The Oregon ScoutK JONE8 &. Chancey Publishers. UNION, OREGON. IN MOONLIGHT. The whlto moon fill' thn silent sky. And tlrrirK at her feet . Tho white floodn rise and leap llio shore IJokl lovers, rash and licet. But a Kxrit Ur flood to fool her sway, And rush in a restless tide. Ia tlie love that leaps from my heart In words Kor her whom t walk beside. Thn whlto moon slips from tho client aky, Thn oca ullps from tho shore. And liack to my happy, Klleut heart Sweeps tho flood of words onco more. But not till tho wavea havo klcd tho beach. And the moon has klwed tho K-a, And not until, sweetheart. I too Ilato kissed been kissed by thee. a. w, n. Art of I'oIUIiliif; Diamonds. Tho art of cutting and polishing dia monds with their own xwdcr was intro duced in Europe, according to tho gener ally received account, by Louis van Bergen, or Bergueni. who, in Paris, studied the handicraft, then imperfectly practiced. Ho revolutionized tho trado and established a guild of diamond cut ters in Bruges. In 1475. nearly twenty years after ho had made tho discovery, if it was a discovery, ho was entrusted with thn task of cutting tiircc largo rough diamonds for Charles tho Hold, duke- of Burgundy. For his work ho received 8,000 ducat3. Tho largest was tho famous Bancy diamond, which was lost in tho battle of OransQii. Tho second after wards belonged to Popo Sixtus IV. Tho third, n triangular shaped stone, was set in a ring and given to Louis XI. Now York Mail uud Express. TI10 Orcnt Climatic Cyolo. According to tho calculations of M. .Adolplio d'Assicr, based on tho assump tion that tho coincidence of tho earth's perihelion passago with tho Rummer sol etico overy 21,000 yearn marks tho regu lar recurrence of a northurn glacial period, tho last glacial period, culminated in 1)2."50 H. C, the alternating period of greatest northern warmth occurred A. D. 1250, and tiio ico period now approach ing will reach its greatest height A. D. 11,750. Evidenco of tho slow cooling during tho past 000 years is seen in tho changes recorded in the northern limits of tho growth and ripening of certain fruits. Arkansaw Traveler. Influenced by ISiivlronniont. Many a man is saved from tho com pany of tho (leillcd nnd tho defiling by tho sweetness and light of a cheery homo. Many a woman, in the possession of a house which invites tho actualiza tion of her womanly concepts of tho amenities of decorative art. finds tho cares of tho household no d:ilgery and her work lightened and brightened by tho cheerfulness of her environment. Human nature is always more or less in fluenced by environment, and the house which one builds and lives in has much to do in shaping his character and dispo sition. Pioneer Press. I'olMm of tho Amliii. T11 tho splendid flowering timo of tho azalia it is interesting to remember tho old story of tho Pontic variety. Beneath tho fragrance of these flowers lurks n subtle poison, ond it was from them that tho honey was collected by tho bees of Pontus, which, when eaten by tho Greek noldiers in tho famous retreat "of tho Ten Thousan'1, produced extraordinary symp toms of poisoning. Xcuophon states that after eating It the men fell stupellcd in all directions, so that tho camp looked liko a battlefield covered with corpses. Boston Journal. IIo liluetied Ills Nose. A correspondent relates that, whilo limiting in Colorado last year, his eyes were painfully nlTectetl by a long march on snow, with a bright sun, Tho guide, also feeling tho glare, stopiKtl, and tak ing some burned wood from a stump, blacked his nose anil under tho eyes well down on tho cheek bone. On lieingasked tho reason he said it stopped snow blind iHfw, nnd as tho glare was very strong tho hunter did tho same, and found ini inedia'.o reliof. IIo did this all tho timo ho was out, and never found tho snow lUTect his eyes in any way. Nature, Keeping II III) In Toiv. "Edward, dear, I hardly know my own heart," said tho girl, softly, "and you must give mo a little timo to think it all over." "Will you want very much time?" ho asked, tenderly and hopefully. "When may I como for an nnswer?" In a low, Bweot voice, tho girl replied: "At tho end of tho season," And sho aroso languidly, adjusted her tournuro -with tho gentle tap indicative of noblo birth, and moved gracefully awav. uro. VTuntPtl Somebody to IIo Sorry. Dying Benedict. I bequeath overy dol lar to my wife, Havo you got uat down? Lawyer Yes. Dying Benedict On condition that eho .marries within a year. Lawyer But why Insist upon that? Dying Benedict Decauso 1 wantBomo- - body to bo torry that I died. Harper's Bazar. Well Up In Ills Iruiin, Professor (of class in journalism) "What Is tho diirereneo lietween an edi torial nnd an editorial paragraph? Student An editorial is of tho sumo nature as an editorial iaragraph, but I larger, and doesn't havo as much to say, Harper's Bazar, A IVrfeit Lifeboat. Tho field of Invention Is mill open for n , ipcrfoct lifeboat. Tho Itoynl National .Lifeboat institute, reports that "medals wore offered for a mechanically propelled 'lifeboat, but none of tho various designs ipoeived fulfilled tho requirements." Chicago Herald, Cat Vcru Iluhhlt. Cats aro found to Ik tho best extennl jwuun of rabbits in Now Zealand. They - do great havoe nmong tho young ones, ami in omo sections scarcely a rabbit -wm to 14 Mil, THE JUGGLER. nrountbank amldrt a crowd Thus crtml aloud "Walk up. Jlesxlcurs, and try the cure For every evil men eudure' It Is a powder which will clve All things for winch you strive and live. To fools it Rives Intelligence; And to tliu guilty imioeenco. Honor on rancals it In-mown. And to old women hrtiigH young beaux: Secures old turn young, pretty nlves. Makes madmen lead well u-niper'd lives In short, whatever you would gain It will assist you to attnin It Is a perfect panacea." "Tho Juggler's table I drew near ThU wondrous powder to behold Of which such miracles vero told It was a little ixiwdered gold :" The Fables of Florlan. I.lrnrds and Ibelr Tnlls. Most lizards havo tho faculty of shed ding their tails when seriously frightened, anil of sprouting new ones from tho 6tuinp sotno timo afterward. This leads a writer in a cyclopaedia for young jieople to say that "lizards' tails aro almost as brittlo as glass." and that a glovo or handkerchief dropped on them causes them to snap off. To my own knowl edgo tho tail of tho "joint snake," or legless lizard, is so much more "brittlo" than glass that it breaks into several pieces when it isn't touched at all, pro vided tho rcptilo is placed in jeopardy of his life. Tho tendency to sprout a now tail when tho old one is gono is so strong that it is not uncommon to seo a lizard with n forked tail tho new 0110 having grown out when tho old one was only partially dissevered. Henry J. Philpott in American Magazine. TVrnk llyes In Sellout Itooms. It is not surprising that60 many school children .suffer with weak eyes when wo consider tho conditions under which they are forced to uso them. Tho very fact tiiat tho light in many school rooms is twice btraiued through glass partitions beforo it penetrates the insido rooms, is in itself a severe test of sight. Tho pre ponderance of sash wood over tho panes of glass is anything but propitious to clear seeing. With heads lient over desks doing arithmetical examples, or studying tho fine printed school books, or reading their own imperfect handwriting trom which many oT tho lessons must Ihj learned, the only wonder is that all tho little ones aro not purblind beforo they reach tho grammar bdiools. Professor David Webster. M. D. Fishes hi nil Aquarium. In a storo whero birds, fishes and ani mals are sold I watched an attendant putting together tho material for a small aquarium. "Is it not great trouble to keep tho fishes alive? I asked. "Yon must change tho water daily, must you not!" "Not moro than once a year," was his reply. "Tht was the old fash ioned aquarium before the scientists had discovered for us tho oxygen producing plants. You see that bit of plant under tho rocks there? Well, that is oxygen producing. Wo put it in with tho fishes, whero it serves at onco as an ornament and n life, giver and preserver. This aquarium that I am now (ini.shiug will not requiro a change of water for at least eighteen months. Then by changing tho water it will go another year or year and a half." Now York Tribune. l'irnr of Kuro,.oiin Tom-lnls. It is a fatal error of almost all those 00,000 tourists who como iu tho annual swarm across the Atlantic that they lly along tho well worn paths, live in modern hotels, diet themselves on homuopathic doses out of guide books, and pass fi out city to city, just as tho rustic gazes through 0110 liolo after another in tho peep show at a country fair. There are thousands of people who stay at home, read quietly, look thoughtfully at laps nnd pictures, nnd through all kiu.s of good books get a far dceer insight into tho lives of other lands than tho bustling conventional tourists, who take the round peep show method of looking at Europe. Corinth Cor. Boston Globe. Strength ot 11 Wet Itope. Experiments havo proved that tho ten silo strength of a wet rope is only one third that of tho same rope when dry: and a ropo (saturated with grease or soap is weaker still, as the lubricant ermits tho fitters to slip with greater facility. Hemp ropo contracts strongly on being wet, and a dry rope twenty-tivo feet long will 8hortonto twenty-four on being wet. Frank l.eslio'8. Direction III "Tempering." A Philadelphia tool manufacturer in structs his workmen to hold -largo steel tools inn north and south line while they are being tempered. Unsays that many years ago ho noticed that such tools would often lly apart when lieing tem pered If held "oa!.t and west," and that tho liability to such accidents was greatly lessened, If not entirely obliterated, if tho tool was belt! "north and south." Chicago News. A Tomb In Algiers. At tho head of each tomb is a slab of marble with one or two round holes in which flower jKits aro set or ciqis placed thoro that tho birds may drink from them; the natives believe that these birds afterward lly away to heaven with a greeting from the soul reposing beneath. F, A. Bridgman iu Ilnrier' Magazine. I'lntrnr its lludges. Tho cornllower that was tho favorite of Kaiser William llu blue "bachelor's button" of this latitude is said to Ihj tho badge of tho Liberty arty in Belgium, while tho red oppy is that of tho Con servative or Clerical party. Chicago Herald. How lCggs Aro lUeil. In Franco alono tho wino clariflers use moro than B0.000.000 a year, and tho Aleutians cousumu fully 1)3,000,000 in calico printing nnd for dressing tho leather that is used In making tho lineal French kid gloved, Eastern Farmer, A lato refinement In dentHtry U a tiny elect rlo lamp for lighting up tho cavltfe of tho teeth during tho process of filling Algeria, which nlxty yearn ago was nearly all waste land, has now 0,000,000 nf acres under cultivation. Arm mortality hT llles. In connection with the subject of regi mental lossof there is the important one ot losses by diM.-nse In out army there were twice a. many deaths from disea as from bullets in the Confederate army the loss trom dwax' was. fqr ob viou's reasons, much less, being smal'?r than their loss in battle This loss by disojibo was. in our noitlicrn regiments, very unevenly distributed, running as low as thirty 111 Mime and exceeding .100 111 others, while in some of the coloied regi ments it was still greater There seems to be an nupiession that the regiments which suliered most in battlo lost albo tho mot (roin disease. Tins is r.n error, the direct opposite being tho truth. Tho report of the war department for 1800 says, regarding this subject, that "it is to be noted that thc.o slates which show largo mortality on tho battlefield likewise show large mortality by disease" This may bo true of the state totals, but is wholly incorrect as to the regiments themselves; for, with but few exceptions. tho regiments which sustained tho heaviest loss in battle show the smallest number of deaths from disease. The inference is a fair one that- tho flghting regiments owed their exemp tion from disease to the same pluck which made them famous, and which enabled them to withstand its encroach ments without tamely giving up and lying down under its attack. It was a question of mental as well as bodily stamina, and hence there is found in certain black regiments a mortality from disease exceeding by far that of any white troo)s, n fact which cannot bo ac counted for by climatic reasons, becauso tho particular regiments referred to were recruited from blacks who wero born and raised along the Mississippi, whero these troops wero stationed, and whero tho loss occurred. Col. William F. Fox in Tho Century. Itestniirnnt I. lie III London. Americans engaged In making tho grand European tour can never under stand one feature of restaurant life in London. If you happen to lion bachelor, and therefore dependent on chop houses for meals, as t ho hotels rarely provide for tho inner man. you will probably look around for a comfortable placo whero you can get acquainted and tako all your meals. That is tho great error into which all travelers fall. In London you want to select threo different chop houses, one for breakfast, dinner and supper, or is you wish to be English sans reproche. you must havo another for tho evening lunch about 11 o'clock. These houses all make a speci alty of one meal, and while you may bo supplied with enough to dull your nppe tito at oilier houses, you will only get perfect service at the one table for which tho houso has made a reputation. Then, for example, tako a dinner chop house: You tako a seat, ordei a piece ot roast beef and have the whole roast wheeled out in front of your table whilethe waiter slices oil a juicy morsel that would tempt an anchorite in Lent. When you come to understand these things you can live with greater satisfaction on $5 a day than nn American could on double that amount at homo. Tips are nothing, as a penny npietje is enough to satisfy ordinary waiters. Ulobe Democrat. The Women of Morocco. Ill tho cities throughout Morocco I found it impossible to get moro than a passing view of a woman's face, so jeal ously aro they veiled and guarded, and especially among the higher classes, whore the women, possessing no more intelligence than a child, are taught that all men but their lords and owners are fiends. Occasionally, however, by acci dent or design, the lace covering would bo dropped for an instant just as a wo man passed me. and at the same time an arm and shoulder u'ould be presented to my gazo. The women ot Morocco are of all shades and color, and I must say that some of the handsomest women I ever saw, both iu feature anil form, were full blooded negresses. Another surprise was to notice that many of tho Moorish beauties would show a snowy rounded arm and a clear pink and white si; 111 that the most beau tiful woman iu Boston would havo been glial to possess, but where they got this skin and complexion I could never find out, for tho men, perhaps, from their constant exposure to the sun, are tanned and blackened almost to the color ot the negroes. In the country all is different, and little attempt is made by the women to bo stingy with their charms, unless from some religious motives, and to this freedom of the country many n oor simple girl owes her jxisition as prime favorito in the liarem of some Moorish dignitary, who kiw her perfections whilo traveling by hei father's tent or hut. Cor. Boston Tramct ipt. Ceylon's I'lilms untl Cocoumit Trees. This low land up at the northern neck of the island is largely planted in Pal myra palms. I'or l'JO miles along the western and southwestern shore it is a fringo from one to seven miles deep of cocoanut trees. These two kinds of trees suport the bulk of the native population. They furnish tho material from which they build and roof their huts. Tho rap gives them their sugar and their intoxi cants. Tho green nut is their milk nnd tho ripo nut much of their solid food. From tho hark nnd leaves they make shetls, fans and matting; from tho fiber, sails, cordage, fishing nets, etc, Tho young leaves nro their salads. Tho ripo fruit given them oil for their lamps, for their hair and for cooking purpones. They wear for clothing tho net woven by nature about the loot stalks of tho leaves; plait hats, and sunshades, and baskets from tho fronds, nnd drink from tho cup; sail iu boats constructed of tho hard, old wood, nnd when sick make medicine from tho tloweru, Tho uses of tho palm nro said to run into several hundreds, and nro tho themes of innumemblo native itoems. Carter Harrison In Chicago Times, Tho Mediterranean Sui(f Dttiery. Science has claimed tho spongo fishery of tho Mediterranean. Tho native divers who could stay under water not moro than two minutes arc being driven out by men in regular diving nrmor, who can work by tho hour. A German pro fessor lias originated a method of plant ing cuttings from sponges and it is laing prosecuted with success. Now York Bun, ROOF9 OP CITV HOUSE3. A Thyslcliin Iteronimends That the House tup Ito Ttirneil Into I'luygrnunils. Dr. Oouverneur M. Smith has contri buted to a recent number of The Medical Record an interesting and suggestive paper The mam point of this article is that by -neglecting to make the roofs of the houses places of safety and pleasantly habitable. New Yorkers miss the best and most readily available opportunity open to them ot enjoying fresh sunshine in moderate weather and fresh and com paratively cool air during tho sweltering heats of summer Dr. Smith describes the 6tate of thing which all New Yorkers know when i.e speaks of the "dark closet with prtvipit ous ladder leading to the 6cuttle. rarely entered and ascended except by work men to repair the roof." In n privato dwelling of the smallest size habitually built on tins island, the roof has an area as largo ns that of the yard, immeasur ably better lighted and aired, and intrin sically a far better place as a playground for children or a retort for adults in pleasant or m oppressively hot weather. That is to say. in the bouses most favor ably circumstanced for light and air, one half ot tho avnilable breathing space of the city, excluding the streets, is abso lutely wasted In the more expensive nnd extensive dwellings the case is worse, because the yard is contracted as the house ts extended, until in mostcases it amounts to little more than an air ehaft, and I? not available at all as u place of recreation. In the tenement houses the case Is far worse. NotKxiy who has ever visited tho back yard ot one in the more (wpulous quarters of the city would ever there after think ot it as a playground or a breathing space or a place of resort for rest and refresh men t Yet ttie choice for these puroses is practically between this place, one-third the area ot the house, and the street, while the house top, three times as large as the yard and in every resect more eligible, is abso lutely wasted, so far as concerns any pre cautions taken tor its use and enjoyment by the builder, who nevertheless prides himself ukjii his economy ot room. It is no wonder that fr Smith asks vhcther "architectural ingenuity, coached by sanitary science," cannot "contrive some method of using the thousands ot acres oi housetops 011 this island so thai roof's can tx made additionally useful at certain seasons by aliording outdoor rec reation and protection I nun invalidism " Really it seems as it architectural inge nuity had been exerted in the opposite direction, foi there is 110 dithculty in the way of achieving tins result New York is already a tlat rooted city All that is absolutely needed to convert its roots into the plea.santest parts of the house alter the sun goes down in summer, and while the sun is up during the spring and au tumn, is pernap'- slightly to increi- their structural strength, to cover tl with some material that shall lie pra cable as a pavement, to provide (let and commodious access to them by c tinumg to the root the main stairwa the house, and to provide a arapet 1 win obviate any danger of falling children or careless persons. Tho cosi an tins is not worth counting in cc panson to the tenelits to be derived tr it New orl 1 lines. Wiirnitli of 11 l.lvlnu Itooni. The needs common to nil women t so common that few regard their inqx tanco. To say that warm rooms 1 essential to health and beauty sounds li n truism, but the fact is that among well to do classes it is the rarest thing find n really warm house. A heat house, burning up coal and vitality gether, is common, but not otio soundly built thai rooms do not read cool off, and where comfort is felt w moderate heat, or where draughts do 1 sow rheumatic twinges, with wrinkles match. Out ot doors dress and exerc keep up the natural heat. Indoors quieter lite and shutting oil the grea part of the sun's rays render the q different. The constant temperature all occupied rooms should he enough keep the blood at its normal heat ot as degs. without any chilling or change say 7.1 to "8 degs. by day and 1A degs lower by night. Instead, when steam is up, or the lurnace burns up, you will find the glass at cfA degs. on the north wall ot rooms. Two hours or less after thb heal goes down the thin walls lose their heat immediately, and it is 4A degs. In the same place I describe what I havo noted recatedly in houses where comfort was supposed to bo tho llrst con sideration. Such variations are enongh to try the strongest frames To say nothing of neuralgia and lung troubles, 11 is impos sible to keep ti good complexion through such ruinous changes of leniK'r.iture. Tho heat dries it into line wrinkles, the cold semis the blood inward, leaving the faco blue and features pinched. Let the husband who wishes to keep his wife in freshness be careful that she has warm rooms to live in. The injury to the cir culation which destroys nil bloom nnd elasticity strikes deejier in time, causing failure of the heart or chrome inflam mations. As you value bloom and long life, never permit yourself to bo chilly for flvo minutes. No matter what ther mometers say, if you are out of order enough to feel chilly tho thing to do is to raise tho heat till the blood absorbs heat and grows warm again. For heat is life, and the chilly precepts of certain hygienists who seem to consider comfort as a crime bavecost unsus)octed victims. Shirley Dare. Chief Anions III l'ello,-s. A southern woman writing of the freedmen lately said. "Tho Held Iiands in the Gulf states show us the condition i of n people making tho first effort to rise I out of ignorance and squalor to civiliza ! tion. There is in every half dozen faun 1 lies ono innn of integrity, energy and in dustry, on whom tho others livo as parasites. I never failed on entering ono of their villages to detect lliia natural chief." Youth's Couiianion. ltet .Market In Etirtip j Tho best market on tho continent of Euroxi Is said to bo at Berlin. Fish are told from vats and aro kept nllvo. There l is every variety of game and domestic i fowl to lie had within a thousand miles. ! ami steers, vual calves, lambs and other animals art) dressed complete their , heads and tails being skiuued nnd kept iniact on their trunks. uuicago UoraJU The Hands. Ono of the most common signs oi wnnt of breeding is n sort of uncom fortablo consciousness of tho hands, ar obvious ignorance of what to do with them nnd a painful awkwardness in their adjustment. Tho hands of iv gen tlenian seem perfectly fit homo without being occupied. They nro habituated to elegant repose, or, if they spontane ously move, it is attractively. Some of Queen Elizabeth's courtiers mndo play tin? with their sword hilt an accomplish ment. and t!i 1:1 sf edlcient weapon of t!i- Span -It c.Miiottc is her fan Strength in the lingers is u sure token of mental aptitude. When Mutlus burnt his hand off beforo tho eyes of his captor lie gave the most indubitable proof we can imagine of fortitude, and it was natural that amid the ferocious bravery of feudal times a bloody hand in tho center of an escutcheon should become the badge of a baronet of Eng land. Now York Ledger. Syndicates ut Homo and Abroad. We are informed that in Europe Germany take the lead as the country of syndicates in ISS'.I. Ninety-two wore formed there in that year, including an auction "ring" and a warfhigers' "ring." In Austria there were thirty-eight syn dicates; in Great Britain, thirty-one. in France, six; in Russia, seven; in Belgium? eight: in Italy, two; in Swe den. four, nnd in Denmark ono. tn addition to these there were eleven in ternational trusts dealing with copper, zinc, nitrates, rails, mirror glitss, sugar, dynamite and hotels. In America fifty eight syndicates wero formed, several of which were of English origin. It is known that, about 2C0 of these trusts wero formed during 1SS!1. and it is probable that 1111 equal number existed unknown, except to those interested in them. The majority of the syndicates appear to have been genuine industrial nnd commercial undertakings. Stock Exchange. Combination I.lfn Preserver. The idea of combining various uss in a single article is a favorite ono with inventors. "Tho combined cap, pil low and life preserver" is to bo made of some air tight material. As a cap it looks liko tho double visored headgear which is considered the tiling for steamer wear. The center pulls out What appears to bo a ventilator in the top proves to be a mouthpiece. You blow into it until tho interior is about half filled with air. and you have a very fair imitation of the air pillow If von awake gt nidit-awajtok-ttmt ce - a 1 a lie iis in- 'od . .... - is m tie built in Af rlca. 'the Rlll-a-man-daily railway runs into ' Chicago. CONSUMPTION SUIt ELY CUIIEI). To the Kditor: 1'leaso Inform ypur readers that 1 havo a positive remedy for tho above- , named disease, lly its timely use thousands of I boneless eases liav Im'cii tMrmaneiillv cnriwi 1 1 I shall be Rind to send two bottles of my remedy j tree to any ol your readers who havo conmmp- i tton If they will send iae their express and post olllce address. Respectfully. T. A. SI.OCUM, SI. (!.. 181 l'ead street. New York Copyright, 1600. All on one side the offer that's made by tho pro prietors of Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy. Tt's 500 reward for an inoiirablo caso of Catarrh, no mat ter how bad, or of how long stand ing. They mean what they say ; they'ro responsible, and tho offer lias been made for years. It's all on your side you lose your catarrh, or you'ro paid 500 for keeping it. But it's safe, for them, too thov know you'll bo cured. Dr. Sage's Remedy produces per fect and permanent cures of Chronic Catarrh in tho Head, as thousands can testify. "Cold in tho Head" is cured with a few applications. Catarrhal Headache is relieved ami cured as if by magic. It removes offctisivo broath, loss or impairment of tho sonso of taste, smell or hear ing, watering or weak oyos, and impaired momory, when caused by tho violonco of Catarrh, as thoy all frequently aro. Remedy sold by druggists, 50 cants. Til K HUCOKKIf OK OLD lannted the skull and en we bones, their enslen, Ictlautly nt the rnthesd. Your modern pirate, not on the high ca, but upon the high reputa tion of standard remedies, skulks under various dlpgu'pcs. Ills hole and corner tratlic lias never to any degree ullected Hosti Iter's Stomach Hit .ers, althoUKli that Maudard InvlRoirtut and ror eetlve has lotiR been .he shining mark atuhleh his shafts have been directed. 1 'heap local hit ters, fompoced of flery unrectlfled stimulants, I h hii Itifnclon. or extract poslbly. of some tonic bark, nro still sometimes recommended as denflCHl ulth, or slml'nr to, or possessing vir tuts kindred to thereof Amc Ira's chosen famllv medicine. These perish speedily, while the (treat iiibdtier and preventive of disease pursues its 'ticeeful career, overcomlntr malaria, dyep sla, f-ervou-i'Css, kidney trouble, constlipion and rhoumstl" ailments, not only on this, but uu many continents. A Kindred h xpertencu.- -'Did you ever take i) sot vHntfe?" No, but I've used a stomach pump." ' HOW TO GET HI" OP MDKACHi:. Who lias not niillcieil from sideacluf We all had it when we. ran races nt, school we have it when we overwork ourselve 3 itHiiyage. Itcoineson.aHeverybodj known; suddenly. By using one of Am.Cock's 1'onofs I'l.ASTKits It, goe away nearly as quickly. 1"' HoeMicr of Ne. fed West Fift e'ghlh slteut, New York, says: " It in with pleasure I write these lines In testimony to Mm powers of AU.COCK's I'ouuUs Pi.atkiis. I have been some what n 111103rd with serious pains in my sides, for which seveinl ineoicines have hi en prescribed, but to no avail, and through the advice of a friend I tried two Ali.Cock's I ohous Pi.ASTKits. and the. re lief they have given no- is both siitUfac tory and ato'iishiiig. To any one annoyed with pabis these plas'er are a certain remedy. ' A woman wltn children Is very much In the fame position n the Lord: thoucli her nhl dreu ss v tie y love her. the Very seldom oll'cr her any thing but complaints. Are any ot th now fin gled washing coniponnds a-gord ns 1 lie old-fashb-neii Hral D.ibhms' Electric Soap has been sold overy dav for ;4 t rurs, anil Is now just, hh it od us ever. Ask j our grocer for it, ami take n nM'or. Old I.awvcr I'.ave you auv suits pendlnp this term? YotiiiR Ait( rne No, but I have an over coat hi.UB up for !" If attllctcd with Mr Ryes,, ue Dr. Isaac Thoiniison's Kvp Vaer Drvmi-'lMs sell It 2V. A Pure Cream of Tartar Powder Superior to every other known. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. Delicious Cake and Pastry, Light Flaky liiscuit, Griddle Cakes, Palatable and Wholesome. No other baking powder do -uch wort. Of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites Of Lime and Soda. There ore emulsion ami eiitulnlonn', and there is still much sl;hinnl tnillc tflitrh mnsijueritiles its evetnn. Try as then tt'ill many maimfaetarera can mil no llsi)nise their cott liver oil as to make it jHilatable to sensitive stomachs. Scott's J.'tanlston nfl'VKK XOItU Kai.lX COD l.lVllll Oil,, comhlneil with iiji jihltcs is almost as jmlatahle as mill:. l''or this reason as well as for the fact of the stlmnlathifl (lualities of the i;io hosihttrs, l'hisieians jrenuently ire scrtbe. it In cases of CONSUMPTION, SCIlOFl'n.t, llllOSCIIlTlS and cunosw couaiiorsiii'iutn coed. All Uruijtiists sell it, bat ha sure you net the aenuine,as there are poor (ni'tatlous. I Faber's golden Female Pills. ForFemalo Irregular I ties: tiothlin,'llkothem on tho market. Sever uiL Successfully used ny prominent ladles monthly. Guarantee)! to relievo suppressed menstruation. SURE! SAFE! CERTAINI Don't bo humbugKed. Save Time, Health, Bent to any address, secure by mall on re ceipt of price, iZ00. Address. THE APHRO MEDICINE COMPANY, Western Branch, Lox27,l'OKXlVA.ND, OB Sold by Wisdom Dbuq Co., Portland, Or. DR. LIEBIG'S "WONDERFUL Gnu Inntir Tn Trntn ff Wonderful Power and .SuiHTlorltr. A SI Jlottlo will bo glveo or Sent Vrco on application, per tonally or by Utter. Krery ono knows that nrowu.Semnird'1 Veritable Elixir of 1.1 fo was a failure, aud that Dr. Llchlg's InTfg orator Is the orklnal and only genuine Vital Elixir, ' rw.J. .? 1'JIWI UAKSOT MET CURED f Uu ""J "J Manhood, l.lr, l.ut. rJ'JL-I-. 10 8 ,!VlGonATOIlX.llith..i1tT,diMaw VSS7!SW,i!tf- .r,u cf. '""i""". i cm. or .u nPi ?iu!,ii' if U,UM' h" f"- " tn. .5V r Diut of tic 1Itm. Inm la omn, pwuijr, UwnKuliO'famll rDt curt lii sfvvdartl rifll ' CS "H or Urn. am ur, tlrl,Bu IrutUa. 11. 1'rlriu uliua, tt liu buirU A TTTT fXT inii r of h w- jAUJ III WB oWm aro o aiU. ' DKSIfiNS u! atainiw S6e for our liook "lliuu- ""f;"1'0' mil Hosiisa" Addre the National ilulUlrri ., , Adams Kprcsuuildlug.i litiago.IIt TITl! DPicnu ... . SCOTT'S I FWULSiOl 1