The Douglas independent. (Roseburg, Or.) 187?-1885, July 21, 1883, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    S35
WAV.
D Being In thy dlssolutiou known
UoU lovely then;
O Life that ever bu to die alone,
To live (gain;
O bounding bean that still most bow and break
To touch tblne end;
O broken purpose that mast failure take,
And deatbward bend.
For the great tido to stretch from rock to rock
His fehining way;
O wandering Will taat from the furthest shock
Oftea deep gray,
gilver constraint of secret light ou higti
Leads safe to shore;
O living Rapture that doth Inly sigh,
And evermore
'Within thy j iy vhe wailful voices keeo;
1 se tnee now,
Son of the antatnomable deepl
And trembling know
The crowned shadow of man's opposite,
1 he forces dread
That sway him into being, blanched with lights
Of thunder bred;
poised Passion wrought from central breath
ofwnlrling storm
And evermore deathless life in death,
That ktiil reforms.
And tho'i, man's prototype In varying moods, .
Didbt lonely beat
The vacaot thore and rpeechlesa solitudes
, With silver feet.
Through the great eons wandering forlorn
In search of him,
At lose and Mi like vecent flame, lone morn
And evening dim,
Ere light had grown articulate In love.
Or silence knew
Herself hj worship, f ten didst thou ever move
Beneath the blue
And incommaaicible mystery.
About thy shore;
A visible yearning oi the earth and sea,
Thatevtrmore
Flung out white arms to catch at some far good
Yet unfulfilled.
And falling touted and sank in solitude
Wlih heart uiisi I lied;
A voice that ever crying as ot old
: la deserts dumb,
With hollow tooKue reverberate foretold !
A llie tocoae. EUlce Hopkins.
HEREDITY AND INSANITY
W. "W. Golding, M. D . , superintendent
of the government hospital, read the
following address to teachers before the
National Educational association at a
recent session: i
Gentlemen: You take the j mind
young auil fresh in life's morning and
send it, aspiring to become godlike, on
its upward flight; I receive it torn and
bleeding as it comes fluttering down; is
there anything in common betweenour
studies that I should ask you to pause for
fifteen minutes in the important labors
of your session to listen to me? I doubt
it, unless you consider it in the light of
a fifteen-minutes reces3. How shall I
teach the teachers? The germ
of insanity lies back of the
I education, and I question if the inexor
able law in nature which we know as
tbat of "the survival of the fittest" will
not, in spite of any or all education,
send a considerable per cent, of weak
brains to moulder and become moss
grown! within asylum walls. This
seems but a reasonable deduction from
the facts within my own observation;
bur then I reflect that the sources of
life and reason are not in our" hands; I"
know how a little more or a little less of
that subtle something we call common
sense makes the difference between the
wise man and the fool; remembering,
too, how a sage physician, by a sudden
flash of sunlight thrown from a mirror
upon an idiot boy in a darkened room,
awakened a gleam of intelligence, dis
oloBinga mind wLere it had hitherto
been supposed to have no existence, I
realize what teaching in the hands of a
master may accomplish, then, standing
among the melancholy ruins where my
arudies bring me, I think that perhaps a
different education would have spared a
father's anguish for his only son, could
have saved this demented girl
To have been some man's delight,
might have still kept eloquent that
drivelling tongue; and sol am here.
From my standpoint the first mistake
that we make in the edacation of the
young is that we do not pay sufficient
attention to the temperament of the
child; we are not all cast in the same
mould, even if we do bear the same im
a.?e. This lethargic youth, whose men
tal integuments are like the wrappings
of a rhinoceros, needs all our goading
a brain fever is hardly possible to
such an organization; bat this girl, with
clear skin, spare neck, intellectual fore
head, and speaking eyes, whose lessons
are always perfect, whose answer antici
pates almost your very thought, whose
nervous susceptibility quivers through
every fibre if she fancies your reproof of
the above mentioned blockhead is meant
for her it is not study out of
school that she requires, but the gym
nasium, the rest of long vacations in the
summer fields, with nights of repose un
broken by any dreams of school prizes.
I know ofttimes your brighs scholar is
sueh an oasis in a desert of abounding
dullness that there is ahtroDC temntatinn
to the teacher to give him free rein;
hence it often occurs that your valedic
torian is never heard of afterwards. Is
is staying power that you want more
than brilliancy of mind.
Are we not asking too much of our
children? Lay the foundations broad
the I broader the better in physical
health, and let the mental growth be
natural without foroing. I like the open
atr summer schools; even in our climate
we should be gainers with more of the
out door life of the old Greeks,' I wish
we had again the forum and the grove of
Aoademia; in such sohools our children
would gain in vigor to more than
counterbalance their loss in the exact
methods of book teaching. Yes; the ad-
wn their name is legion. A treatise on
the neurotic disorders now makes one of
the largest works in a physician's li
brary. It is an age spendthrift alike in
brain and material. Of the heat and
ower that have been slowly accumn
ated in the coal measures through the
eons of geologic time, which would last
with careful consumption for myriad
generations, we take 2 per cent, for our
purpose, sending the remaining 98 per
cent, to be dissipated in warming inter
stellar space. To the charge of wasteful
expenditnre,modern science answers that
future generations can make available
the energy of the tides and keep warm
by electricity stored up in reservoirs
whose feasibility is even now being de
monstrated. They will need it, for the
ruthless destruction of the forests will
not even leave them the luxury of
wood tire. Yes, power is convertible
into everything short of mmd. bnfc tha
I doubt. The "Promethean heat" Once
exhausted, the vital energy of a race de
stroyed, science, that tells us so much
Knows of no way to restore it, and his
tory points us only to the Huns and
tne liotns.
lhe danger to our civilization to-day
i : it 3;
uea in me direction oi nervous exhaus
tion. I know that those who believe tha
we are just on the dawn of an intellect
ual and a material millenium will smile
at this, and the v will tall vnn
a a. .
history o
is
that never in the
tne world was there a higher
manuooa, or a time wben the mdividua
man was so grandly cared for and had
such possibilities as at present. The
world, in its successive epochs of civil
ization, has always shown a culmination
of prosperity and an intellectual bios
sommg just before its decline. Witness
the Augustan era and that age of gold , o
opamsn conquest ana .renown. This
the age of brain ; the marvelous discov
enes of. science are utilized to intensify
onx struggle for wealth, for vantage
ground, u maxe an ine universe tribu
tary to the little span of our human life
The luxuries of the last generation h&va
become the necessities of this; wealth is
oniy relative, and power never brings
uuuwm; mere is a constant increment o
Duaiu, auu wmo tu tue orain mat goes
halt or maimed into that battle.
Do you say this is the mere vagary of
au uiuuusn, wa uasouaara line cry tnat
finds no believers? Ah, but while it was
in the in unite decrees that Cassandra
snouid not be believed in that fated o,tv
At 1 It'ttt 1 M . J '
uuua me less oia tne divine amatascom
pel her to prophesy, none the less were
ner forebodings true. Do not under
stand me to mean that our school educa
A . m . . .
uon is responsible tor all this; no, not
even lor any considerable part of what
we are pleased to call the spirit of the
times; but what I do say is that it is the
duty of the teacher, instead of drifting
with the tide and accepting the tenden
cies of the age as something inevitable
and not to be overcome, to stand up in
the dignity of his great ofBce, and of his
mannood, and call a halt to this on
rushing madness, and to so instruct the
coming generation, the youths who shall
tase our places, those who "shall be
Kings hereafter," as to lead them into
"more excellent way."
in trutn, we are sponsors for the fu
ture as well as possAssora of the present
and are morally bound to transmit this
earth, which is ours to-day.and the visor
mi i.uib uuman me, wnicn tor a span we
hold, unimpaired to those who in r.h
endless procession shall come after us, as
the miller may use the water in the river
io turn nis wneei and pass it on to an
otner, out nas no right to divert the
cnannei or poison the stream.
lhis brings me to what I have to say
on heredity, a subject which concerns
you as educators in the broadest sense
t K ; l .1 . i , i . '
tuiiurou aioue Dni oi communi
ties, ti use now, for the curnoses nf
certain trial, the newspapers, those blind
Samsons in the cause of popular educa
tion, nave given out that there is no such
miug as nereaitary disease, that the
most emiaent experts have so stated.
Well, what my brethren who stand away
up at the head of the class did say, try
ing to be very exact in the use of lan
guage, feeling that they were under
oath, was, that the tendency to insanity
was hereditary, not the disease itself.
j.ue rose by any other name" but in
common parlance we say, and properly
say, hereditary disease; and where a
great truth is involved we cannot afford
to be misled by any subtleties of exact
definition. And here I take occasion to
say, in answer to this newspaper dictum,
that the hereditary charaoter of insanity
is a perfectly well established fact in
medical soience, and is recognized as
such by the profession, and that,
acting as the remote cause, hered
itary predisposition has prob-
aoiy more . to do with the
developement of insanity to day than all
the assigned immediate causes put to
gether. "Visiting the iniauitiea of the
fathers upon the children unto the third
and fourth generation" is not a mere
metapnor of oriental language, it is a
fact; it was true three thousand years
au, it. ia irue now. we say this child
does not learn because he has no head
dui tne real trouble is the father was
acepnaious before him? what a thousand
pities such a father ever had a son; the
1001-mner was an important agent in the
twilight dawn of civilization which wa
miss at its noonday. From Lycurgus to
pect to recover Love from his blindness.
but all the more I reoognize how far ud
in "the glorious procession of saints and
martyrs" some souls will hereafter stand
whose lives, like their devotions, have
been single, whose silent purpose has
been that the inherited taint of their
blood should die out from the world
with them. And we have seen iu them
only single men and women, who being
bo uiuuu ciuuupieu. in aomg good had
jound no time "to marry or be enven in
marriage," and so left no children to in
herit their many virtues. But perhaps
me vxreai xeacner saw tnose lives other
wise.and had such in mind when He said
for our instruction the words that we
are inolined to hurry over as we
read, "And some have made them
selves euuuohs for the kingdom ot
heaven's sake." Too much already the
race is poisoned with hereditary taint;
yes, as we use language, there is such a
thing as inherited disease; it is a sin to
conceal it; to deny it is a crime.
The fifteen minutes, for which I thank
you, are over. This is, indeed, a weird
paper for teachers, as much out of place
with its detention as that of the Ancient
Mariner to the wedding, guest; but if
you censure it from the educational
standpoint, my apology must be that I
have erred with the old Athenian teacher
who exhibited a drunken man to his ohil
dreh as a temperance lecture.
j FARM ASD HOUSE NOTES.
Stubble On land rich in vegetable
matter the stubble bad better be burned.
Drouth As a protection against
droutn, the constant stirring of the soil
by the small plow or cultivator can be
surely relied on.
Sulphur Remember to sprinkle the
eggs of a Betting hen with sulphur.
Every louse will be killed by the time
she leaves ner nest.
Useful Young chickens can be made
useful in a garden at insect catching is
long as they do not scratch the newlj
planted ground.
Hay Grasses intended for hay should
be cut when they are in bloom. Cut
earlier there is too much shrinkage.
Cut la'er the hay is less digestible.
Melons Potash, whether in the shape
of ashes from burned wood, or in the
form of sulphate or muriate, is an ex
cellent dressing for melons of every
kind.
Orchards A successful orohardist
says that if he were to live over again he
would trim his trees higher and pasture
his orchards with sheep in place of plow
ing or mulching.
Paris Green A member of the West
ern New York Farmers' Club sprayed
his orchard with a solution of Paris
green to exterminate the canker worm,
and reports that the apple aphis, which
formerly infested his tiees. had entirely
disappeared.
Potatoes. An Ohio farmer says that
repeated experiment and long observa
tion have satisfied him that flat culture
of potatoes not only requires less labor
than hilling, but produces heavier crops
of equally good quality, and this
whether the season be wet or dry.
Rice Waffles. One quart of flour, half
a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonfnl of
sugar, two teaspoon fuls of baking pow
der, one large teaspoonful of butter, two
eggs, one and a half pints of milk, one
cupful of hot boiled rice. Sift the flour,
salt, sugar and baking powder well to
gether, rub the butter into the flour.
beat the eggs well separately, and add
the stiff whiies last of all.
Prune Puddinsr. Scald one Dound of
Freach prunes, let the swell inu the hot
water till soft, drain and extract the
stones, spread on a dish and dredore with
flour; take a gill of milk from a quart.
Bur into it gradually eight tablespoon
fuls of sifted flour: beat six eccrs verv
light and stir by degrees into the remain
der of the quart of milk, alternating with
tne batter; add prunes, one at a time:
ooii two nours and serve with wine sauce
or cream.
and dreadful meaning. Any one who de
sires to possess the "Mrs. Langtry nose,"
has bnt to sleep in torment for a week or
two and the great result is obtained. If
the figure of the would be beauty is not
as lovely as she wishes, " the anatomical
corset maker" will supply her with a noc
turnal squeezing apparatus which will
"fine her down" by degrees. If her
statute is too long for beauty, she may
remedy this by wearing what is mildly
called an "appliance;" in the days of the
Inquisition it would probably have been
classed as an instrument of torture. This
appliance squeezes and streches the low
er part of the body, and its use is said
not to interfere with the comfort of one's
beauty sleep. Once enameled always
enameled. The professed beauty can
wuij auoru to oe yenow, grey and un
curled in secret. She finds herself
precipitated on the downward path. It
is just as well, having once begun to at
teno to the matter, to perfect her beauty.
Why not make use of the marvels of
modern inventiveness remodel her ears,
her nose and her finger-tius? It is diffi
cult to say why she should not carry her
theory out to the full. London World.
Value of the Stjntloweb. Agricul
turists claim it to be the best egg-producing
food known for poultry, keeping
mem iu a mnvicg condition and largely
increasing the production of eggs.
Every poultry raiser who tries it will
find that the seed is the best food known
for glossing the plumage of fowls, and is
almost indispensable to those who want
to fit their birds for exhibition to the
best advantage. The Russian sunflower
is easuy raised, requires very little care,
can be grown in fence corners or other
places difficult to cultivate. Its produc
tion of seed is immense, yielding often
at the rate of 100 bushels to the acre. It
should be planted in hills four feet apart
any time from the 10th of May to the 1st
of July. Three quarts of seed will plant
an acre.
FTP Hi Mil i uniwiiiiiiiwiiiiniin jii iisiniijii.ai i.jiLi ,
IlllllltlltiUfllfililr
ia "J ' a i . i r i ri'Bi'ia,
mm id ii iwi
167 Third St, PORTLAND, OBEGOX.
JOHN B. GABBsSON, Propr.
All the Leading Sewiug MahtiieH. Oil,
fieedlea, Attachments and Genu
ine FarU for sale,
All kinds of Sewing: Machines Repaired
and Warranted.
GENERAL AGENT FOR
The MMl aaiWMts Sswing Mines.
GENERAL AGENT FOR
THETURKISH RUG PATTERNS.
GENERAL AGENT FOR
T IE UNIVERSAL FASHION CO'S PERFECT
FITTING PATTERNS.
DR. SPINNEY,
JT. IX IT ray street, U. F.,
Treats all Chrenle and Special Dl
YOUNG MEN
A. lste vieit lo the warerooms of Messrs Gardner
Bros. 165 first street. Portland. OreRon, hit filled
us with wonder at the immense displaf of pianos
and organs of all kind. Prominent amon U
these is steck's Little Giant rtano. Jmai f andele
C5' vl ooerfDlly powerful and sweet
Sfi2?t,2he Tbr 0aa 8irpesses any Instru
ment we have yet heard Visit this home when in
Portand and enjoy a musical treat. jyfi-lm
BiAvns Vmemite cnerrjr room Facte.
An nrnmfiH mmKlnntUr. 1.
f7u . 41 , """'uu r ""i preservation
of the teeth and gums. It is far 6uierior to any
preparation of its kind in the market. In large
handsome opal pots, price fifty cents. For sale
by all druggists. Hodge, Davis & Co., whole
sale agents, Portlaad, Oregon.
New Branch Bouse.
Messrs. Raymond fe Wilshire, of San Fr&ncisce."
SJ.?6118 brnch house at No. 95 Front 8t!
application ucm. rncea furnished cn
DON'T BUT BOSS BOOTS UNLESS
TOU WANT THE BEST. SEE THAT
OUR NAME IS ON EVERY PAIR.
AJK.LN. SELLING & CO.
T? ILot0Sraph m Oregon, go to F.
G. Abell's gallery. 167 First street, Portland. His
work will bear the moat searching tests, for it is
made by genuine artists, who understand their
business.
Roaring cataracts of honest applause, loaming
oceans of fun, and the best show of the season
now being held at the Elite theatre, Portland,
Oregon. Kegular prices 25 and 50 cents.
Turkish Bees. Send to John R Rirrionn
167 Third street Portland, for catalogue of ie-
aigna.
Garrison repairs all kind of sewing machines.
Tuke frm. Pfunder's Oregon Blood Purifier.
WTO MAY BR SUFFERING FROM THE EF.
fects of youthful follies or Indiscretion, wDl do
well to avail themselves of this, the greatest boos
ever laid at the altar of suffering humanity. DR.
SPINNEY will guarantee to forfeit I50O for exery
case of Seminal Weakness or private diseases of any
kind or character which he undertakes and Jails te
cure.
AIIIDL,E-AGED HEX
There are many at the age of thirty to sixty who are
troubled with too frequent evacuations of the bladder,
often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning
sensation and a weakening of the system in a mannst
the patient cannot account for. On examining the
urinary deposits a ropy sediment will often be found,
and sometimes small particles of albumer will appear,
or the color will be of a thin milkish hue. Again
changing to a dark and torpid appearance. There are
many men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the
cause, which is the second stage of Seminal Weakness.
Dr. 8. will guarantee a perfect cure in all such cases,
and a healthy restoration of the genitor uuinary or
gans. OfBce Honrs 10 to 4 and 6 to S. Sundays from 10 te
11 A.M. Consultation free. Thorough examination
and advice, t5.
Call or addre s 1)K. SPISNEY A CO.,
No. 11 Kearny treet. Sail Francisco, OsX
OREGON BLOOD PURIFIER .
Strangers in Portland
Should not fall to visit tha
SAN FRANCISCO GALLERY,
''or, of First and Morrison Streets,
Where you can get the
Best PMoira in America.
CIVIL ATTENDANTS
Always in Charge.
W. II. TO WKE, Photorapher.
(O. ST. P. Cq-Mew Sertes Xc. -.)
PHILLIP BEST'S
1
MIEE BEER
v. . jessb de co.. Xo a wu.hn. M.
Analysis of ores, metals, coals, etc. una assav for
4 assays. S10. Orders hv mail
gold and silver. 33:
promptly attended to,
MITBIC HOlsR.
vanoe in all kinds of Knowledge is some- Christianity is an immense advance; he
thing wonderful. The Cell me it is nec- carei for the race and forsrot the ind v,M.
ual; but may we not be iu danger of for-
wssary mat my son snouid begin at
the age of seven to fit for college, if he
is to enter Harvard; it is true he begins
to shed his milk teeth at that time, but
be will only see of Harvard the outside
of the building, for, college or no col
lege, I Jo not intend to make him the
last of my race. You say, and probably
truly, that; the student now must kno-y
more when he enters college than I did
when T gradpated, and, I may add. than
I ever have Binoe. And what do you ac
complish by crowding all this accumula
tion of wisdom into one .little brain?
"Why, you have increased the cerebra
tion, you have intensified the nervous
action, but you have not enlarged the
cranium, or, if you have, the ohanoes
are you have done so at the expense of
the physical vigorr.
But you say by your education we
have moved forward the limit of the in
dividual life. For thirty centuries, and
I know ' not how much longer, the
Psalmist's three score years and ten have
been the inexorable horizon of earthly
existence; we cannot change this, but we
do practically extend it by enlarging its
vista; our life keeps quick step to the
wonderful march of science; we ride with
the storm, we write with the lightning,
we paint with the sunbeam; everything
is by the instantaneous process. As Poe
said of the singer Malibran, "She
crowded ages into hours; she left the
world at twenty -nine, having existed her
thousands of years." I grant you, if
this were the final ago, nothing could be
more desirable: if this was the closinsr
scene and no coming timo, no children
to inherit our exhausted vitality and to
call us anything but blessed.
In a bookstore, the other day, the first
volumne that met my eye was "A New
Form of NervouB Disease." Naw form?
getting the race entirely in our care for
fcue latuviauau Christianity came down
irom heaven with its divine mission to
ine poor and the outcast, and its promise
is that ; "the meek shall inherit the
eartn, Dut ahould we not draw the line
at defectives, and stop the intermarriage
of the insane? ;
Imoress upon those who look to you
for instruction and guidanoe that, while
in their tender
these unfortunates, they will do well to
rM SMy Al. . 3 . .
uivme compassion, thev
shall, as they value the integrity of the
race, in tneir pity stop short of marriage.
It is time that the laws which govern
nereauy were taught in schools other
man meaicai. bins against the physical
uu i00 tuose involving the moral
nature kare far reaching in their effects.
Ah, what a moral teacher vice becomes.
when we see its last stages in a hospital!
ouuienmes x imns i will open a sehool,
lor, tnougu 1 am but little of a preacher
ana less oi a leacner, my hospital could
lurnisu a kindergarten with some strik
ing object lessons. Contemplating the
misery resalting from , bereditarw dis
ease alone, looking on these pitiable
wrbcks where vice and decreneracv. in
sanity and scrofula, have left the blight
on faces more eloquent of the truth of
the inheritance of sin and the wages
that it brings than any poor words of
mine can be, I wish I could take the
young men just breaking ground for the
planting of their wild oats, and let these
silent teachers speak to them! We sow
the wind; "ah, what shall the harvest
be?" .
No ,you do not need to remind me how
easily, when its passions are involved,
the world forgets the lossons of its phi
losophy, and as a physician I do not ex-
Buttermilk Pudding Althouah from
its consistency this can scarcely be called
a puaaing, still it is a verv nice dessert.
and was eaten by our grandmothers when
anna and corn starch were unheard of
delicaoies. Boil one quart of fresh but
termilk, beat one esrz. aoinch of salt and
a heaping teaspoonrul of flour together,
ana pour into the boilinc milt- fir
briskly and boil for f wo or three minutes
and serve while warm with sugar, or still
oetter, mapio syrup.
Profitable Crop Amateurs in farminc?
are constantly asking agricultural papers
which are the most profitable crops to
grow, ihere is no answer tothis ques
tion. Almost any crop well cultivated
under suitable condition pava a nrofifc.
The safest rule in going to a new locality
or engaging in a new business is to do as
buuse ruuuu.you are aoing. 'ne crops
grown in a locality are pretty sure to
succeea mere; otners, However, profit
able elsewhere, may not, and probably
win nor, ao so.
ateaK i"ie uut a tender steak into
thin slices and sprinkle them with a lit
tle nnei-chopped mushroom, onion and
parsley; season well with pepper and
salt, rubbing the seasoning thoroughly
over them on both sides; then roll up
eacu mice oi Deei. rui into a saucepan
a layer of bacon, then the rolls, and just
enough water to cover them; simmer
gently until tender, but not overdone,
with the lid on th saucepan. Have
ready a pie-dish lined and bordered with
paste, put in the meat and a few hard-
boiied eggs quartered; reduce the gravy,
pour it over the meat, cover with naste
...
ana oa&e in an oven.
M- w .fJtMTlCK. lOT First Siret-Leadlne
1 X. Y. JEWEI BT(H).
Bottled expressly for the
Pacific Coast Trade.
Superior In quality andjpurity to all
others.
One Trial Will Convince,
SOLE DEALERS,
CHAS. KOHfl & CO.,
44 FRONT STREET,
Portland, Or.
NORTHERN PACIFIC
Land and Immigration Company.
Officet Rooms 40 and 41 TJnlAn Block.
C A.. GOVE. Haaurr. 1AT vi. s. .""
Pbmonds, watches and jewelry. The Rtf
Country orders solli-lted.
Kallrond watch.
PORTLAND.
O. Chilsteom.
President.
WEAL. EXGBATKRS
C B. PET V. Ko. S3 Oak Rtrut-a,,.!
er, manufacturer of notary and lodsre seal., fcr
tetters, 4c.; rubber stamps
and steel stamps, steel
and stencils.
TEXTS AND AWNISes.
V "!". . North Front St.. eor.
jjaiiuiaciurer oi an Kinds of tenta. n
i c
bass.
hydraulic hose. waron and other awning Flagsof
all nations a specialty. Will fljl country orders.
iKEMOVAli"
-V"K.KttT.PKr8c,I-plan Maker an.1 Onran
builder, and direct aent for Stei.,way A Son's
pianos, has removed from 83 Yamhill to 131 Fourth
street, near Alder. Portland. "
IjOOBS, SASH A n BLIK
OREGON.
Frank Owkm,
- Secretary.
This Company operates throughout Oregon, Wash
ington, Idaho and Montana.
Lands of all kinds bought and sold.
Immigrant Colonization a Specialty.
Headquarters tor all land seekers.
Description of Government and other wild lands
furnished free.
Information given on all branches of business.
Correspondence solicited and communications
promptly answered.
1. O. box 86Q.
A Reliable Honse of Portland
to www rr is
SAFE TO SEND ORDERS.
MERCHANDISE BROKER.
uu.:a'M'Sli.y'. windows
and
UAKBLK MUKk.1.
, T0 PK.K T Strk.-Monument.
Tombs, Headstones,etc, furnished In Itilan and
American marble. Countty orders filled promptly,
tsend for prices and d. signs.
JK.MCT.ATTOHTTN- HAS OPESFt) IN notf.
nectlnn with hlR Oreen Front O'othlng and Fur
ninhlne Htore, a Me.-rhand se Urokernge, and will seii
and nnrcha al kinds of Merchant in Inree or
small quantities for psrt'eR livln ontsMe of the city,
for a very small comro'sxlon; therehv rnvlntr thrm the
erpenne of oomlncr to Portland Matchirgdress sam
ples a specialty, orders promptly filled. Correspond
ence solicited. Address
J. 33. MTA.TJaiIJL,Tjr,
P. O. Box 82T, Portland.
REFERENCES Murphy. Grant A Ct.. Aken. 8en
ng Co.. Jacobs Bros., Wasserman fc Co., J. Bar-h-man
Bros. 30Jlmt
ENLARGED PICTURES
MADE IN THE
JSn' Highest Style of the Art,
BRANCH
HOUSE OF "THE WESTINGHOUSB COMPM'
8CHENJ3CTADY, NEW YORK.
Jh: h- ; r
V;;:; p f ;
- Wfcj. .! naSSnwannnnnaaaaSaaaaMMiM u '1 11 ill Saassay. 1 . 'i'-J- j i
MANCfACTURI 8
OP THRBn,'
HOR9 E POWER 8,
PORTABLE AND
TRACTION EXGIKZ8.
MILLS. iTC.
GecersJ sgecto fcr Use
Wctlcgbonea Double
Cylinder Znglne. Ko
8tLLi:D EJGIKEER
N Ei;E33Afi Y:
RIE. land;
El KCTRIC.iL
GINE? a apecial'y,
fully guarantee .every
nnJcJe a ld by us. Lo.
c J aid trcs.rer A genu
for THE DEERIXQ
TA'INE BINDlfE.
Reapcrt, Mower, ud
dealer la nil klnda of
BUGGIES and AGRI
CULTCRAU IMPLE
MENTS. Carl or send
for circulars, priceje.
Office, foot of Morrison
met, Portland. Or.
KA.
OR
EN.
-
THE NELSON ROAD OART.
$X I Br F;r'V-.2f " 1 I
Most Perfect 2-Whee!erJ Vehicle ! the World,
Easy of acceRs, shafts being low and attached direct to
the axle. Perfectly balanced and entirely frea from all
Jerkin motion of the horse, ao disagreeable to other
carts. Rides better and ts more convenient and desirable
than a buggy, at about one half the cost, and it will
carry a top equally as well. Four different styles and
qualities. from 100 to 150. Refer hv nermlsMon to all
partieswho have nsed them to prove that they are thm
Mmt Kldlng Vehicles In the VForld. 7
, , A. P. NRIAOT,
Portland Carrlsira rAnnfH.ptnrv u .xh mi vr,t. e
Portland, Oregon"
OF POBTLASD. ORFfiflV.
(Incorporated under the laws of the State.) Every organ manufactured under the oarel va i,t nr. ..f
320 First street, Portland. Omcmn.
S;.sR5Pi:i8, Manager Branch House, New Tacoma. W.T,
r iv t-uui'jiK, JNianasrer Branch House. Salem. Oregon.
BKTTKIS T11.1S GOLD.
CALIFORNIA FRUIT SALT a
A Pleasant and Effioactous Remedy.
fi imm
IF YOU HAVE ABUSED YOURSELF
By over Indulgence In eating oi drlnkinir: have s!ek
or jiervous neaiacne; arynesst ot tne skin, with a
irverisn lenaencj, nignt sweats and sleeplessness; by
u iutous una
Steven's California Fruit Salt,
And feel young once more. It w the woman's friend
iry it; SI per bottle; 6 bottles for 5. For sale bv all
umgtfisis. uuwit, uaviss CO., Wholesale Agents.
DR. HENLEY'S
0jfPf?C (LieMrs Extract),
if p ;p p tot w onfletfiii HamtiTB
L3a iafj Mfl UTigoraior. -
Biniiy.
(Pyroplicspsate),
Tcmc (or tis Blood, ni
rood lor tie Bran.
'Another Great Victory la Medico
Science I
Worth Millions to ths Human Family!
CELERY, BEEP AND IRON
Is acknowledged by all Physicians to t4
the Greatest Medical Compound
yet discovered.
Is vl never rilling nrr fr Xenrulala
und Airrvous ilcbtilty.
"liRTKYQRH.
COUPKRfe HAMILTOX, 3vll Engineers and
Rurv-eyors. Room if. First National Bank building,
Portland, Or. Ail kinds of surveying and dral tin
done in any part of the country.
TBAKJEBIBST
EPIRK BAKKKY.-42 Washington. Voss A
tllhr. PrODS. Uanu(iMlKir. nt VH1. K.rf c; 1
Picnic Butter. Boston, Sugar and Shoe Fly crackers.'
Orders from the trade bolialled and oromntlv at.
tenoed to.
iuouo. DUB IS
this admirable?
Beant Bought in Shops.
It is a question whether beauty, like
gooaness, must not necessarily be genu
ine in order to be admirable. The climax
of this tneory is reached when the old
lady oi eignty-nve, tne aged patroness
of many charlatans, is held up to ad
miration Decause at a little distance
she would pass for thirty. Proudly her
"makers-up" point out how this effect is
produced: her hair is false, her skin
is enameled besides being "tightened'
to prevent wrinkles her eyelashes are
stained, ner ngure is
false all oyer. Now, is
Would not a little honest old axra an?
ugliness be more agreeable? Be this as
it may, it is not very important. "When
a lady nas reached the mature ae of
eignty-nye ner appearance troubles no
one very mucn, except her grandchil-
aren. jjut wnen it -conies to the
lady whom you love, or mirt.f
wre quite certain that
she was genuine, the case is differ
ent. It is bad t o know that von r ilua
Angela must sleep in corsets, or she
never, never could attain to the fashion
able waist: it is ad to think of thn in
evitable results on her poor little feet of
nose Louis umnze heels, which mafc
her pretty boots look so bewitching. Fig
ure to yourself what it must fl lit tn.
take your beauty sleep with a pair of
pincers on your nose. That pretty old
fashion ex-pression has now taken a new
K. X K 11 YA tt enm ey and Counselor at
Law Room S llekum'a halldlnK. Iegal busineai
pertaining to Letters Patent for inventions, befon
the Patent Office or in the Courts, a specialty.
BY
ITJKT RECEIVED AT OARRISOX'S SEW'INO
19 Machine store, 1ST Third street, Portland, Ore
gon. Iti9 canes of Household Sewing Machines. Dur
ing two and one half years' use in Oregon the House
hold has forced its wav to the front, fta imu.Hn.
merits are now well known to the public. Agents
wanted to sell In every town in Oregon.
CHEAPEST HOUSE
FOR
AMERICAN WATCHES.
Elgin, Springfield or Waitham Watrh.
I oonee Sliver Cm Sia OO
! 8 ounce Silver Case i so
la 4 enaee. Mllver Cam ... ... im
I neaa boilsMi. and
. - u.c, .eae taeaniaa
A.meriM Movements- Imitation.
Also full stork nf
JEWELBT, CLOCKS and SPFtrr a nr..
Goods sent C. O D." to any part of the coonfay.
aon.v ju beck.
Watchmaker and Jeweler.
14 Front St. foopoatte the JEsmoad),
Portland, Oregon.
S. Larsen & Co.,
WHOLE8ALB OBOCEBS
OTITOBE. S. L. tfc CO.
Produca and Commission Merchants.
Dealers in Tropical and Domestic Fruits. Knta etc
Consignments of country produce solicited.
H US fe 114 Treat Street. Fertlaad. Or.
TTSE ROSE PILI.S.
I. G. DAVIDSON.
PHOTO Git A PHE R ,
PORTLAyp. 011EG0X.
C. E. McBREEN'S
EYE & EAR INFraMARY
SANITARIUM, OR HOME FORTHESICK
Haeadam Boud, bet. Porter and Wood Sts..
South Portland. Or.
Dr. Pllklngton, late Professor of Eye fc Ear Diseases
in tne .Meaicai uppanment oi Willamette University
has erected a fine building, on a beautiful elevation in
the south part of the city, and Is prepared to accomo
date patients suffering from all diseases of the EYE,
r.i nor in im i . ami win pay sieciai attention to
persons laboring under Chronic Nervous affections,
niiu w uwwa wt:uuur u unien, anil receive a Umi
wanumoeroi cam's expecting confinement.
i ne luiemion is io provide a lining tor alien rases
witn an tne oest nygienic ageiicics combined with the
nest meaicai ssui to oe naa in tne metropolis.
ConsultUiK ohvhlcian and surseon Dr. Phll'n TTftrvev
Prof, of diseases of women and children In the medical
aepartment w Ulamette L-mversitv.
Also Ir. J. M. F. Browne. Prof, of Physiology med
dep't. Willamette Voiversitv.
For any amount of referecies and circular, addresp
J K. J. IS. I'1.HI.'1XI.V,
Cor. 1st and Washington ftta.. Portlnod. Or.
P. S. Akin, Bkx 8Ki.iJ3ja, H. K. DoacH
BOSS BOOTS ARE BEST.
THEY ABE ALL SADDLE SEAMS. -
IB ITT JiO OTHER,'
fll I
See that Our Jiame is on Erery Pair.
AKIS, SELLING- St CO.,
' ' Portland. Otvcoa.
WILLIAM BECK & SON,
Wholesale and retail dealers In
Sharp's, Kemington's, Ballard's. Marlla
and Winchester Repeating Rifles.
Colt's, Reminflton's, Parker's. MoorV
Baker's Double tnd Three-Barrel
BREECH-LOADING SHOT GUNS.
S1000 JIEWAI1D
VV i "A1U to AJ: ' PEKSON PRODUC
"'O uivurciicvtuoi rua Ulsn
Dr. Keek's Sure Cure for Catarrh.
QUEENS WAltE BAZAAR,
itTpri?e $1. "--- u I our aruggfat has
Pr.Keclc thoroughly oaderatatida, and is emlnenUy
succewrfnl in the treatment of allroalc anTallBf
"T " 1 " L" ana all asrea. harinc
made a mwiaJtYnr thsir -.mr. J" E'rT' rrT"1
He treat. CiaTwtthSnt og u.V knifeT hS faVS?
Nolady aooSd be without it yZZ,F ffiaSTJ,
rSlTr?'u'aDn or of suffering U
SS24Su7PPlyto time to the
ciaesjentioanr prt of th7 wiU E?c"r. 1eS
montiki, and a list of printed oaestlons fn
6T llorrison Street. Portland. Or.,
THE LEAPING AND CH EAPKST 1IOVSE
furnishing Store in Portland. Tea aad Dinner
Sets a specialty.
All Ooods below Pint Street Prlees.
W. B. MA11YE,
Cirll Engineer, Survejor & Draushlsman.
AM. K1XDS OF KN(J IN EEKINf 1 KXECCTED
in the state of Oregon and Idaho, Va,h:ngtja
and Montana terntories.
Sooia Ko, la, over Flrat Natlonul Rank.
PORTLAND, OREGON.
Full Set of Teeth for $10.
Beat Set, 915.
TEETH FILLED AT LOW RATES; SATrSFAO
oaten Saranteed. Oas administered. Dental grad-
IKI3HJV I1ICOH.,
Portlnod. Oreaoa.
Room St, Union Block. Btark street entrance.
k kFT&SSJSJI. fxl.,ddres DR. JAMES
. No. 1SS First street, Portland. Or.
WOBTHWRST I10VE1.TT MIHPAXY.
WANT IK TII TO WW
sw invention
- atliWalt Im
jBoy. to caiiTaws for Novelties.
U.. H A . A., MK . 1
..wi..uuWoew inventions t cataloeue A tctiua
!!; Agents for specialties. s Commissions rmld.
. . . v. -
NINE CENT STORE.
Great Bargains in Fine Dry Goods.
Pend for price I'st and sspirs. Frea AddrtM
W. B SK1VELY,
183 Third irei, rrtnnr. Oxgnn.
CP
R'S) j
PISHING TACKLE!
Of every description and qnality.
LEAOEBA, FJUHT. IIOOK.8. HAlsn.
Braided aad Tapered Oil 811k T.i.
SIX SPLICED SPLIT BAM Hon Tinna
-
Slargeoa I.lnes and Hooks of all Kinds.
165 and 167 Second Street, Portland.
H. P. GREGORY & CO.,
No. 5 North Front St, between A and B,
Portlaad. Oregoa.
n V 1
1J
HA"W8,
Woodworking
Machinery.
Straw Eogiaeo
and Ilollera, -
Mining
Machinery
Beltlasr.
Paeklac
avBdIlt
Floor Mill
Maealaeif
Water Waela
Etc etc
ii
SyKSiBGarfifflrCatairr
I TQUID OR DRY, PRICE 1 00; "ATirOSPHERlO
J-i Insufflators." price 60c. f)rr t'nre and Insnfll.
core mailed on receipt of nrice. with full direction for
oserc M. a. SKIDMOKK Co., Druggists 151 First
strret. Poulard. Or,
h1 A rents for theN. Iacift
mwiM
BISHOP SCOTT fJ RAMMER SCHOOL.
-A Boarding avd Day School for Bork.
THE SIXTH YEAR TJNDER PRESENT MAN
agement begins !ept. i. Classes in Greek. Latin.
German. French, Emcltah. mathematics, book-keep
tng. sdeii'-es, music, drawing and penmanship.. Disci.
pline strict. Kend for thirteenth annual catalogue
witn list of former members to the If ead Master-
y. u. tiawer 17. j. w. icill, M. D.,
- Portland, Oregon.
THE BALDWIN
I THE O.VI.Y FiKST CLiSS
Family Restaurant in Portland.
USE ROSE PILIS.
USE ROSE PXl-LS.