicians, including
Rubinstein. In the Century he tells of
his first meeting with the "young
Beethoven," as Liszt called him.
Liszt sometimes left Weimar for a
few days in order to be present at or
conduct music festivals. On one of
these occasions, early in June, 1854, I
remained alone at home on account of
slight illness. As Klindworth had gone
to London for concert-playing and
piano-forte teaching, I had moved into
a suite of rooms In the Hotel zum
Erbprinzen. As a matter of interest
to pianists I here note the fact that
these identical rooms had been occu
pied by Hummel several years pre
viously. On the afternoon of the day on which
Liszt left with his cortege the head
waiter came to me, saying that a young
man who had just arrived was in the
cafe inquiring for Liszt and seemed
disappointed on learning of his at
sence. "I told him," said the waiter,
"that you were the only one of the fam
ily here. Will you see him?" I assented,
and in a few moments he ushered In a
young man about 24 years of age, of
strong features and with a great shock
of dark hair, who Introduced himself
as Anton Rubinstein. I explained to
him that Liszt had gone away for three
or four days to conduct a festival, and
that I could not say precisely when he
would return; but in the meantime, if
I could make him feel at home, I should
be very glad.
After some conversation he asked me
to play. I remember very well how he
looked sitting on the sofa, and the posi
tion of the piano in the room. I played,
but he did not. I had a suspicion that
he was inveigling me without any in
tention of allowing me to take his
measure. He sat there in a gruff Rus
sian way, like a bear, and perhaps my
imagination helped to produce this im
pression. Rubinstein was already quite well
known as a child prodigy, but of course
not nearly so famous as he afterward
Decame. 1 ao not recollect paying Mm
very much attention during Liszt's ab
sence, but, then, he did not allow me
he was rambling about all the time; nor
did I hear him play before Liszt came
back. When Liszt returned, Rubinstein
was immediately invited to take up his
residence on the Altenburg. I remem
ber that there, one afternoon, he played
may of his own compositions. His
playing was full of rush and fire, and
characterized by strong emotional tem
perament. He had .1 big technic and
reveled in dash and fire. His touch was
hard, and lacked the mellow and tender
beauty of tone which distinguished it
in later years.
STRIKING POWER OF FANCY.
Cainille Flammarion Cites Several In
teresting Cases.
Cainille Flammarion, in his recent
book, "The Unknown," alludes to the
power of imagination. "The power
which imagination is capable of exer
cising over life itself," he says, "has
long been established. The experiment
performed in tho last century in En
gland on a man condemned to dei'li,
who was made the subject of a study
this kind by medical men is well known.
The subject of the experiment was fas
tened securely to a table with strong
straps, his eyes were bandaged, and he
was then told that he was to be bled
from the neck until every drop of his
blood had been drained. After this an
insignificant puncture was made in his
skin with the point of a needle and a
siphon was arranged near his head in
such a manner as to allow a contin
uous stream of water to flow over his
neck and fall with a slight sound into
a basin placed on the floor. At the end
of six minutes, the condemned man, be
lieving that he had lost at least seven
or eight quarts of blood, died of ter
ror." A somewhat similar experiment was
also tried in England during an epi
demic of smallpox. Leading physicians
came to the conclusion that fright was
killing almost as many as the disease,
so they applied to the government for
permission to experiment on a con
demned criminal. The criminal, It is
said, was promised a pardon if he sur
vived the ordeal of sleeping in a bed
with a person who had just died of
smallpox. The man consented. The
result was that in the morning he was
found to be suffering from smallpox
and of this very disease he died a few
days later. Yet the bed in which he
had lain and the sheets and blankets
on it had been purchased expressly for
this very purpose and had never before
been used.
How to Save School Children.
In tie Ladies' Home Journal Edward
Bok takes up the cudgel again agains t
the cramming methods inflicted oa
school children, and urges as a step
toward a reform of the abnse "that
every parent who has a child at school
will send a note to the teacher that,
under no circumstances whatever, will
the father and mother permit any home
study by the child.
"This may seem to be a very simple
thing to do," he contends, "but often
the simplest things are the most effec
tive. If the teachers of this country
should, within the next month, receive
thousands of notes from parents to the
effect pointed out, which they could
and I can speak for hundreds of teach
ers when I say that they would gladly
do so hand to the heads of their
schools, it would practically mean a
readjustment of the entire system of
study. This may be better understood
when it is realized that the entire sys
tem of study during school hours in
many of the schools is so arranged as
to allow for some of the work to be
done by the pupils at home. Let this
taken-for-granted home study be stop
ped, and a change would at onceJSave
to be made. The studies at school can
not be increased in number, for already
there are too many. The school hours
cannot be lengthened because the tide
has set in to shorten them. Hence, some
stuies would have to be thrown out, if
home study were eliminated. And this
is the result desired." .
Un que Temples.
Mayalipuram, India, is graced with
seven of the most remarkable temples
in the world, each of these unique
places of worship having been fash
ioned from solid granite boulders. The
"Hevasa-Goda-Cla," the largest of the
seven, is three and a half stories high,
its outlines resembling those of an At
lantic steamship. The Inside of the
boulder has been chiseled away until
the walls do not exceed eight inches
in thickness. The two floors above
that of the foundation are each about
a foot in thickness, and seem as solid as
the rock of ages. The upper stories
are reached by a spiral stairway, carved
from the same piece of grSnite.
New Mexico the Great Sheep Country.
To-day the seat of the sheep-rearing
industry of the union has shifted from
the middle west to the plateau region
between the Rockies and Sierras. Ohio
is still doing very well in the business,
with nearly 3,000,000 head, but she has
dropped from first to fourth In the list
of mutton-producing states. New
Mexico is at the head, with more than
4,000,000; Montana has nearly as many,
while Wyoming leads Ohio by a few
hundred thousand head. Idaho closely
follows Ohio in rating. Oregon, Cali
fornia and Texas each has about 2,500,
000 sheep.
A Question of Color.
A young clerk at the Oliver-Flnni
Grocery Company received a slight
scratch the other day, and the manager
called out to the negro who does chores
around the store to go and get some
flesh-colored court plaster.
The negro started off down the street
at a lively pace, but In a few minutes
he came back with about three times
the amount of speed he used in his de
parture, and, running breathlessly up
to the manager, asked: "Do yon want
white or black flesh colored?" Mem
phis Scimitar.
Freight and Passenger Earnings.
Taking the United States as a whole,
I only a little over one-fifth of the total
' earnings of railways are derived from
the passenger traffic. A large proportion
of American railway lines are conduct
ing their passenger traffic at a loss,
I while others are merely paying ex
penses and deriving no profit propor
tionate to the investment and the yd
ume of business done.
Art and Nature.
A bulletin of the New York Zoolog
oal Society reportB that the experi
ment of decorating the walls of the
bird-house with paintings of landscapes
ins bad at least one interesting result
the cranes have several times tried
to walk through the walls.
The Chinese Situation.
The cause for the present Chinese en
tanglements is the abuse of the Chinese
immigrants by the foreign powers. An
other great revolution conies from the
abuse of the stomach. Overtaxed digestion
(induces constipation, indigestion, dys- '
1cisjcl aiiu .liit 11 in i-v . xiusieirer s stom
ach Hitters is the-best medicine to take.
It prevents nervousness or sleeplessness.
Don't fail to trv it.
Wash mirrors in warm suds, then
dust with whiting from a muslin bag
and polish with chamois skin.
Stops the Cough and
Works Off the Gold.
Laxative Bronio-Quinine Tablets cure
a cold in one day. No cure, No Pay.
Price 25 cents.
Professor Lloyd Morgan, in a recent
address, stated he bad found that
-oung chickens, taken straight from
the iucubator, could swim very well,
the power of swimming being perfectly
instinctive.
It the flowers in your window box
seem blasted, or are of a faded, sickly
color, cover the earth around the roots
about half an inch deep, with pulver
ized charcoal. The roses that blossom
in the next few days will have a tine,
lively rose color. Charcoal always
gives great vigor to the red or violet
colors of flowers. White petunias be
come varied with red or violet tints,
violets become covered with irregular
spots of a bluish or almost black tint,
but yellow flowers are insensible to its
influence.
AN EDITOR'S EXPERIENCE.
ARMY LIFE CAUSES PHYSICAL
AND MENTAL DISABILITY
FOR MANY YEARS.
Rescued From Death by Reading an
Advertisement A Journalist of Note
Advises His Readers and Friends.
From Farmer Dairyman.North Yakima, Wash
In 1883, I entered the regular D. S.
Army and was assigned to Co. "K,"
Sixth Infantry, then stationed at Fort
Douglas, Utah. My boyhood days had
been spent on a farm in Kentucky, but
I had not been accustomed to manual
labor for several years previous to en
tering upon active military duties.
The constant and excessive daily drills,
sleeping in tents and general exposure
of a severe winter, brought on a pecu
liar nervous trouble, which soon inca
pacitated me for all garrison work.
The post surgeon ordered me to the
hospital and diagnosed my case as
mnscnlar rhuematism. My lower
limbs seemed to be dying losing all
sense of outward feeling. The most
excruciating pains made me almost
wild with misery and I could not stand
alone. My appetite was ravenous, di
gestion perfect, lungs strong and gen
eral health good except for this dis
tressing disability.
After several days' treatment with
no change, the surgeon concluded I
had heart failure. "He rescribed tinc
ture of digitalis, and gave me several
ounces of this without any effect, ex
cept that I kept getting worse. In the
fall of 1884, I was discharged on sur
geon's certificate of disability, and be
gan the difficult task of existing and
trying to regain my health in a strange
land, surrounded by unsympathetic
people.
My condition continued to erow
more alarming. I was compelled
to use a heavy staff to prevent tailing.
AH attempts at manual and mental
labor were made under exasperating
difficulties. I seemed about one-half
dead. My weight was less than 140
pounds, though I Was over six feet in
height. I tried electricity with no
avail. Several local physicians gave
me treatment which was not effective.
Many well advertised remedies for
nervous debility were taken .with no
satisfactory results.
I read all the medical authorities
obtainable, and finally found my symp
toms under the head of Locomotor
Ataxia. The author said there was no
cure for the disease, and I believed
him. He recommended a mixture of
iodide of potassium and sarsaparilla.-as
a possible aid to existence. I took sev
eral bottles of this formula and double
the strength. This failing, I made up
my mind to die as soon as possible.
There was no comfort, pleasure or hap
piness in'life which knew nothing but
pain.
One day I read the experience of a
man who had been afflicted with Loco
motor Ataxia, and cured by the use of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo
ple. I bought one box and tried the
remedy, following the directions very
closely. This had a little effect, and I
procured a half dozen boxes, and" took
them before I was convinced that a
cure was possible. I began with ono
pill after each meal, in a few days I
took two, and finally used one box a
week. My pains gradually disappear
ed, color came to my fiesb, I could,
walk, run and jump, and actually dis
pensed with a cane.
Words cannot portray my feelings.
Today 1 weigh 200 pounds, am perfect
ly healthy and feel 20 years younger
than I did 10 years ago. Journalists
and all brain workers are liable to
afflictions such as I suffered. To all
such I would advise the 'use of Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People
in connection with cold water bathing,
morning and evening. I will cheer
fully answer any and all questions
asked by those afflicted.
JOEL SHOMAKER,
Editor Farmer and Dairyman. North
Yakima, Wash.
Subscribed and swom to before me,
this 3d day of January, 1899.
JAS. R. COE, County Clerk.
A specific for all forms of weakness
is obtained in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Pale People. The blood is vitalized
and becomes pregnant with the ele
ments of life. The nervous system is
reorganized, all irregularities are cor
rected, strength returns and disease
disappears. So remaikable have been
the cures performed by these pills that
their fame has sprear to the far ends of
civilization. Wherever yon go yon will
find the most important article in eveiy
drug store to be Dr. Williams' Pink
rati.
DYSPEPSIA
" For six years I was a victim or dys
pepsia in its worst form. I could eat nothing
but milk toast, and at times my stomach would
not retain and digest even that. Last March 1
began taking CASCARETS and since then I
have steadily improved, until I am as well as I
ever was in my life."
David B. Murphy. Newark, O.
CANDV
CATHARTIC
TRADE MARK MBJsTfRBD
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Bo
Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2;;c. 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sl.rllaf II.w.Ht Owp.HJ. ChiMgv, Monlr.al. K.w Tart. 311
Ufl Tfl RAP Snlrl and fi-iinrxiTiteed br all drnc
rlU" I U'BhU gists in V.VKK Tobacco Habit.
Rub your lamp chimneys after wash
ing with dry salt, and you will be sur
prised at the new brilliance of your
lights.
tlOO REWARD SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis
ease, requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system, thereby destroying the founda
tion of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in its curative
powers, that they offer One Hundred Collars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold bv druggists, 75e.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
For the first time some blind fish
from the Mammoth cave of Kentucky
have reached England alive and been
placed in the London Zoological Gar
dens. CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
The rice-eating Chinamen could con
sume the present world's crop of wheat
and still go hungry.
This signature is on every box of the genuine
Laxative BromoQuinine Tablets
the remedy that cures a cold In one day
The number of newspapers and period
icals in the United States has increased
from 5,871 in 1870 to 21,178 in 1899.
Health for Ten Cents.
A lively liver, pure blood, clean skin, bright
eyes, perfect health Cascarets Candy Cathartic
will obtain and secure them for you." All drug
gists. 10c, 25c, 50c.
Instead of an engagement ring the
Japanese lover gives his sweetheart a
piece of beautiful silk for a sash.
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Con
sumption has an equal for coughs and
colds. John P. Boyke, Trimtv Springs.
Ind., Feb. 15, 1900.
The retired list of the regular army
includes 764 officers on half pay, aver
aging about $3,000 each.
TOO KNOW WHAT YOU ARB TAKING
When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill
Tonic because the formula is plainly
printed on every bottle showing that it
is simply Iron and Quinine in a taste
less form. No Cure, No Pay. 60c.
It is probable that in the future
moie root crops, such as beets, turnips
aud carrots, will be grown for stock.
The difficulty has been in the labor of
slicing the roots, which is necessary
when feeding them to cattle, but with
in the past few years root cutters have
been introduced, which cut all 'kinds
of roots into thin slices, bran and corn
meal being sprinkled on the food so
prepared, which makes a meal that is
not only highly relished but one that
is cheap and promotive of the thrift of
the animals.
A company in New Haven. Conn.,
undertakes to serve hot meals to Ml
within a radius of seventy miles frc ji
its headquarters. These meals are pent
out in wagons with compartments for
each article; the meals are placed in
the different compartments smoking
hot and are kept at a high temperature
until placed on the purchaser's table.
The "elephant beetle" of Venezuela
is tbe largest insect in the world. A
full-grown one weighs about half a
pound.
$ Two Big Pains i
seem to be the heritage of the
human family everywhere, viz:
Rheumatism
and
Neuralgia
but there is one sure and
prompt cure for both, vie:
i St. Jacobs Oil !
tMM
Are You Deaf??
all oases of DEAFNESS or HARD-HEARING
an now CNtlBU br onr aw inwntjom only Upwrn
leaf ars incarabie. HKAD Nonas ttASE IHWURLT.
Tj cribs rour osm. Examlastlom snd ad Ties tree.
Ton saw oars ronTsaif at home at a nominal coat.
International Aural Clinic. JuStoSSiaa,
mmsmmsmssan
A Phosphorescent Crab.
There was recently added to the
aquarium at Calcutta a gigantic crab
about two feet in diameter acros its
shell, and having legs three feet ong,
which was captured in a dias-nt in
the Indian ocean about a mile fpo!a the
shore and at a deptn of 45 fat-cms.
After being placed in a large taik, it
devoured the fish and smaller oWsta
ceans that were its fellow prisoners,
and later, in the evening, surprised its
keepers and visitors by emitting a
white phosphorescent light, strangely
illuminating the gloomy corner jvhere
it had concealed itself between two
boulders.
Why Certain Metals Cannot Be Cast.
As is well known, some metnls are
unsuitable for casting, whileothers,
like iron, can readily be cast ia any
desired shape. The property of casting
well is said to depend upon whether
the metal contracts or expands on so
lidifying from the liquid form. Iron,
like water, expands in solidifying, and
hence the solid metal may be seen
floating in the liquid iron about it.
Gold and silver contract iu oooling,
and therefore, are not suitable for cast
ing. A Slight Correction.
Miss Lakeside Goodness! How
tanned vou are! You've been in the
sun. haven't you?
Miss Presyse (of Boston) Most as
suredly not. There are no means as
yet of transporting oneself to that
sphere. I have been merely basking
in the beams which percolated through
the circumambient atmosphere of At
lantic City.
An attempt is being made to reform
the Mexican army, teaching the officers
to stay by their men in an engagement
instead of seeking a secure place when
danger is encountered, and the men to
fire from the shoulder instead of from
the hip. President Diaz also intends
to have his army provided , with the
best modern arms.
While some farmers are deploring
the loss of profit on wool, tiie knowing
ones are raising "hothouse" or early
lambs, and make more profit from one
ewe than they formerly did with half
a dozen sheep kept for wool. They
use the mutton breeds, attach but lit
tle value to the fleece, and make larger
profits from sheep than they have ever
done before.
DOU YOU WANT YOUR SON EDUCATED FOR A BUSINESS LIFE 7
YAMHILL AND ELEVENTH STICKET3, PORTLAND, OHEGO.V.
Write us. Send for our New Illustrated Catalogue.
The Famous German Wood Preserver)
mm A VENARIUS CARBOUNEUM..
....Permanently Destroys....
..CHICKEN LICE AND VERMIN..
got One application is all that is required. It lasts for years. If
your dealer cannot supply you, write for circulars and information to the
following distributing agents: Perfection Pile Preserving Co., Seattle,
Wash.; Fisher, Thorsen & Co., Portland, Oregon.; Whittier, Coburn &
Co., San Francisco, CaL
NOTHING BETTER MADE
You can't make a mistake it yon get a
..Mitchell..
IWitehell, Iiemis & Staver Co.
s
PORTLAND. ORECON.
A
IN AMERICAN WATCH
rrhp handsomest H-K. double eoldnlated wstch ever offered
fxffV QR ssbbhbbbw Beautifully erne rave. I ,h uct.ni
' 3 s nr nnen f ice. fitted with ace
1 Mki" Buaiue AMTDir AM
MOVEMENT
mo Imitation, full
jeweled, nickel fin
ish , properly regn
lated and adintted
auick t ain and with aU
ypj jrsnWssPB modern improvements In
' mmmmm-- With proper carewilllwta
KSSKE! 20 YEAR GUARANTEE.
pea;a-:c9equlto anyt-Wsolideold watrh. SentC.O D.forVS.93
V?vssssS5"msBBBmms"rSB lactone t I nit n::rv wzt'.e
and ex presich arret, with privilege of FKEK EX A JURATION. If
not satisfactory, can ueret nrned at our expei
An elegant Qoldplaterl Cham worth One Doll
ff .l 9.1 ia sent with order. Where mo Exrjrei
STFREE
b OflM $3.85 must
be sent with order and goods will be shipped by registered
nail. Write whether Gents or Ladles. Jewelry Catalogue free.
People's Jewelry Co., Dept.33 Safe Bldg, CHICAGO.
FINE OLD
...WHISKY...
Gin, Brandy, Rum
12 full quarts. 9.00. Per gallon, 12.50. XXX
POET AND SHERRY, L50.
ALL GOOD GOODS
Orders for 125.00 and upward delivered free to
nearest Railroad or Steamer Landing. Blank
Cases and Kegs.
LOUIS CAHEN & SON
Established 30 Years.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
BRILLIANT Self-making Gas Lamp
Makes lta own gas. iLverybody can
now have light brighter and better than
electricity at about 1-10 tbe cost of k tyro
sine or common gas. One quart gaso
lene lusts 18 hours, giving 100 candle
power light ; more than & electric bulb
or a mammoth Rochester lamp. Any
body can run them; can be carried
around or hung anywhere; perfectly
Safp ' annrnvfid hv insurance companies ;
over 25,000 in daily use nearly two years ; all rec
ommend them. Local agents wanted.
BRILLIANT OAS LAMP CO., 42 State St., Chicago.
HELP WANTED.
WA NTKD-Men and women of good
character to represent established house
on salary; splendid opportunity. Ad
dress P. O. Box 537, Portland, Oregon.
s3R.8UNN'SrSPILLS
ONE FOR A DOSE. Cure Sick Headache and Dys
pepsia, KemoTe Plinpios, Purify the Blood. Aid Dlges
tloa, Prevent BtHonsneM. DonotGrlpoorSlcken. To
SfSSS.'iSKS' JU1 ma" 'roe; full box. 25c DR.
B08ANKO CO., iTnndelpku, Pi. Sold by Druggists.
JOHN POOLE. Portland, Okkoos.
can give yon the best bargains in general
niachinery, engines, boilers, tanks, pumps,
plows, belt, and windmills. The new
steel I X L windmill, sold by him, is unequalled.
The Smell
i
of the Back
That is where some people feel
weak all the time
They are likely to be deapondent
aad it is not unusual to find them
borrowing trouble as if they hadn't
enough already.
The fact is their kidnej'S are
weak, either naturally or because
of sickness, exposure, worry or
other influences.
'I am thankful to say," writes J. Ti.
Campbell, of Sycamore. III., "that Hood's
Sarsapnrilla has cured me. For many
years I was troubled with backache.. At
times I was so bud I had to be helped from
the bed or chair. I ani now well and
strong and free from pain." What this
great medicine did for liiiu it has done fot
others.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Promises to cure and keeps the
promise. Begin treatment with
Hood's today.
An iugenious table intended for the
use of invalids who are confined to the
bed, has been devised. It is so arrang
ed that it can be raised or lowered,
an 1 can be increased or decreased in
diameter, to overlap the side of the
bed. By pressing a knob it can be con
verted into a reading-desk, and spring
clips are provided for holding the lead
ing matter in position. The mechan
ism of this tablejs so easily worked
that an inavlid can operate it without
assistance.
Giraffe skins have become extremely
valuable because of their scarcity.
Ten or 15 years ago it was common
enough for a hunter in South Africa to
kiil 40 or SO ot the animals in a day.
At this rate they were rapidly being
exterminated, and now a giraffe skin
is worth anywhere from $20 to $50.
It is a great mistake to make a large
tea biscuit. Properly speaking, a tea
biscuit should not be more than tw i
inches in diameter and proportionate!.'
thick when baked. This gives a deli
cate, moist, flaky biscuit which will
be cooked through before the outside
crust has become hard or over brown.
3
Ihe Only Sure Cure and'
lrstantaneous Relief for
RHEUMATISM
SCIATICA. Mfc URALCI A, Nfci--VOUSNES3.
DYS EPSIA. HEAT
ACHE. C TARRH, CROUP. BR IN
CH. TS, LA CRtPPfc. MAURIS
HEART WEAKNESS, CRE - MN
NUMBNESS, etc. Buyabottle today and
have it in the bouse. It will save suffering and
doctor's bills. Harmless for children's use. o?i
tains no opiates or other harmful ingredients.
Absolutely pure and concentrated. Large bottle
of 300 doses for $1, prepaid by mail or express, or
we will send you (postpaid) a trial bottle for 25
cents. Agents wanted.
SWltlSQI BKEUMTIC CURE COHPIW, 164 Lake SL, Chicago, III.
CUTLER'S CMBOUTEcf IODINE
A guaranteed Cure for Catarrh and
Consumption. 11.00. I) Lock Box 146.
W. H. SMITH & CO., Buffalo, H.T, Piop's.
DROPSY
10 o ;YS' T&ATKSfc FREE.
Have in ado Dropsy and its com
plicatioas a specialt y for twenty
years with tus most wonderrol
success. Have cured many thous
and oases.
3. B. S. 5ESSM s BBHB,
Box H, Atlanta, Gra
V. P. N. V.
Ho. 45 1WOO.
w
HUN writing- tf ailvertis.rs pie...
mention this paper.
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