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About The Oregon scout. (Union, Union County, Or.) 188?-1918 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1887)
V f SCHOOL AND CHURCH. It is said that this Subbnth-sclionls of the Presbyterian Church on chil dren's day this year contributed to mission work $20, 42a. -19. Tho Presbyterian Sabbath-school in the city of Damascus is attended by 350 children and the day-school by 730. Between 400 and 500 natives attend tho Sunday services. Public Opinion. Dr. Greene, of Constantinople, re ports that tliero are in that city four Mormon missionaries from America. Thoy seem to have taken up their resi dence there, rind have held one public meeting. United Presbyterian. A site of fifty acres has been taken for the ("Chinese ) Gordon Memorial Boys' Homo, in London. A building U to be erected which will accommodate one hundred and sixty boys, and tho cost of maintaining the establishment will, it is estimated, be $20,000 a year, Tho marking system should be abolished in colleges and in the higher schools, and the students should bo made to feel that they aro working to equip themselves for the actual struggle of life, for rounding out and completing their own personalities, and not to pass tho examinations merclj. Omaha Dec. There is no fighting on a quag mire, raith furnishes tho only solid, the only safe ground on which wo can contend. Faith clothes us with the wholo armor of God. Faith connects us with tho Captain of our salvation, without whom wo can do nothing, but through whose strengthening us wo can do all things. Jay. A student, being desirous of learn ing whether there was any truth in the statement that Seneca was addicted to drunkenness, opened an illustrated en cyclopedia, and having found the naino of the celebrated philosopher, the first object that met his gaze was a woodcut, beneath which were tho words: "Seneca, after an ancient bust." The ardent investigator, find ing his worst fears confirmed, looked no further. Vcnmaii's Art Journal. Street boys congregated on tho steps and in the vestibule of a Boston church and littered up things with pea nut shells. The sexton kicked, but tho pastor stood by the boys, for ho thought the old walls might bring good to tho urchins. The sexton appealed to tho governing committee and was sus tained. Thou came the crisis, and the pastor appealed to the church, and this high court, hearing the case from their parson, who pleaded almost in tears, stood by him. There are lots of boys about the old tomplo now, but there are few peanut shells. RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL. G d's eye is upon his servants in the solitudes of the desert as well as amid the splendors of tho palace. "I don't believe in tho existence of the devil." "Well, my friend, resist him a while, and you'll believe in it." The Moravian. To try to do other work than that to which God has adapted us, is simply to break and ruin some of God's tools and leave our work undone. Mr. Whittier is quoted as saying: "T'is a great thing to own a little bit of tho Lord's earth straight up to tho heavens. A man feels better for it." It is stated that out of tho 27.000 inhabitants of the Samoan islands 7, 000 are church members and 3,000 are candidates for membership. Thero aro 200 native p istor-;. A CABINET-MAKER'S LUCK. Some men uro born rich, some ac quire riches and others have riches thrust upon them. To the latter for tunate class belongs Mr. Charles A. Johnson, who resides at 375 W. Ohio street, Chicago, and who was the lucky holder of one-tenth of tickot No. 13,6-lG Avhich drew the first capital prize of $150,000 in tho October 11th Drawing of Tho Louisiana State Lot tery Company. A Traveler reporter, hearing of his good fortune, called upon Mr. John eon to congratulate him and hear from his own lips the story of his profitable investment. Ho found Mr. Johnson a very intelligent young Swede, twenty-seven years of age, a cabinet-maker by occupation, who eix years ago came to America and found employment at his trade in Chicago. Being of sober, frugal and industrious habits, his wages were sufficient to maintain him comfort ably, but would not permit of much to bo laid aside for a rainy day. Hav ing three times beforo purchased tickets in the lottery and drawn noth ing, his joyful surprise may be imag ined when ho found that his last investment of one dollar had brought him a return of $15,000. The money was received by Mr. Johnson through tho American Express company on October 21, just ten days after the drawing, and is now deposited to his credit in ono of tho banks of tho city. When questioned regarding tho use to which ho would put his fortune, Mr. Johnfcon said : "I shall remain in Chicago and at once build a comfort ablo house, furnish it elegantly, and marry tho young lady to whom I have for some time been betrothed. For tho present I shall continue at my trade, and later 1 may engage in busi ness for myself." Mr. Johnson is pleased with the promptness with which tho Loftory Company forwarded the amount of his prize, and especially is ho delighted that ho can now marry mid maintain in comfort tho lady of his choice. Ho is a eontiblo as well as a fortunate young man, and will, with out doubt, make good uso of his end donly acquired wealth. Arkansaw Traveler, Nov. 5. TO MAKE CIDER VINEGAR. A yutck Preterm of I'rodurlnp; a Pure and Wliole.onio Article. Any farmer can easily change all tho cider ho is likely to have into vinegar by tho following quick process: The requirements are, first, a cask; second, a box made of four wide boards, fifteen to eighteen feet long, with a bottom board' "full of holes;" this is to be placed upright, above and leading into the cask; third, above and leading into this box there must bo an automatic fountain. These provided, each per son can determine where it will bo most convenient to improvise the fac tory, whether in barn or wood-house. If ho has no better place he can put the fountain in his house at a second-story window, the box and cask being out side under the window. Instead of the box. I used (with first-rate success) two headless salt barrels one above another, the lower one with one head full of holes. It may be possible that the barrels arc better than the box. tr eatise air is admitted where they join, and they do not allow the porous con tents to settle readily and pack as a straight box would. Cross-pins through the box would be a remedy against the settling and packing. Next I put in a half bushel of cobs and filled to the top of the upper barrel with oak saw-dust. Then, from the fountain, 1 turned on a stream of cider nearly or quite as large as a common penholder, but reduced to a mere dripping through the night. The saw-dust ab sorbed more than a barrel before any began to run into the lower eak. ITo fountain Was kept running with cider till the lower cask was nearly full. Then the fountain was supplied from the contents of this cask till the liquid had made three or four circuits through the saw-dust and corn cobs and had become excellent vinegar. Most of this was barreled, and the rest was used, alternately with new ci der, to replenish the fountain. Some times I used twice as much of ono as the other, but as fast as it became good vinegar I kept on barreling all except what was wanted to mix with new ci der in continuation of the process. When there was no more cider to work up, the vinegar in the saw-dust was got up by putting water in the fountain. ind as it descended in the saw-dust it "displaced" or pushed the vinegar downward. When the water began to come through tasting only a little of vinegar, it was turned off. The last lot of vinegar mav be mixed with that previously made, and the to tal measure will be fully equal to the original quantity of cider; and if the cider was pure and unwatered, the vine gar will be so intensely strong that it mav be largelv diluted. During the process considerable heat is generated, the saw-dust and liquor becoming quite warm. It may bo that this heat may bo increased or dimin ished to advantage bv turning on a large amount of cold eider at once, or by having the cider warm when it is turned on more especi ally at the beginning when every thing is eohl. However, without warming the cider. I succeeded as above. Tlie original recipe prescribed mixing i small quantity of hooey with the ci der. This is not necessary. The recipe also called for beech-wood shavings, as though nothing else would answor. The fact perhaps is that tho shavings anil saw-dust of all kinds of wood that will not coniniunicato taste or color, are about equally good. Dead ripe, cut straw, washed free from rust and smut, would probably answer. The theory of the quick process is based on the diffusion and exposure to the air. of the cider (or of any other fluid that will make vinegar), so that all portions may absorb oxygen simultaneously. If the theory is correct, then it is almost a certain fact that crushed charcoal or coarse sand that will ai'niit circulation of air would answer. Some people object to tho quick-pro cess cider; but there is no reason why the simultaneous absorption of oxygen by all parts of tho eider from the pure external air should make a vinegar less wholesome than that which is ono or two years in "making itself" by al sorbing oxygen through a bung-hole from the poor quality of air in a cellar where tho cider is fermenting. rresh made, quick-process vinegar is freo from animaleiiliu and will remain so for main' years without "dying," bo oming "niothery," or "ropy," if in full vessels tightly coiked. Cor. llural New Yorker. m Monuments in Berlin. Berlin contains monuments of fifty celebrities, ten of them being crowned heads Frederick William 1., Frederick tho Great (2), tho Elector Frederick I., Frederick William III. (2 J, Frederick William IV., Emperor William (2) and Queen Louise. Twelve are monuments of Generals Leopold of Dessau. Zieten, Scliwerin, Keith, Wintorfold, Seydlitz, Bliieher, York, Gnciseimu, Billow, Scharnhorst and Wrangel. Three are monuments of statesmen Stein, Count Brandenburg and Chancellor Coeceji; two of poets Schiller and Goethe; five of scholars Alexander von Humboldt, Wilhelin von Humboldt, Hegel, Graefe, Wilms; fivo of religious, political or economic reformers Jahn, Bouth, Timer, Calvin and Nouhatis; and thir teen of artists or writers on art Schinekel (2), Sehadow, Ottfried, Mid ler, Winekehuanii, llauch, Corneliitr, Knobolsdorf, Kiss, Hirt, Kuglor, Schnnsso and Waagon. X. Y. Post. m m ' ' A colored man who had boon bit- ton by a rattlesnake claimed to Jiavo boon cured by whisky and an applica tion of raw uhiekou Hash. It is hard to tell which had tho power to effect a una, but tho colored rneo and the hickon always draw pretty well to- gcthur. Puck. ABORIGINAL VILLAGES. Somn T tlio Ilnn.r-a CoiMtruetrtl lij- tho In (Hun Trtio f New York. Before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Dr. W. M. Beauchamp said: "Some of the finest New York relics are not found on inclosed sites, but be long to early travelers or residents in open villages. Many articles found on open sites quite commonly are never seen in forts, and the open vil lages differ much from each other. This does not prove that they were not sometimes contemporaneous. Early New York earthworks are rarely or never rectangular, but stockades are often of this form, being more re cent. Palisades were frequently sup ported by banks of earth, but these were replaced by cross timbers and parapets, firmly bound together, at a later day. When the Indians got new ideas and tools from the whites the de tails of forts and of warfare soon changed. Village sites were usually occupied but a few years, but not for distinct terms of ten years, as asserted by the French. These changes must be considered in estimates of age and population, as successive forts occur in groups. "Digging necessary trenches wai less laborious than supposed and foi palisades continuous trendies were made, not separate holes. Stockades probably had as many gates as earth works, but they have often been ovei looked. In the highlands forts were commonly long and narrow, often two or three times as long as wide, and usually with the houses in the narrow part, leaving the widur portion for pub lic uses and games. Ti.o long house was not peculiar to the .'.roquois. nor prominent among them, and facts have yielded to theories. Greenhagh no ticed these large lodges only in one town and Morgan's estimate would give that town live times the whole Seneca population. The traveler's ac count gave but an average of two or three warriors to a lodge throughout the live nations. The form of tho forts often alfoided little room for long houses, especially in those examined by the writer of this paper. Among the Iroquois they do not prove com munal life. Early writers often refer to an ownership of fields, and that high authority, Sir William .Johnson, said that every nation, tribe and family had its own district and well-known portion of laud. "The early Indians who occupied sonic of the open villages and small camps in Jsuw York or came here as travelers were neither Iroquois nor Algonquins, and they had more skill in working stone and a larger variety of stone ornaments and implements than those later nations who dwelt in forts. The modes of fortifying did not essen tially diller, except as better tools were obtained, and no forts were very old, as Squire judiciously has observed. Also tho long house was not largely used among the Iroquois and it was not peculiar to them. As for burial customs, thev varied so much that all that can bo proved is tho changeable ness of their rites. The few Iroquois long houses were found mainly in one town and proved nothing regarding communal life. In the five nations the principal men often had large lodges, while the others had not. because in their degree distinctions of wealth and station existed among them as among white men. Tho conclusion to be drawn from a true study of aboriginal life is that it embraced not only ques tions of war, social economy and re ligion, but also those of property and fashion." Troy (Ar. Y.) Times. THE DEADLY CIGARETTE. A Dainty I.lttlo Coniolrr Tluit Drives A way All Worry and Fret. A few years ago there appeared a small poem entitled, "My Cigarette," the opening lines of which were: "My d ilnty little Turlns.li cltfiirette, You drivo nwuy ull worry and fret," etc. According to the New York coroner who recently held an inquest on the body of a prominent young man who smoked three packages of cigarettes a day, there is quite as much truth as poetry in tho lines quoted. When taken to excess tho cigarette undoubt edly does drivo away all worry and fret. It certainly did so in the ease of tho young man upon whom the coroner held the inquest. After tliis dreadful example, no tViHibt many young men will go homo and burn their cigarettes holding one end in their mouths. It is claimed by smokers that tobac co makes men calm and complacent, or in other words, the moro they funic tlio less they fret. While too much smoking cures dead hogs it kills live men. Perhaps it was a knowledge of this fact that caused a condemned man in Texas to go to tho gallows with a cigarette in his mouth, lie hoped it would kill him beforo ho got there. Tlio bo who wants to livo long should avoid tho deadly cigarette. You may bo sure that Mjithtiselah never wont around with yellow stains on his thumbs. When a boy begins to smoke cigarettes, ho throws down a gauntlet to his father, and u bud-slat should bo promptly taken up and applied to ids person, otherwise his friends may find occasion to insert in tho looal paper something liku tho following: Hit. hands and tool wcro btlft and cold, Ills brow with dow wus wot; Tlio coroner wrote in hl ruoord book, "He kinokod u olgarotto." It has boon stated by scientists that cigarette smoking injures (lie eyesight, but tlio distance at wliioli a cigarette smoking boy can discern "tlio old man" orontos an impression that per haps the syiontisUi aro mistaken. Tcxai Sijlinys. Wo have been Informed by Colonel A. Andrews, who hns just returned trotn the Knst, that his Dlax end Palace will be open every evening until further notice. e have exninln-'d his iiiiiizniticcnt stock of ointnonilx, wnt lies ami jewelry and must CMifcss that we never saw its eqml in thU or any other city. It will certainly pay intending purclmv ers of goods in Ida line to t o n few blocks out of their wny and examine his choice stock before purchasing elsewhere, as they can save at least from M to per cent. In the Hue of diamonds and watches, lie has tho largest stock of any house in the State, and his prices defy competition. Parties in the interior will do well to send their orders direct to Colonel Andrews, stating iho article wanted and the price, and leave the selection to his good taste, judgment and honor, and they may be assured of being justly dealt with. If the goods do not suit, they ran lo exchanged, or the money refunded. Goods forwarded C. O. D. The Diamond Palace Is situated nt 221 Montgomery street, San Francisco, under tho Huss House. ltussla is massing troops on the German frontier. "A is the bud bit with an envious worm," so Is many a youth cut down by the gnaw ing worm consumption. But it can he made to release iU hold and stop Its gnaw ing. Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Dis covery" will if taken in time, effect perm anent cures, not only in c nsumption, but in all cases of chronic throat, bronchial ami lung diseases. Henry Kb rt hot his wife and himself at .lerscy t'lty. Absolutely Pure. ThU rtmvder never vni!(fl. A marvel of rmrltv. I strenctfi unit wliolcsomcnoii. Moro economical than tho ordinary kiiulu, niul cannot bo cold In coinotl Hon Willi tho imiltltuilo of low tot, short weight, nlum, or phosphate powders. So'tl only In cans. ItoVAfc BAK1.M rowDKil Co., 100 Wall Struct, K. V. PDCC fori jr I IIRJI SMITH'S (lGim) III'.ltAI.I), C-I1UU,,,, tll k-u lhlliila. Hindllo fori) cur iw.fitair.ttiiiil Int.. ii. P... M f.t..U 111.. I. ... ...... ,t VIIUUUIUU1U flUU. .... m. BUSINESS COLLEGE. '24 Post St., S. P., CaL Shorthand, Typo-wrltlns. Penmanship, llook-kccphig and Tulcginphy tdl lur 73. SGHOO OP PltACTICAI,, CIVIIi, MwJuinleal and Mining Ilu- k'lui'otliik'. HurTcilnir Arclil- itucturi tlrauiui; and Assay ing. JJAN'CItorTllUlUJINa. 723 Mnrkot St., San Francisco, Cal itjTSeud for circular. A. VAN'DKU XAILIiUX, President. IN THE SELECTION OF A CHOICE GIFT For 1 Vl(r, Parent, Teacher, Child, or Frlend.both t'leganconnil iisefuliie-Hs w ill ho found combined in n copy of Webster's Unabridged. ' UNABRIDlirJw1 WHIMS k w Dctildes many other valuable features, it contains A Dictionary of 118,000 Words, 3000 Engraving, A Gazetteer of the World locating and describing 25,000 Placcn, A Biographical Dictionary of nearly 10,000 Notod Persons, All in One Book. 3000 moro Words and nearly 2000 moro Illustra tions than any other American Dictionary. Sold by all llookscllers. Pamphlet free. G. & C. MERRIAM & CO., Pub'rs, Springfield, Ma, S IMC MUSICAL INSTRUMENT. Playi Plxulcal, Bacrwt, Danco and all powili r cuiM' correctly. I'rlco S15 to M Write It Oil I.ITli A Ull.lSi:, San I'nmclHCo, for catalogue CUBE FITS I Wh.n t ..v film I iln nut mMn fnfirvlr tu stno them foratliuuandtliunlmru them rrtura k it. I nin radicnl cure. 1 Iivh iuhiIii thtt (IImiibh of lfI I n, lA'llr KI'HV or FAM.INU HIOKNKSH allfo-lomj Mud I warrant my romwly to euro tlt worst caM-. Itui-ausa Miter lino failed it no ruatton fnr not now receiyum a cure, hfiitl at imca for a treatise and a rreu llottla il in? tnfalliltlti remttdy, (lire Kxpreait and Post Oltiou, U. ('" HOOT, .11. C 1 H'J IVurl Ml. tivw urh. the wmm JAM 1 mm Twenty jmuwi oncli, witli Ckiloreil Coven anil Full-pitgo I-'roniitipleca I'lctures. Tlioy wMl bo unutually attructlvo this yctir. a., perry MASON & CO., SOTompIo PIqco, Boston, Mass. CREAM IU superior ctcellcnco rroven In millions of homes for more Uian a nu&tter of a century It Is used ly the .rl.-. Ul.lnlll f I... fit.. Orsat t'nlrcrsltlen as the Stronirost, l'urest and Most ucaumui. itr, i rice inu uniy t.itKintt luwuri in., tlnet not contalu Ammonia, Lima or Alum. Hold only lu Cans. rmcF. iiAKtKo rowDr.it co.. NEW T011K, lltlCAtlO MT. LOUIS. WILLIAM BECK & SON. liolosalo nml It tail Denlcra in Toys, Camos and IMovoItios DOllS. Drums. & Music Boxes, Stoves, Music Boxes, TIN AND MECHANICAL TOYS, in: xx n ki.v.zik sux'vv.s ASSORTED CASES OF TOYS l'ut up for country trado. S.t SIO 81.-S SJO 1SIO Rend for C'atatosuo Xo. C 105 it 17 Hi'cotul fit.. Poi-tliuul, Or. ltUANl'll HTOIIKH. Ulrcralde Av Rpokano Falls. W T. Il Ktatu rt.,Salcm,Or OLD SORES AND ULCEUS r Ion standing etired tu AI.LKVN til HII.M:Slt.l K. Iltnnr fails. 11 Mall.tiSe. .Made by J. I: llfn, ht Paul, -Mlnu, XDTJR CATARRH Can too Ourod. Is INFALLIBLE I A c If Vs-ilir nriicvcylo- t?nr lfl ltellered lu FIto Minutes. HAVpKVKIt. Curoauaranteod If Takuu lnThna ItltOXCHITIH, Curo WarrautetL nKAF.VKSH Cured lu Three to Six Months, IHplitlic rlii, 4'rniip, cnrnl Bill, llciiilui lit', Kuro '1 Itroat fii'EEiuLY Cured. Invaluablo Romody ( Patented April, 1634. frlco of Trnatmcnt, SI 00- (Smoko II ill. $2.00 Dobcllutor, for Internal Uso, $1.00.) CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL GO. G52 Market SI., San Francisco, Cal. gJBowaro of Hurtful Imitations, II50PIi H'S It B SPHIVSAIt V Acme Electric Belt Agency 171 Fourth St,. boL Morrison and Yamhill. Portland, Oregon. ADVICE AND MEDICINE 8I.OO. All Dlseaae successfully treated. Uhrunlo and Nul vous T'nuliliti a stiecalty. Klieuiiiatisin. Neuralgia, fleueral and N'irtoUH Delnllty, Hoiulnal Wvaltnetia and Ixwt MaulKHHt siiccensrnlly tieatetl with the aid of the UR1.KIU1ATKI) Ac Mic r.i.Kinmo IIKI.T and other electric appliances. Heiual Diseases taken liy the case at nurnl teasunahle rates. A cIUH'tvnt Physician and Klco triclau In attendancu dally. Uuuntry patients Hill pleaat stattj symptoms as aocuraui as pusslble. C'orrusH)nd solicited. Tenns strictly cah, Qflfl ciiMCH or Hootnl ItlHi-rtHo, I'llm, OUl FlMMiireH, FlHtuliiH and Iteetnl Ulcer treated HueceMMl"nlly, ivlthout uno or knirt. M lthln punt two years. VIhUh Hovernl Interior towiiH. Kenil for cirrulnrM. J. II. 'llkliiKton,tI. 1 IVo.ii Jh'knm'H building. I'ortland, Or. 'i rtls lihl.T nr Iteprncrstorls mails csiirBily fur tbu cure of drpgcnifnu of Iho geuersllra orrftm. Tlie continuous strrsm or Kt.F.CTlUCITY .fif,llol Ibrouf h the parts mu.l rcitars tttjtii lohcallUTactluu. Do not toufouud toll ullti Kltctrlo Haiti sdrertUed lo cure all tits from htait lo lot. 1 1 Is for Hit OS B pcctrloiiuriio.fl, Kor circulars (llo( full lo. forUHtllou, addrf Ch-tr Kite Irio Hell Co., Ill Wa.lilOloa Ulrcet, Chicaju, 111. N P.N I'.Vo. 2(10 H. V N II No. '.'MI e Oniilmlin Omnh UttlUUllU UlllUMj, n hriqa m m -x-JBu a -Jl mm BALL mSm OM SPECIAL OFFER. Bit l.arjro Advi-rtUeiucnt In Pre Inn Number nt lld Taper. To nny Now Subscriber who will CUT OUT and sond us this Slip, with namo and P. O. oddross and $1.76 In Monoy Order, Express Money Order, Rotjlstorod Letter or Chock, for a year's subscription to tho Companion, wo will sond tho paper frea oach week to Jan. 1st, 1888, and for a full year from that dnto to Jan. 1st, 1880. If ordorod at onco thio offer will Includo tho Double MoSiday Numbers Knr TlmnUsi;lvlii and ClirlHtntaa. Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute NtnlT of i:iclitcru Exiicrlcnccil mill MUlll Till l'loiilcliwi tnnl MiirueoiKi. ALL CHRONIC D15EASCS A SPECIALTY. Patients treated hero or nt their hoinin. Many treated nt home, through correspondence, n9 successfully as If hero in person. Como and 8oo us, or send ten cents in Btams for our " Invalid' Quido-Dook," which trlves all njirtlc ulnre. Address: Wont.n's DiscensaiivJIedi Cai. Association, cm Main St., llutrolo, N.5C. 6 For " worn-out," " run-down." debilitated school teachers, tnllllnorf, scmnstresM'R, house keepers, nml overworked women irenernlly, Dr. Pierce's Fnvorlto Prescription Is tho liest of nil rest o nit I veto n I cs. It Is not a "Cure-nil," but admirably fullllls a nltiKleneM of purpose, being a most potent Specific for nil tboso Cliroi'lo Weaknesses nml Dlf-enses K'ciillnr to women. Tho tivntincnt of tunny thousands of such cases, nt tho Invalids' Hotel nml BurR leal Institute baa nrTorded n lnw c.xperlcueo iu ndnptlnjr cemediea for their cure, niul Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription ts tho result of this vnst experience. For iiitoi-iiiil congestion, iiirlniniuntioii nml ulceration, it Ih a Specific. It is u powerful jreneral, ns well as uterine, tonlo nml nervine, and imparts vigor anil ftrength to the wholo svHt- ni. It cures wealtnifrs of Etomneh, Indigestion, bloating, weak buck, nervous prostration, exhaustion, debility nml sleeplessness. In cither fcx. Fnvorlto Prescrip tion Is sold by druggists under our imiltve Oliamittec. See wrapper nroutul bottle. FRSCE $1.00, rsVgsLool? Sent! 10 cents in stamp for Dr. Pierce's largo Treutlso on Discuses of Women ( 1C0 pages, paper-covered). Addrchs. Wom.n's Disi-nN-mitv Jlunimi. Association, Coy Main Street, llullalo, N. Y. WWo LITTLE sas aVt LIVER ANTI-IIIIjIOUS nild CATIIAUTIO. SICK HEADACHE, UHloufl ITondnoiio, IZ7.II0H. CJoimtlpa tlOII, IlMllgOHtlOII, and SIllluiiHAltnckH, iiromptly cured by nr. iMoi-co'n lMounnnt IMu-Kiitlvo I'ollolsi. ' cents it vial, by Dntgnlats. Send for ' Descrltition and Man of l-I.OUIDASOUni- KUN1L It. LANDS. Ftmr lnllllonacre Etlltablo for Oranges, I.cnioni, Olives, Pineapples, Itanauas, titrowlicrrles nml cirly vtgctahlus. For talu on lontr credit, $1.25 to $8.00 icr aero. Addroas fVJ. SOLOMON. Oim. N. W. Ag't, T.ii Mi. 'lurU .SI., Clilnigo, Ills, Tho Oregon National Bank. OF IUItTI,AM. IBuoocnmirato Motruixilltjin avlngiflank. OAriTAL PAID IN, H100.000. Tniuwicta n (lenernl IlanVu g llualneaa. AOCOUNTH l.ept, Mibjoct, Id rhK'k, Hl-.IAH i;X(JIIANnt;unBuit PranclsroaiitlNoir York. MAKi:a 0()M.i:m'ION8 -us favtuahlo Uniis. VAN I). DttLAHIlJlU'lT. "KO. 11. MAItKLE. Jr., Ploaldout. Vtro-PiualtVsot. D. V. B HERMAN Oaaltler The Van Monciscar DYSPENSARY, PQBTLAND, OH. Yonnif, nilddlc-osod and old, r'nclo or marnod men tnd a.1 bo sutler with ,OHT MANHOOD3 Nerroiu DeUUty, Bpcrcoa torrhoa. Uemlnal Lottos Beiua' Iky-ay.FalllDg Miro ory, Weaa Kyos, Laos or Bkln Diseases. fjrohtlUs l jjergy, also iiioou rana Eruntlons. Hair ValUi Hair Val Una a. Hwelilna llouo rains. Btve Thruut, UIoivi, EX foots of Morcury, Kiuneyl uul flLuVler Trouble WcakBaok. Ilnmina Urlno, Couonhea, Qloot BUIc uro prompt rot tut and cvire for lite, It o tit MexcM Voiitralt .JoBfldoBttally Owo-inm 1H3 St 184 THJRP t?T. CURtS WHtRE All ELSE FAILS. Mest Cuuiih Hyrun. Tiuititi gnod. Use in tiuin. rioiti ity iirtitticeitt. O hn ttVen the Uhd la tliCMtcs uf tri.it lUit of lemcillct. nt ha given htos,t univcriil battufao- Munrnv nnos.. rl TO 6 UAYS. Corn Id pQBarutttd dai i CkttMtSUiOUlV Wiif, Ter (3 hni won th Uor uf tTid jiui4icn4 now tnV inioi) ttio leading Modi Racluc) f tho oildoin. Wrdoal hj th llncj Cbizlcil Co. Cincinnati, Ohio. roMby Druir(f(u PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." Tlio Original nml Only J en nine. Bahsnlslvsys IlclblI. Pi-wtreofTCurthlru Imitation, lodl.iwnialilo lo LADIES. Aak your llruitirUt M "Cliloheater'niiBTlal7'anl taio do other, or iuiloaa J. (itaran,) to us for lutrtlculara la ftlr by return mala NAME PAPER. ;hlehetr Chrmlrnl Co.. Paid by Untie1''" ererywhere. Aik for "Chlphe tcr'a KnuliaU" I'tiinyroyul fills. Tass oooUr. WATCHES OK ALL kMM MAKE In Gold or Bllrer. J EWELRY Or All HtylCM. Clocks, Silverware, Spectacles, OPERA, FIELD AND MARINE GLASSES. Country Ordern Nolleltcd. JooiIh Kent Hnlijeet to IiiHpcctlon. WATCHES REPAIRED and JEWELRY MANUFACTURED. A $2.50 PAPER FOR $1.75. w nil ibwjvn 7 v UA f m B M - Hi