Cottage Grove echo=leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 18??-1895, May 11, 1895, Image 3

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TH E
The latest investigations by
the United States and Cana­
dian Governments show the
Royal Baking Powder supe­
rior to all others in purity and
leavening strength.
Statem ents by other manufacturers to
the contrary have been declared by the
official authorities falsifications o f the
official reports.
ROYAL WAKING POWDER CO ., 10« WALL S T ., NEW-YORK.
A S C O T A T T H E H EA D .
J o h n A . C a i r n s L e a d e r o f t h e S t r i k i n g M in -
e ra I n th e P i tt s b u r g D is tric t.
John A. Cairns, leader of the striking
miners in the Pittsburg district, is a Scot
by birth, though he was brought to Amer­
ica when a mere boy and has remained in
this country ever since.
Those who know him well speak of him
as a man of unusual energy and determi­
nation, as one who has the courage of his
convictions and feels bound always to do
what he believes to be right regardless of
the opinions of othera Although he has
never before been intrusted with the im­
portant po?t of strike leader, he has been
prominent in the labor movement for
many yez.rs, and his services as member of
several most important conferences be
tween miners and operators have been
such as to win for himself the repute of
having rare executive ability. More than
once, too, he hss steadfastly opposed the
beginning of a strike when he thought it
ill advised, and because of this his fellow
miners placo implicit confidence in his
judgment and fidelity.
John A. Cairns is 88 years of age. He
was born in the small Ayrshire village of
Boston. His first home in the Unitea
States was in Beaver county, Pa., where
his parents settled on their arrival. A
year later they removed to Washington
P O E T R Y IN T H E M ORGUE.
The
R e g is tr a r o f th e P a r is D e ad h o u se
W r ite s a B o o k o f V erses.
The “ Galtes de la Morgue” is the title
of a volume of poems recently published
In Paris by M. Clovis Pierre, who for 15
years prior to 1893 was the registrar in
that little building on the lie de la Cite
j in the shadow of Notre Dame. In his
official capacity it was his daily business
to receive and record the 800 or more
stray bodies and the human debris which
| suicide and crime contribute annually
to the city’s death roll.
Yet this Parisian Mark Tapley has
found much to lie mirthful over among
, the sad scenes in “ that great hotel well
known in Paris—the hotel with the No. 2. ”
He reports in vivacious verso an amus­
! ing conversation which he heard outside
the door one day between two drunken
men who had just been viewing the
“ found drownod” within. The poem ends
by one of the inebriates slapping the oth­
er on the shoulder, saying, “ Behold, there­
fore, nion vieux, to what the abuse of wa­
ter leads one,” and inviting him to fur­
ther potations.
The poet’s description of some of the
visitors whom curiosity or other motive
brings to the morgue is likewise diverting
and throws a curious sidelight on the Gal­
lic nature. He tells of the street girls,
who come there to meet idlers of the op­
posite sex w ho visit the ghastly place to
kill time. Another character almost too
graphically portrayed Is that of the gam­
in, who enters during the noonday hour
and inspects the occupants of the marble
slabs while munching his bread and
cheese.
One of M. Pierre’s mo6t charming bal­
lads is founded on fact and relates how
from some sweet peas found in a drowned
man’s pooket he made the little garden
which one may still see in a window of
the morgue.
T H IS M ARRIAGE A F A IL U R E .
D iv o r c e C o u r t S e q u e l t o t h e E l o p e m e n t o f
C h i e f J u s t i c e F u l l e r ’s D a u g h t e r .
As a sequel to a runaway marriage
which created a sensation in March, 1889,
Mrs. J. Matt Aubery, the daughter of
Chief Justice Fuller of the United States
supreme court, has applied for a divorce.
The causes leading up to this action are
well known to the newspaper reading
public, says the Chicago News. Since the
county, and there he has resided ever since
In spite of his Scottish blood he became an
enthusiastic Irish Nationalist several
years ago and was the cause of many large
contributions to both the Land League
and the famine funds. No doubt it was
largely his devotion to the cause of Erin
that made him so popular with the Irish
miners in the “ river district,” when he
was chosen its secretary some years ago.
A t that time be was living in Roscoe.
Washington county, and he was one of
the strongest factors in organizing the
men of the Monongahela. Before that he
had been a trustee of the Amalgamated
association, so that his election to his
present place as president of the P itts­
burg district of United Mine Workers, by
virtue of which he is now strike leader,
was quite in the line of promotion. It is
largely due to his efforts that the miners
of his district accepted the strike settle­
ment of last year without much protest
or delay, and it was this course that
shortly put the district in better shape
than any other in the national organiza­
tion.
MR. AND MRS. J . MATT AL BERT,
elopement and marriage the life of Mrs.
Aubery has been anything but a peaceful
and happy one, owing, it is charged, to
her husband’s habits. In October, 1893,
It w ill lie remembered, she was forced to
leave young Aubery and return to her
family. Since then she has resided in
Washington. Aubery has been in trouble
at various times and was arrested some
time ago at Sioux City for alleged non­
payment of a hotel bill. His father came
to the front on each occasion and helped
his wayward son out of his difficulties.
Mrs. Aubery was Pauline Cony Fuller,
T a le s o f t h e “ G r e a t F r o s ’..”
and years ago her family lived near that
Touching instances of the recent stress of young Aubery in Chicago. When it
of weather come from the mountainous became apparent to tho chief justice that
districts of Wales, says the London Daily his daughter was in love with young A u­
News. At Ffestiniog a sheep actually bery, ho disapproved of the match, it is
walked into a house and placed its fore legs said, but the young people were determin­
on a lady’s lap to beg a bit of bread which ed to defy parental authority, and on
she held in her hand. A t Barmouth a March 19, 1889, they ran away to Milwau­
robin took up its quarters on board a kee and were married. Mr. Aubery, Sr.,
steamship, the Telephone, accompanied bad a good position with a railroad com­
it on its voyage to Liverpool and back pany, and his son was in the same busi
again, and at dinner hours hopped on to ness, with prospects of advancement and
success. Therefore the young couple were
the table and dined with the captain.
forgiven, and their married life began
with every omen of happiness.
T h e D iffe re n c e S lig h t .
In her bill Mre. Aubery says that all
" W h at’a this?” demanded the guest, went well until her husband contracted
pointing to one of the side dishes the the llqnor habit, and she declares that all
her troubles aro attributable to that fail­
w aiter had brought
“ Sausages, sir, ’’ answered the waiter. ing on the part of Aubery. She details
how her life at length became so unbear­
“ I didn’t order any. 99
able that she was forced to return to her
“ I thought you did, sir. ”
family. She took with her the two chil­
“ I ordered sauce. Can’t you tell the dren—Melville Cony Aubery, 5 years old,
difference between sauce and sausages?” and Mildred, 4 years of age.
“ YC8, sir ,” said the waiter, gather­
T h e y P ic k le d F a th e r .
ing up the rejected dish w ith unruffled
dign ity
“ Between sauce and sausages
An English writer tells how, when he
there is merely a di(Terence of ages. was traveling on the wilds of Dartmoor,
a terrible snowstorm compelled him to
W ish coffee, sir?’’—Chicago Tribune.
j seek the shelter of a small farmhouse,
| where he was hospitably entertained. In
L n c k y P o o r R e la tio n s .
i the middle of the night, hearing certain
Poor relations have rarely had such a sounds,he peeped through thorough board­
windfall as that reported from Bordeaux. ing of his bedroom wall to the big kitchen
It is stated that a merchant in the said and saw the body of a man being thrust
town died intestate and without any di­ into one of those long tubs in which the
rect descendants. His fortune, amounting excellent Devonshire pig is pickled. So
to 22,000,000 francs, or 14,400,000, is ac­ horror struck was my friend that he took
cordingly to be divided among a certain his way the next morning at as early an
number of humble families, the members hour as was possible In spite of the risks
of which live in Cognac and Jarnac. he ran by such a journey. The result was
Among those entitled to shares in the es­ that he fell Into a snowdrift, was only
tate ore two barbers, a cooper, a shoemak­ rescued by the merest accident and lay ill
er and several laborers, all of whom were at another farmhouse for many weeks.
distantly related to the rich merchant of On recovering ho remembered the horrible
Bordeaux.
tragedy of the pickle tub and determined
to glvo notice to the authorities. On his
way to the nearest town he passed the
T h a t l u m p in a ■cone of his terrible experience, and curi­
m a n ’ s s t o m a c h osity induced him once more to enter.
which makes him The woman of the house immediately rec­
irritable and misera­ ognized him as “ the geut who was there
ble and unfit for bus­ the night they was salting down father”
iness or pleasure is and told him it was that ceremony—ren­
caused by indiges­ dered necessary by tho severity of the
tion.
Indigestion, storm—which he had witnessed.
like charity, covers
a multitude of sins.
P o s s i b i l i t i e s o f H y p n o tis m .
The trouble may be
London is watching with considerable in­
in stomach, liver,
terest just now tho doings of a hypnotist at
bowels. Wherever it the Aquarium, who puts his “ subject” in ­
is, it is caused by the
to a trance for a week at a time, during
presence of poison­ which period he takes no food, is uncon­
ous, refuse matter scious of all external happenings, and is,
which Nature has in fact, practically dead to the world.
been unable to rid The hypnotist says there is no reason why
herself of, unaided. the traDoe should not be extended almost
In such cases, wise indefinitely.
Humorous commentators
people send down a suggest that In this way many of life’s
iittle health officer, evils might be avoided. One who hates
personified by one travel by railway might be hypnotized at
of Dr. I*ierce’s Pleas­ the station, and, with a label hearing the
ant Pellets, to search name of the town to which he wants to go
out the trouble and on hl9 back, be packed away in the train
remove its cause.
like a side of beef. Those subject to sea­
sickness would find the process a most
useful preparation for a sea voyage, and
workmen with no employment, rejected
lovers or men “ sent up” for ten days
m ight all derive advantage from dream
less sleep prolonged to any necessary ex­
tent.
IM PO R TA N C E
OF
PRO PERLY
TR A IN IN G C H IL D R E N .
A
T a c tfu l
E m p r e s s —B r i t i s h
much impressed with the importance of
such matters wheu she consulted that pre­
cious volume herself and found that the
marquisate of Downshire was created in
1789, and that of Drogheda in 1791. It
seemed rather droll that three marchion­
esses should lay stress on such a matter
among themselves. —I^ondon Letter.
C o m p lic a ­
t i o n s o f R a n k —T h e “ B e t w e e n i t i e s ” — S u ­
s a n B . A n 'h o n y a n d H e r S i l k s a n d L a c e s .
T h e P o w e i o f A p ro n s.
“ Oh, dear, I am completely discouraged
lbout that child! He really is gettiug
quite beyond my control,” said a nervous
m d foolish mother of a 3-year-old boy.
And it was not at all difficult from the
way in which she said it and the expres­
sion on her face to conclude that she
rather thought the speech an extremely
bright one and the situation a sort of serio
comic bit of domestic byplay. To be sure,
Ihe child paid no attention to what she
‘aid and followed bis own sweet will, kick­
ing and screaming whenever he wanted
anything that was denied him and mak­
ing the neighborhood hideous until, by
hook or crook, he got it.
There is not the least bit of smartness
in a speech of that kind. It simply shows
a conspicuous lack of capacity on the part
j f the parent who makes it. A child under
th« age of 15 years who refuses to obey the
commands of its parents is in need of most
wholesome discipline, and it might be
said in the same connection that the par-
snts are quite as badly iu ueed of training
as the child. People who bring up their
children in this way have a very grave re­
sponsibility at their doors.
The children under 15 years of age who
cannot be made to mind belong to the
class from which paupers and criminals
are recruited. One of the most necessary
parts of education is to learn to recognize
fixed laws. Failing to do this in infancy,
the child continues to grow more and more
intractable and less likely to yield to dis­
cipline of any sort. Such children devel­
op very restive natures, never satisfied with
what they have and continually straining
after the unattainable. With no habits of
industry they lay no foundation for mate­
rial prosperity, and as a consequence are
more than likely to come to want. They
have nothing and are in want of every­
thing. Therefore those who possess the
good things of life are to them objects of
hatred and envy and all uncharitableness.
From the time a child begins to notice
objects of any sort whatever a decided
course of education should begin. First of
all things, it should learn to respect au­
thority and obey orders promptly. To
teach this lesson there is not the least ne­
cessity to indulge iu any cruelty of any
sort whatever. The properly trained child
never knows that there is such a thing as
disobedience.
It is held as a fact by many persons that
if the training of children were begun in
proper season such a thing as punishment
would be entirely unnecessary, and all of
the scenes and straggles now so common
in families might he avoided. To do this,
however, requires a great deal of firmness
and a steadfastness of purpose rarely
found, especially in young mothers.
It is so nice to let the little one do all
sorts of cute and smart things, and it
seems so dreadful to hurt it by any pun­
ishment. Misdirected affection is respon­
sible for nine-tenths of the bad children in
this world. It is, to be sure, very pretty
to watch the pranks and mischief of a ba­
by, and it is a source of endless amuse­
ment to note the development of its intel­
ligence in various ways; but, like a great
many other things in this life, the conse­
quences are quite likely to be disastrous.
It may bo questioned whether love, like
a great many other of the good gifts of
this world, is not a bad teacher. Certainly
justice, firmness and a clear headed recog­
nition of authority are much the safer for
the after life of the pupil. One of the im ­
portant lessons to impress upon the mind
of a child is that under no circumstances
must it inflict pain upon its fellows or
upon helpless creatures. Many a child
hurts insects and domestic animals merely
because it has not been taught any better.
It does not realize what such pain means
and should be taught by the only possible
method, that of actual experience. It
seems hard to inflict pain upon little chil­
dren who know nothing of the causes or
consequences of it. but it is the only way
to cure them of various mischievous tricks.
A mistaken idea of tenderness and a too
firm belief in moral suasion have sent
many a child
the road that ended in
the penitentiary or the hangman’s noose.
It is by no means difficult to impress the
little ones with proper ideas. Their minds
are full of inquiry, and their curiosity
leads them to endless experiment. Satisfy
their interest in ft legitimate way and teach
them the proper bounds of it, and one of
the ground principles of success and a com­
fortable career is established. To refrain
from correcting evils because the child may
be made unhappy is like refusing to pull a
thorn out of its flesh lest it may cause pain.
It is much easier to have the whole thing
over, and with all the ev ents impressed on
the mind, than to allow mischievous diso­
bedience to grow until it dominates the
entire nature. The mother who would have
her child a credit to society and an honor
to her training must under no circum­
stances admit to it or herself the idea that
she cannot do anything with it or that it
has grown out of her control.—New York
Ledger.
A T a c tfu l E m p re s s.
The empress of Japan—being that sweet­
est of all sweet creatures, a womanly wo­
man—has upon many occasions openly
evinced her deep interest in the wee ones
of Japan, giving freely to all institutions
that exist to benefit them in any way, even
practicing all sorts of touching little econ­
omies that she may be able to swell her
contributions to certain charities that
most interest her.
The conduct of this ideal woman upon a
certain sad occasion her devoted subjects
are never weary of describing. Prince Iwa-
kura, a fearless Japanese leader in the mo-
lientous days of the crisis, from which the
lovely archipelago is still trembling in it9
subsidence to what seems assured stabili­
ty, lay dying in his yashiki. The empress
announced her intention of paying Iwaku-
ra a visit in person. The poor prince, weak
and, as I have said, about to die, was
thrown into a dangerous state of excite­
ment upon receiving the news, but he man
aged to borrow from some hidden nervous
force sufficient strength to grasp his writ­
ing box and brushes and to paint her an
urgent but most respectful request not to
think of coming to him. He forced upon
her as excuse for declining so great an hon­
or the fact of his rapidly approaching death
and his consequent inability to acknowl­
edge her visit with even a sixteenth part
of the homage it demanded. He begged
her to deign to kindly consider how ill he
must be when it remained an impossibil­
ity to throw off the malady even for her
entertainment. In reply, winged with
speed, came a dear little missive whose im
port was as follows:
“ I come not as your empress, but as the
daughter of your fond well wisher and co­
adjutor and as your own anxious friend.”
Shorn of all ostentation and display, the
empress arrived and remained beside her
grateful subject until his final summons.
—Harper’s Bazar.
B r it is h C o m p lic a tio n s o f R a n k .
A duke's daughter, even though the
wife of a plain “ M r.,” takes precedence of
a countess, while a duke’s younger son’s
! wife comes below a countess. Then a
countess takes precedence of the daughter
of a marquis, too, but the latter precedes
the duke’s daughter-in-iaw. It is worse
•ban the multiplication table. When peo­
ple of identical rank are in company, it is
needful to know which peerage was the
elder “ creation.” At a gathering at which
her majesty was to be present I was once
standing talking to a dowager marchion­
ess when her daughter-in-law, the reign­
ing marchioness, who had the management
of things, came to her mother in great anx­
iety: “ Can you tell me which is the elder
•reation—Downshire or Drogheda? Lady
Downshire and Lady Drogheda are both
here, and which should go first?” The
elder peeress was “ sure they were near to­
gether, but could not remember,” and it
was evidently a most serious difficulty.
At last, though very reluctantly, the host­
ess had to ask themselves to tell her, not
having her peerage at hand, and the ladies
were perfectly ready with the information.
Mrs. Fenwick Miller writes that she was
T h e “ B e tw e e n itie s .”
It is astonishing how much can be ac­
complished in the “ between tim es.” Mar­
ion Harland, in one of her housewifely
books, quotes a correspondent who pointed
to a set of embroidered chair backs which
she, although a very busy woman, said
that she did in the “ betweenities.” And
George Eliot, in “ Daniel Deronda,” speaks
of the lack of leisure for anything found
in the day that isn't marked off into fixed
hours of work. It was once upon a time
advised a girl who did not suppose she had
any superfluous hours at her disposal that
she should try to secure a few moments,
at any rate, each day for solid reading.
She was not deeply intellectual, but she
happened to be fond of Macau ley's sono­
rous sentences, and she had his “ complete
works” on her bookshelves, into which she
had scarcely looked as yet. So she took
one volume down to the basement dining
room and left it on the shelf there, at
hand when she should have a few moments
of leisure in waiting for the family to as­
semble for the meals, which it was her
place to prepare. They were not more dil­
atory than many people, hut it was sur­
prising how many pages of Macauley she
read in those odd minutes. Before the
third winter was over she had finished ev­
erything he had written.
S u s a n B . A n t h o n y ’s S ilk s a n d L a c e s .
If Susan B. Anthony has a weakness, it
is black silk with point lace. The memory
of this generation runs not as far back as
the time when this famous lady took to
wearing these costly, elegant textures.
Although a very busy woman, she is quiet
and restful. Her clothes never wear out,
and as she scorns to follow the fashion her
dresses and ruffles and lace capes and scarfs
last forever. None of her gowns is trim­
med, the expense for that item being put
in the material. As a result, some of the
straight, round skirts are made of satin
and silk thick enough and stiff enough to
stand alone. She wears nothing but black.
When she wishes to change the character
of her toilet, she changes the lace at her
wrists and throat and the little shawl that
drapes her shoulders. Miss Anthony reads
no newspapers but the marked copies sent
her by friends. She alleges that newspa­
per reading is a great waste of time and a
great detriment to the mind, making a
sieve of the memory and perverting the lit­
erary taste. She depends on gossip for the,
news and upon her friends for the advance­
ment of thought. She is in the eventide of
life, and her time is passed in the compa­
ny of books and friends about which and
to whom she writes a great many letters.
—New York World.
T i e P o w e r o f A p ro n s.
“ It was after long and serious thought,”
said Millicent, who is to be married soon
and who was showing her belongings to
an admiring coterie, “ that I decided to
have all these aprons.”
“ But why?” demanded one of the girls,
looking at the bewildering collection.
““Because I have discovered that nothing
appeals to the masculine mind so ranch as
an apron,” announced Millicent. “ I have
observed that when I wore my painting
rig Henry found me irresistible. Those
two high necked, long i ’ eved, pale blue
things are artists’ aprons, rirls. When we
have come into the studio from a walk,
and I have put on a long white apron and
devoted myself to chafing dish cooking, he
has sat breathless with admiration. That’s
the reason for those big white aprons there.
When I wore cue of those silly, ruffled,
white silk things and sat behind the tea
table, he was filled with adoration. And
it was when I was wearing one of those
fancy work aprons and making Christmas
presents that he offered me his very large
heart and hand and very diminutive for­
tune. Hence these aprons!”
And every member of the coterie prompt­
ly went off and invested iu aprons.—Phil
adelphia Times.
E x e rc is e F o r th e C h ild re n .
Boys generally get their due quota of
exercise. A t the same time, they can never
get too much, if not of a too severe nature
and taken with some measure of modera­
tion, writes Ellen Le Garde in The Ladies’
Home Journal. Burdette says in reply to
the interrogation regarding his acts: “ If a
boy again, I would spend a great deal of
time in the gymnasium. 1 am a strong
believer in athletic scholarship and gym
nastic training. The ventilation in my
gymnasium was perfect. The air came in
with a free sweep from sunrise to set.
There was sunshine all the way from
heaven in the clearings and grateful shad­
ows under the trees. I don’t know so much
about gymnasiums hedged in with walls
and roof and ventilated by machinery,
but I know they are better than none.
Live out of doors all you can, my boy.
Walk a heap. The open air, the free air
m d the sunshine are as good as the exer-
cise—better.” This advice should apply
to our girls as well.
A n E n g l i s h V ie w o f W o m a n ’s L o v e .
The following estimate of women's love
for her husband appeared in an English
periodical of a quarter of a century ago:
“ A Frenchwoman will love her husband
if he is either witty or chivalrous; a Ger
man woman, if he is constant and faith­
ful: a Dutchwoman, if he does not dis­
turb her ease and comfort too much; a
Spanish woman, if he wreaks a vengeance
upon those who incur her displeasure; an
Italian woman, if he is dreamy and poet­
ical; a Danish woman, if he thinks that
her native country is the brightest and
happiest on earth; a Russian woman, if
he despises all westerners as miserable
barbarians; an English woman, if he suc­
ceeds in ingratiating himself with the
court and aristocracy; an American wom­
an, if he has plenty of money.”
E x t r a v a g a n t G ir ls .
Young girls are prone to buy fancy stick­
pins, hair ornaments, candy and soda wa­
ter and to have their blooming young faces
reproduced by tho camera, and these small
vanities run away with more money than
the girl finds it easy to realize unless she
keeps an account and balances it regular­
ly. Every girl ought to have a fixed al­
lowance and be required to confine her ex­
penditure strictly within its lim its, for in
no better way can she be taught the neces­
sary lesson, for ignorance of which many
a woman whose girlhood was one of un­
stinted indulgence has been unjustly
blamed—the lesson of wise and practical
expenditure—and before all else of keeping
one’s outgo within one’s income.—Phila­
delphia Press.
“ K e e p H o m e W i t h Y o u .”
defying costume. But in 20 years her
O X TIIK s r o r .
photographs taken now w ill represent her
as more lovely than the beauties who are
“Out damned spot,” was what troubled1
photographed in the present fashion. Ido Mrs. Macbeth; but it was something in­
not admire the styles now in vogue, but 1
tangible that she saw. In the active sea­
suppose the eye gets used to it.”
son of epring and summer f ports—there
It is remarkable h o w m sny p e o p le fo-erunner of nervons prostration,
are spots that are not visionary, but which t h e r e are who have That Tired Feeling with all th e horrible suffering that
T h e y W e a r a n A x.
One of the leading c!ubs for women in bring with them pa it and gre. t ditconi- and seem to think it is of no impor­ term im plies. That Tired Feeling and
London is the Pioneer, the members of fort Bruises, black and blue, are the ac­ tance o r that nothing need be done for nervousness are sure indications of an
impure and im poverished condition oi
which are supposed to take an active inter companiments of every active sport. They
often cripple and are always a sore trouble.
est in any of the “ woman” movements. Come from what source they may, the 1 it. They would not be so careless if the blood. Tho craving of the system
The badge is a small silver ax, significant thing to do on the spot is to use St. Jacobs , they realized how really serious the for help “an only l e met by purifying
H o o t’s Sarsaparilla is the
of the warlike and revolutionary spirit of Oil freely and promptly. There is nothing malady is. But they think or say “ It the blood.
one great .«.»od purifier. It ex|>eU all
the wearer. Along the central beam in surer and it wipes out the pain as w e 1 will go off after a w h ile.”
inipuri'ies. gives vitality and strength,
the ceiling of the drawing room is in would wipe off a elate. In like manner
W e do not mean the legitim ate regulates the digealiou aud makes the
scribed the thrilling sentiment: “ They sudden attacks of rheumatism, to which
Fay. What Say They? Let Them Say.” people are liable at this season, can he weariness which all experience after a weak strong.
promptly cured by applying St. Jacobs 0 1
—London Million.
hard day’s work, hut that all-gone,
to the pain spot.
“ In the spring I felt very much run
worn-out feeling which is especially
down—no strength or appetite. I began to
M r s . C u s te r .
Overpowering in the morning, when
take Hood’s Sarsaparilla amt nty appetite
Mrs. Elizabeth G. Custer, the widow of
G iv in g W in e A w a y .
the body should be refreshed and improved and I did not have that bred feel­
the famous soldier, is au accomplished
There is such a tremendous quantity
billiard player. She grew skillful at of w ine in Spain this year that they ab­ ready for work. It is often only the i n g ”—H. K. Sqctses, E m I,everet>, Mass.
the game during her long camp resi­
dence on the plains. It is rare to find a solutely do not know w hat to do w ith it.
woman an adept with the billiard cue, yet Good red wines are being sold for 8
there are few more graceful games and farthings a quart, and even at that price
few, too, where the accepted characteristics there are not enough purchasers to take
of women—delicate accuracy rather than it all, and in m any places the winegrow­
strength—are more called in requisition.
ers are sim ply throw ing it aw ay, because
they have no room to keep it and cannot
W o m au a n d Love.
sell it. Near Liria, in Valencia, a vine­ H K W A I 'K O F O I N T M K V T S F O R C t - |
Mrs. Frank l^eslie has been making a yard proprietor put out on the highroad ■ A R i t t i T U A T C O N T A I N M e a t i K V ,
few remarks concerning woman and love.
W O R L D ’S F A I R .
“ A woman with no one to love her,” she a little cart, w ith a barrel of w ine on the as mercury will surely destroy the tense of
says, “ is the most miserable of creatures. top of it, bearing the inscription, “ W an­
smell and comple ely derange the whole
She loses half her value in her own eyes. derer, drink as much as you like, but do
She is unable to do justice to the best of not forget to turn off the tap.”—London system w hen entering it through the mu­
cous surfaces. Such articles shou'd never
her nature. She either hardens and be­ Tit-Bits.
he used except on preset i ¡.1 ions from repu-
comes cold, defiant, bitter and narrow, or
U
t
i
l
i
z
i
n
g
A
t
m
o
s
p
h
e
r
i
c
E
f
f
e
c
ts
.
she withers and languishes like spring
-ahle physicians as the damage they »-ill
Delicate tints prevail in the architec­ tlo is ten fold t t the goo 1 you ca-t possibly
flowers iu an east w ind.”
ture of the California M idwinter fair, derive troni them. Ha l's Catarrh Cure,
T h e P le c e b a g .
and an effort has been made to so dis­ manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co. To­
ledo, O., conta-ns no mercury, and is taken
A useful “ piecebag” is made of any tribute and arrange them that the pe­ internally, acting direenv upon the blood
chosen size and with an interlining. The culiar atmospheric effects of the clim ate a id ntutous surfaces of the sys ent. In
outer one is stitched into divisions which shall be utilized to enhance the harmony buying H all’s Cotanh Cure be sure v u
have on the outside attached flap such a and increase the beauty. W arm tones get the genuine. It it taken internal! v.
and made in Toledo OI i >, by F. J. Cheney
hint of their contents as a loop of black
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
braid, another of white tape, several pieces are not necessary, and the darkness of & Co. Testimoi ials free.
•Soi l by all I) uggists, pri e T.ic per *
of garment to be made over, and whose the background afforded by the almost
JOHN C A R LE & 50NS. New York. *
larger scraps are inside and other indica black foliage is a m agnificent setting. tattle.
tions that will tell at a glance what is to Much gold has been used.—San Francis­
(In s ril y o e r-e if lo r s u m m e r u lu la rle , t rt-d
teeli. K. b / u s in g n o w O regon B lood P ut ill r.
be found and where.
co Argonaut.
That Tired Feeling
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Makes Pure Blood.
* HIGHEST AWARD*
★
A TKKIEIItLi: VISITANT.
J a n e H a < lin g ’8 E y e s .
Mme. Jane Hading is a great woman.
She has a pair of greenish red brown eyes
that can he as eloquent as love me mo
ment and burn holes iu an offender the
next. If she didn’t have a tongue in her
head, she could talk—rave, coax, woo,
supplicate, command, conquer—with those
eyes. —Ftageland.
S p r i n k l i n g C a r p e ts .
It is sometimes recommended that one
sprinkle one’s carpets with salt water in
order to freshen them and bring out the
original coloring. This plan has its draw
backs. Iu damp weather the brine is sure
to work out aud cling to the surface of the
floor covering in the most candid and ob
trusive manner.
P a in is a lw a y s a t e r . l b e v K t a n t , a n d o fte n
d o m ic ile s ita e f w ith o n e fo r life. T h is in flic ­
tio n is p e . e n t i b l e , i a ca ses o f r h e u m a tis m by a
tiin e lv reso t to H o s te it r ’*’ torn»oh B D teis,
w h ic h c h e c k s h e e n c ro a c h m e n ts o f th is <.b«ti-
u a e an«l d a n g e ro u s m a la d y at th ‘ o n set. T h e
te rm “ d a n g e r m s” is n ed a t v i s e d l v , ! r r h e u ­
m a tis m is a lw tv s lia b le to a tta i k th e v ita l or
g a s a n d te r m in a te lif**. No te s t in o n y is m o re
c o n c lu s iv e a n d co m u r r e n t th a n th a t o f p h y s i­
cian « w h o tt s t f iy to th e ex>*«llent e ffec t o f ’th e
B etters iu ih is d isea se . P e rs o n s in c u r h w e 'tin g
In r a in y o r sn o w y w e a th e r, a n t w h o a re e x ­
p o sed to d r a u g h ts , sh o .id line th e B i t e r « as a
l>r- v e n tiv e ^ f ill effec s. M a la ria , d y s p e p s ia
iv e r a n d k id n e y tr o u b le , u e rv o u « b e 8 R* a n d d e ­
b ility a re a lso a m o n g ih e ai m e n ts to w h ich
t h ’s p o p u la r m e d ic in e is a d a p te d . F o r t h e i n -
firm ifieti. s re n e s s a u d stiffn e ss of th e ag e t if is
h g h ly b e n e fic u l.
Minnie Cieghom, a teacher in the Wei
lington (O.) schools, is a second cousin of
N E W W A Y E A S T —N O D U S T .
ex-Queen Liliuokalani. The relationship
Go East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla
comes about through the marriage of an
American missionary in the family of the Walla via O. R. & N. to Spokane and Great
Northern
Railway to Montana, Dakotas. St.
ancestors of the ex-queen.
Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St
Louis, East at.d South. Rock-ballast track;
If a woman understands either music, tine scenery; new equipment Great North­
painting or embroidery well enough to ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family
teach tt successfully, these are all very good Tourist Cars; Buffet-Library Care. Write
ways to earn money, but better be a first C. C. Donovan, General Agent, Portland,
class washerwoman than a poor music or Oregon, or-F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A.,
8t. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in­
painting teacher.
formation abo.tt rates, routes, etc.
TRAVEL
E iH 'I R E A M S M
Siam has a new crown prince whose
name is so thoroughly Siamese that it
would most like­
ly dislocate the
jaw of any Eng­
lish speaking per­
son who should
seriously set about
the task of pro­
nouncing it. E x­
actly what his
is, in writ­
ing even, the pres­
ent scribe is un­
able to set down
with
certainty,
for
authorities
differ as to its
SIAM’S CROWN PRINCE, s p e l l i n g , one
group of ordinarily accurate students of
tho orient giving it as Cowfa Maha Vig-
aravat and another equally unimpeachable
group spelling it Chowfa Maha Vajira-
vadh.
Prince Maha, to mention him by the
only one of his names concerning which
there are no orthographical differences
among the orientalists, is about 15 years
old and is at present undergoing an Eng­
lish education at the famous college at
Eton, England, where he has been a resi­
dent for a little more than a year. He is
the third son of Siam ’s king, who has
been termed crown prince, the other two,
his half brothers, both having died before
they were 20. Prince Maha’s father, by
the way, has quite as unpronounceable a
name as the son, it being Chuglalongkorn.
This merry monarch married three sis­
ters, all daughters of his own father, and
therefore each bearing the relation of half
sister to their kingly husband. The eldest
of these women was premier queen, and
her firstborn was crown prince.
This
queen’s death came at about the 6ame
time as that of her son, and then the sec­
ond sister was made premier queon and
her son, Maha Vajirunhis, crown prince.
He died, however, early in January of
this year, and it then became the king’s
duty to name one of his surviving sons to
succeed to the place of crown prince.
The one chosen is the eldest son of the
present second queen, the third of the
three half sister wives of the ruler. The
choice did not fall upon this lad because
the premier queen had no more sons, but
because he was older than any of his
brothers whose mothers were royal. Sev­
eral sons of the ruler by mothers of low
rank are now being educated in England,
and it is said they are all good friends.
The present crown prinoe was recently
Invested with his new rank In London
by a commission sent all the way from
Siam for that purpose, and the “ drawing
room” held that same evening was very
largely attended, the Siamese ministers at
London, Pavis and Berlin being among
those present.
The real center of the world is the mid­
day room of our lives. We may come
home to live. We may roam over moun­
tain and sea, but there is joy when we get
L e a t h e r L i k e V e lv e t.
back. Move out of the house if it is too
The m anufacture of leather ia reach­
small for you and your family, but always in g w hat must be almost t. e highest
take home with you. As we should make perfection of the art. A new process
our own home on earth, so we should make
for ourselves a home in heaven. The hours has recently been patented in France for
of our religious life should always be kept the production of a leather which both
safe and strong and unmolested. The eter­ to the touch and eye has a striking re­
nal home awaits you beyond. Cultivate sem blance to velvet. Leathers of this
your home. Always keep home with you. description hitherto manufactured have
Money does not make it; social position been obtained by treatm ent of the flesh
does not make it—only love, pure, faithful side of the hide or skin. The flesh side
love. Love at home will save many a man of the skin being alw ays coarse, the
from ruin.—California Christian Adva
patentees claim now to seenre better
cate.
results by treating the hair side. They
scratch or rub the hair side w ith a rub­
L u c y S to n e a t O b c r li n .
It is interesting to read of Lucy Stone’s ber of strong erosive qualities, or with
experiences in college during her four emery or glass, when working sm all
years’ study at Oberlin. She never lost a surfaces, and n se a grindstone for heav­
day from ill health, and she took the col ier work. In this manner a downy nap
lege course with the meu and held fair is brought out w hich they throw and
rank in her class. Nearly all the girls in
the college at that time were poor and lay in different directions, thereby
worked to earn their way through. They bringing out varied designs of changing
did their own cooking, their own washing huo and appearance. The velvety sur­
and ironing, and some of them paid tfffeir face produced is said to be sim ilar to the
way by doing washing for the men.—New down of a peach skin. The fiber is very
York Sun.
fine, soft to the touch and has all the
appearance of silk velvet shorn very
M rs. B a lliu g to u B o o th .
Sarony, the New York photographer, close.— Shoe and Leather G azette.
s a y s of Mrs. Ballington Booth: “ She has a
beautiful face. If any one can wear an
old poke bonnet and the Salvation Army O r F r i c e ’ s C r e a m B a ’ i n g P o w d e r .
World's F a ir Highest Medal end 0 p le n a .
dress and look beautiful, nature 19 simply
M U S I C S T O R K - W lle v R. A lle n C o., th e
o ld e s t, t h e la rg e s t, 511 F ir s t S t., P o r tla n d .
C n ick eT in g , U a rd m u n , F is c h e r P ia n o s , E stey
O g u n s Low prive'-, easy te r ns.
J O - t ' K N T M U i l C - S * - n d fo r ca ta lo g u e s .
3 .
WALTER BAKER & GO.
1*3*? F i NECAU &KANGMM
*3AP POLICE,3 SOLES.
» 2 . w o r k in g m e n ’ s
T h e L a r g e s t M a n u f a c tu r e r s o f
P U R E , H IG H G R A D E
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
B oys S chool S hoei
On this Continent, have received
•L A D IE S *
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
idastrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
Uln Europe and America.
BROCKTON.MASS.
Over One Million People wear the
W . L . Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the brat value for the monev.
They equal custom shoes in style and fit.
Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed.
The prices are uniform,— stamped on sole.
From $i to $3 saved over other makes.
I f your dealer ca n n o t su p p ly you w e can.
I'nlikethe Dntchl'roceaa, no Alka-
llica or other Chemical« or Dyes are
__ r *Md in any of their preparation*.
Theirdelicioua BREAKFAST COCOA ft absolutely
pure and soluble, and conn leu than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
RAMBLER
BICYCLES...
L adles' an d G ents’
All Sizes...A ll W eig h ts
$45, $55. $65, $85
CATARRH
$ I CO
S e c o n d -h a n d W h e Is fo r s a le a n d e s o ^ n n ”e
E L Y ’S C R E A M B A L M O nen* a n d oleum***
th e N asal 1’n s s tig e s A llays P a in a n d In fla in m a
tio n , H eals th e S ores, P ro te c ts t h e M e m b ra n e
fro m c o ld s, R e s to re s th e S e m e s o f T a ste a. d
S m ell. T h e B alm is q u ic k ly a b s o rb e d a n d gives
re lie f a t o n ce .
A p a r tic le is a p p lie d in to e a c h n o s tr il, a n d is
a g re e a b le . P ric e , 50 c e n ts n t D ru g g is ts ’ o r by ,
m ail.
ELY B R O T H E R S ,
56 W a rre n H treet, New Y ork.
G.W.STAVERXCO.
r ’*"“ STAVER Ä WALKER
S end fo r c a ta lo g u e , FR K E .
L ive o g t’s want«?d
FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CP
3 2 7 W n a h l n g t o n W t.,
I ’ O l l t l . ’T f l f f
PORTLAND, OREGON
General Agents for A ultman A T aylor
GHSOKEN RAISiNG PAYS
— Have for sale —
i f you use th e Pctnluiu®
HAND-CASE SEPARATORS AND ENGINES
M ak e m o n e y w h ile
o tlie rs a r e w a s tin g
t im e b y o ld p ro cesses.
C a ta lo g te l is a ll u b o u t
it,a n d d e s c rib e s every
a rtic le i;eed«*d for th e ,
p o u ltry b u s in e s s .
In«-iliators A Brooders
A nd o th e r M a c h in e ry of S a v e r A W a lk e r
S to ck to tlosl* o u t a h e a p .
W r i t e f o r ( 'n t a l o i r u e a n d P r i c e * .
Room 550 Worcester Block, Portland, Ur.
MEN
T h e “ ER IE ”
DR. LIEBIG & CO.,
m e c h a n ic a lly th e b est
kw h eel. P r e ttie s t m odel.
W c a t e P acific C oast
\g c n ts . B icycle c a ta ­
lo g u e ,m a ile d free,g iv es
fu ll d e s c rip tio n , p ric e s etc., a o f n t s \ v a t t f .D.
PETA I.U M A IHCUBATOR CO.. f t t i ’uffA .C al.
B k a . x l h H o u s e , s j i 8 M ain S t., I.o s A n s e lm
Special Doctors for Chronic. Prlnte
and Wasting Diseases.
Dr. LiriMg’* In v ig o ra to r th e g euiest rem ed y for
Semi»'i.l W eaknens, 1 a > s * o f M aul ood an d P riv a te
Disease«, O vercom e« P rem a tu ren es« and prepare«
all for m a rriag e life’s d u ties, pleasure« and resp o n ­
sib ilities; #1 tria l b »ttle given or s e n t free to an y
one describing sy m p to m s; call or ad d ress 400Cieary
St., p riv a te e n tra n c e 40ft M ason 8 t., Kan F rancisco.
KNOWLEDGE
C O R D O V A N ,
FRENCH iENAMELLED CALF.
T h r e s h e r s , T ractioh K xuixeh a n d
D in oek W oodbu ry P o w e r .
Rrings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoym ent when
-ightly used. The many, who live bet-
er than others and enjoy life more, with
-ss expenditu-e, by more promptly
the w o.ld ’s best products to
he needs o f physical being, will attest
he value to health of the pure liquid
ixative principles embraced in the
emedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas­
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial propeities of a jierfect lax­
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to m illions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the K id­
neys, Liver and Bowels w ithout weak­
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup o f F igs is for sale by all drug­
gists in 50c and f 1 bottles, but it is man­
ufactured by the California F ig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, von w ill not
accept, any substitute if offered.
★
Sa.SHOEnUSir^.
Since 1861 I have been o
great sufferer from Catarrh \
1 tried E 'y's C ram Balm
and to all appearances am
cured. Terrible headaches
ft om which I had long suf­
fered are gone. — HT. ./.
Hitchcock, L te Major V.
The simplest way to keep au oiled table
U o ’ b Cure for Consumption is an A No. »S Vol. and A. A. lien
“nice and new” is to wipe it over thor­ 1 P Asthma
medicine.—W. R. WI u I iamp , Buffa'Oy N. Y.
oughly once a week with a flannel clotk Antioch, Ills., April 11,18*44.
well wet in good kerosene oil.
The youngest queen consort of Europe,
the queen of Portugal, was born at Twick­
Means the best thing you can find while
enham. in England. She was the favorite
traveling. NVe’l. it is no exaggeration
child of the Comte de Paris.
to say that all the accessories of Travel
Lizzie Hansel of the Salvation Army ha? Epicure anism ( an be ft und on 1 he North-
volunteered to take care of a band of lep Western L'mited. It is the handsomest
ers on an island in British Columbia.
train in all the New Northwest and every
coach is nothing more nor less than a
wheeled palace.
C H O W FA MAHA V A JIR A V A D H .
W. M. Mead, General Agent, Portland,
T h e U n p r o n o u n c e a b l e N a m e o f t h e N e w Or.; or F. G. Savage, Traveling Freight
and Passenger Agent.
C r o w n P r i n c e o f S ia m .
he B E S T
PREPARED
W. 1. D ouglas
Tat G crmba for breakfast
R 1
“ T om , w h o d id y o u sav o u r f r ie n d Law ley
m a t r i e i ? ” “ W ell, h e m a r r ie d ¿•i0,C00; 1 forget
h e r o th e r n a m e .”
T
A f l T 1 i.c money you lia e puM f-,r o l i l i .
«N Forever
«.SURE CURE FOR PILES
■ p r o v -, l»ul;d o r purcF a < fio- limi«*,
I lo t o r b o t h , an y w lu - r e y o n m a y n a i d e “ r se-
M ee t it. I t is d e e d e d to \ o t i . Yo u o e c pv i t
l a n d p a y m o n t h l y re. t t o i s u n t i l th e m * «m ut
[ d u e i« pai \ l u e se o u d ie , t h e d e b t is i ai d
j Men ot p u s h c a n r e p r e s e n t us e \ ry w he re .
A <>0 Action hid g , 20H Man n St., to, m ?, San
I F ra ncisco. Cal. M h • p fo r
n s p e c t-n * , eie.
In d u c e r e n t s 'o r m m th ly invest*
m u t t» a re e q u a lly profl á b e.
It d u n s Pit™ known h , moist ir . liko tmmpinitt, ,o. c o m
tntonscItching wtmn wstiil 1 n il lurrn .n il Hun J BUw 1 -
in» or Protruding P it». > i r l d n t s u r e to
D R . B O - S A N - K O '3 P I L E R E M E D Y ,
which s e t. diror-tl, on pu rl, .!T«rt.d, shw>Hmtnmor. .!-
itching, effecting a perm anent erre. Price 6 3 .
Pruggistri or nuul D r . ll o a u u k e , P u l l a d a . . P a .
TAKE
PrUfslDER'S.
TD reqgn B lood P urifier ?
DR. G U iltfS
IM PRO V ED
---------------- C U R E S ■ -
LIVER PILLS
kKIDNEY OLIVER DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA.
-I^PiM PLES.BLOTCHCS AND SKIM D I S r A S E S ^ _
A KILO PHYSIC.
IIIliSsat^ACACHf;'* cccT rvcN rss^iJ!jT ||
|
at n
W I Vs A K
A m e ric a ’s F in s t f-e« n t C igars.
F iv e in c h e s in k ite a u d H a v a n a
fi led. If y o u r d e n ie r d o es n o t
k e e p ih e r r , se n d 9 2 . 2 5 a n d we
w ill m a 'l \ o 1 « t-ox of 50 c ig a rs
I. f. KIH l BEM A C l. 112 huff It. PrUasfJr.
GROCERIES - AND - PROVISIONS
W rite for S p ecial C ash P rice -L ist.
. PORTLAND.0 ° .
E V E R D IN C & F A R R E L '
í'*R
S. W
INSLOW S
-------
----------------
S
O N I P I L L F O l? A D O « !:.
A movement of the bowola each <* ajr ib uere*.
health. These pills supply w hat tLe »yrteiu locks to
---- it regular. They cere
cure Headache,
Headache, br;
brighten the
L’yee, and clear th e CompW ion bel ter t ban
ibey neither gripe dot picken. To convince you, » •
will malt pimple free or a full nox for tic . Wold t,,M j-
Id n
L u S a MLÓ M £D. LXJ.. PL.UtUlniu*. { J r
__
FRAZER
AXLE
CREASE
BEST IN TH E WORLD.
I ts w e a rin g q u ä l i t'e « a r e u n a u r p assed
o u tla s tin g tw o b o x es of a tiv o th e r br«
fro m A n im a l U lis. ( ¡ F T T H K ( 1 KN
F ;K H ALE BY O R E G O N A N I
W A S H I N G T O N M K i t e II A N
i« a *
yrup
1
w
F O R C H I L D R E N T E R T M IN Q
:Va-*T
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I O K TLA NO , OR.
MALARIA !
T h re e doses o n ly .
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DO YOU F E K l. BAD? DOF> ^OC.S B.U K
ache? Does everv step seem a liutdei:' V at tie. .1
MOORE'S
REVEALED
REMCDY.
“ IT IS I G N O R A N C E T H A T W A S T E S
EFFORT.” TRAINED SE R V A N T S USE
T h e o n ly S ta n d a r d T y p e w rite r w ith P e rf e tly
V irib le W ritin g . Huj p lie s fo r A ll M< ch in e* .
W. A. RIDEOUT, Gen. Ag’t
N n. S I !
l a r k S t.
P l 'K f L A N I . , O H .
SA PO LIO
USUAL PRICE, $ 1 5 ° 9 1 A E R M U T O R ^ Pries
The A E R M O T O R A N T I- F R E E Z IN C T H R E E -W A Y
b reak , h as a very larg e a ir ch am b er, h as a very large spout opening,
an d can be fu rn ish ed by any d ea ler th is sid e of th e Rocky M ountains
A erm otor ag e n t fo r th em . It is alw ays b e tte r to go to an A erm otor
As a ru le he is a first-class, lir e , reliab le, w ide-aw ake fello w ; th a t i t
in o u r e n tire list o f th o u san d s 0 « agents, you c a n fcnd o n e slow , s tu p id ,
F O R C E P U M P baa
!ew castirg*
h a s a w indm jil shut-off
le v # r attach e d ,
a t th e above price.
O f course, ?t is b e tte r to go to an
agent fo r any- J y
th in g you m ay w j.nt w hich h e handle*,
th e reaso n
he is an Aem»o*or agent. It ir, d cu b tfal 'f.
b ehind the- ®
iioi « tellow . W e furnish a lso a S P E C IA L
A E R M O T O R F O R C E P U M P A T $ 4 .5 0 , B E T T E R T H A S U S U A L L Y S O L D A T $ 8 O R * I O .
S en d for our
P u m p C atalogue. B uy n o th in g b a t a n A erm otor Pum p, e n d d o n o t pay m ore th a n A erm otor p ric e s for It. W e p ro te c t th e p u b lic W'e
fu rn ish it good goods at low price».
W e have e sta b lish e d tw enty b ra n c h b o o r s in o rd er th a t it m ay get g o o d , cheaply an d prom ptly,
k o n c o n su lt your own in te re s ts by insisting on n e t only A erm otor prices b u t A erm otor goods at A erm otor p ric e » B t sure an d see our ofler
a e a week of a »40 F eed C u tter at » 10 .
AERM OTOR CO .. Chicago.