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About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1900)
Sandwiches that are to l>e served at au afturuouu tea should But be spread with butter or ths tilling mixture quite to tbe edge of the bread. This little preciiutiou will preveut their soiling th" gloves of those who hold them. The Hauhnote 1» in the poeaeaaioii of the Bank of Eng land Ills dated lWwinber 19, l»iHH, and is fvr £000. but accouut of it« age -»n»»»- *3 n.ada very valuable. One of the oldest and most valuable stomach medicines is Hoatetter's Stomach Bitter?» For tiftv years it has cured dyspefwia, indigestion, nvrvoiisne*!« «»r insomnia. It will cure when faithfully taken. omen rst-the medicine that Ids the record for the •gest number of abso- >e Cures of female Ills Lydia E. Pinkham’s ye table Compound. Second Mrs. Pinkham n show by her letter es In Lynn that a mil- m women have been stored to health by her adidno and advice. Third All letters to Mrs. inkham are received, ened, read and an gered by women only, ils tact is certified to by e mayor and postmas- r of Lynn and others of rs. Pinkham’s own city ’rite for freo book con- ining those certificates Every ailing woman Is ivited to write to Mrs. 'inkham and get her ad- ice free of charge. At a street fair in Wichita this fail, one of the chief features will be au arch 40 feet bi^h. constructed entirely of apple«. • too KKVlKll a too. The reader» vi th i • paper «ill be pleated to tbaru that there ia at iea»t one dreaded disease {hat wCicuce has been «ble to cure iu all tit I'.akis and that tacatarrh H«ir»i alarrh Cure is ine only poaitive cure knovtn to the medical fraternity, t ataxrh betn^ aconatitutknial dia eaac, require» a con»Utuu<«nal treatment. Hat! » < atarrh ('tire is taken internally, a ting directly upon the blood and tnuc<»u» oir a •«•% of the nyatciu,thereby destroying the founda- tiv'ii off IhO d '< a»«-, and tflviaf the patient atrenRth by building up the constitution and a*»!Ming nature in doing its work. The pto prietora have ><> much faith in ite vurativ« iH»«era. that they off« r One HundrOd I m II h for anv ca*e that it ails to cure, beud for list of tvhtimouials. Ad Ire«« F J CIIFNEY A CO., Toledo, O. bold by druggiata. 7&0. Hall's Famiiv Pi!'» are the bo«« An Egyptian contemporary aaya: “Our whole island ia now giralod with golf oouraea. AU the world ia uo longer a utage, but golf iiukt." Thia »i gnat uro ia on every bos of tbe genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine T.bi.t. the remedy that curt« m cold in one day Rural mail delivery is progressing in a way to satisfy both the |>eople and the department. Iu Carroll county, Maryland, every farm house now has a daily free mail delivery. Lydia E. PinkhanfMed Co., Lynn. Mass. Private nwtf garden*» are such a sue- •ss iu New York that the large board- g- houses find it necessary to adopt iein as a regular summer feature. ON’T <iKT FOOTSORE, GET EASK. When you take Grove's Taatelesa Chill Tonic because the formula is plainly printed on every liottle showing that it is simply Iron and Quinine iu a taste less form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. FOOT- powder. At this season your feet feel lollen, nervous and uncomlortable. If <u have smarting feet or tight shoe-«, try lien’s Foot-Ease. I tresis and comfort*; akes walking easy, l ures swollen ami reating feet, blisters and callous sjaits. |eiieves corns ami bunions of all pain and (a certain cure for Chilblains. Sweating, lamp or Fro.-ted Fret. We have over 30.- M) testimonials. Don’t get footsore get Foot-Ease. I ry it todui,. Sold by all ruggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial ackage F ree . \ddress, Allen 8. Olm- led. I.e Rov, N. Y. The natives of Hawaii, lie they ever ) poor, never steal or beg. These (fences aie confined almost exclusive- r to the Portuguese residents of the (land. TO CTKK A COÏ.D IN ONE DAT Take Laxative Bromo (Quinine Tai)- its. All drvggirte refund the money ! it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s sig- ature is on each box. 25c. Under rational treatment the average ield of a bee hive in falcatine is 100 ounds. Farmers who keep common sheep and depend upon wool, do not know how Fpecimens of some breeds may be made io reach great weights. A 2-vear-old jrade Lincoln wether in England wa." slaughtered, its live weight being 434 j ounds. The carcass weighed 304 ’pounds, the loose fat 34 pounds, the ¡sikn, blood and entrails 90 [tounds and the waste 6 pounds. Sheep weighing 800 ¡»ounds live weight are numerous in this country. The population of the Berlin suburb •Chariottenburg is in a curiously unsta ble erudition. Last year 44,718 of the )>opulation of 174,550 left the citv and 58,744 from elsewhere took their places. CATARRH I Catarrh l.as become such a common disease that a person entirely free from this disgusting complaint is seldom met with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh ts nothing more serious than a bad cold, t simple inflammation of the nose aud throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and very dangerous disease ; if nut at first, it very soon becomes so. The blood is quickly contaminated by the foul secretions, and the poison through the general circulation is earned to all parts of the system. Salves, washes and sprays are unsatis factory and disappointing, because the^r do not reach the seat of the trouble. S. S S. does. It cleanses the blood of the poison and eliminates from the system all catarrhal secretions, and thus cures thor oughly and jiermanently the worst cases. Mr p H. McAllister, of H»rrod«Hirg. Kv, write»: •• Hiving becn a temble sufferer from Catarrh, and being now ■ound nnd well, the ques tion often put to me is, ‘ What cured x ou ?’ In an swer I feel it my ditty to ■ta’.ethat Sw it » Specific i» the me licine. I am •uch a true l>ehever in the efficacy of S', lit » Specific that 1 can bonestiy and eon orient ions! y recom mend it to anv one »uffer- in< horn Catarrh. Have recomtnende 1 it to many, and »in hnppv t sav that those whom I have induc st»tem**nt that ed to use it ran belt rne< ut ir the — — it will cure any case of Catarrh if takeu “ccord- i: g to direction» ‘ is the only purely veg- K/w e-.sb e bbod purifier known and the greatest K Ji f al Mood medicines WW WW wV and If you have Catarrh don’t wait until it becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be gin at once tbe use of S. S. S . and »end for our book on bl<x*d and akin diseaaea and write our physicians about your case. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. An.*«!», M- ari Stic AU Elit FMi- y rug. 1 s*»«» <í» «M. v _ «_ *__ vor KNOW WHAT YOU AHKTAKINO two children are to set at this table over in this corner. Come right along.” Ant when they were seated the old lady bus* tied up to .Mrs. Patch and said: “Now, Lucy, you and your husband and the children are to sit here at this table.” “And if she didn’t ¡dump them rigl t down with the Whitings that they hadn’t spoken to for years.” said the voluble Nancy Ross afterward, Indeed Nancy was so fond of telling f about that Thanksgiving dinner afterward that I think I will let her tell about it now. “Then,” she said, "if that Hanner Dor- ton didn’t set old Squire Bent down at the head of one table with his daughter Nellie at his right hand and his son in law, John Watters, at his left, an’ their baby in a high chair at its gran’pa’s side, an’ it wa’n’t three minutes before the old Squire had that baby iu his arms and he et his whole dinner with the little thing in his lap. I heard his daughter say to him, ‘Shan’t I take the baby, father, so that you can eat your dinner in greater comfort?’ But he held right on to it, and there he sat talkin’ to Nellie and John same as if there’ll never been any trouble at all. And he had that baby in his arms the whole afternoon, an* went around as proud, sayin’ to folks, ‘See my grandson. Ain’t he a mighty fine boy?* It was the first time he had ever seen the child, an’ the next week he made Nellie and John come and live with him. Then what did that Hanner Dor- ton do but put Reuben Hoopes an’ his brother Silas and their families at a table by themselves, an’ I heard her say to ’em. ‘Come. now. you folks want to be sociable an’ have a good visit together same as own brothers ought to on Thanksgivin’ day.’ Their wives have al- ways wanted to make up, an' 1 tidl you they found their tongues niigh ty soon, an* ’fore that meal was over they Wai talkin' away as if there hail never been any row over property or anything else. An* before they knew it the Anderson ami Robey families found themselves at the same table with Hanner sayin' to ’em, ‘Now it don’t make no diff’renco about the past. This is Thank*givin’ day. an’ a good time to forget that there has ever been anvtbiiig but a happy past between you folks.’ "Then if she didn’t up an’ set old Ituth Norse an’ old Betty Underwood down side by side, an* they hadn’t spoke to each other for years, an’ before they knoweii it them two old bodies was chat- tin’ away together as if they hud never had a failin' out in the world. Then when she had got all the people that were enemies set down side by side she M ated every one else, and then she said, 'We w ill now sing ’ * “Blest l>e the tie that binds.” * An’ ev’rybody sung it. an’ then Elder Sharpe asked a Metin’ an’ the dinner was l»egun. There never was such a spread seen before in these parts, an* you never would have thought to have seen them people ratin' an* laughin' an* merry inakin* together that then- was such a thing in the world as mallee or pnvy or bitterness or ill-will or anytl o’ the sort, no you wouldn't. After the dinner we had games an’ sung songs an’ nmde s|»eeches, an’ from that time on there was more prare an’ happiness an* sociability in the neighborhood than there ever was before. I tell yon we’d good reason to stand U|> «* did before we AT THE FARMHOUSE. »he married J« din Watt era against the squire’s wishes. There was nothing November trees are brown and bare against John, excepting that he was And brief ami chill November days, poor, and he had a brother that had been But ou the farm all are astir in jail, but John couldn’t help that, and And cheerfully the mother says— The day to all New England dear he has done splendidly ever since he mar Thanksgiving Day, will soon be here. ried. and it is my opinion that the squire would like to make up with John and "So, father, choose the turkey now And 1 will make some pumpkin pies. Nellie, only he is too proud to make any And we will have a pudding nice advances, and they won’t either. Then Ami It shall be of largest sise; there is Kate Whiting and her sister, There aie walnuts In the garret Lucy Patch, who had a fulling out years And there Is corn that pops like snowr. There are apples In the cellar ago. and ain’t spoke to each other since, Which all the children love, I know. and before that one was the very ahadder of the other. Reuben Hoopes and his "Ami we will have our sons come home. Our daughters and grandchildren, too, brother Silas and their families fell out Mary Ann and Jim and Joseph, over the property after old man Hoopes Maggie, Nellie and baby Prue.” died, and they ain’t ever spoke since. Then the Anderson and Robey families So father gets the turkey tine And mother makes the pumpkin pies had a falling out five years ago, and they And home Thanksgiving morning brings don’t speak, and before that they were Beloved ones of every size. as thick as flies around a molasses bar’l. The old house rings with their glad laugh, Then their are other families in the dis The tireplace glows with ruddy light, trict that ain’t as friendly as they ought And when at table all have met to be, so your Thanksgiving dinner might That kitchen Is a pleasant s ght. end in a riot if all these people come to The father ofTers sincere thangs. gether in the school house.” The little ones Impatient wait. “Not w ith a woman of your tact at the And theu the turkey plump he carves And from the bounty fills each plate. head of it,” I said. Then grandma's plum-filled pudding comes “Well, you go ahead and get it up, and With mince and pumpkin pies galore, I will aid and ain't you all 1 can. 1't will While nuts and apples, raisins sweet. And fun and feasting crown the hour. be a break in the monotony of things here even if there is a fight.” And here the poor remembered are And not In kindly word alone. I spent all of my time before and after With well filled hands the children -peed school during the next ten days in call To neighbors’ homes where want Is known. I ing at all of the homes in the neighbor hood, and inviting the people to come to The pleasant hours most swiftly fly, The corn Is popped and stilled the fun, the school house on Thanksgiving day An<l happy children rest In bed, with well-filled baskets. The school The glad November day 1» done. h<*ise was unusually large, and there But by the Are grandmother alts would be room for all if we took out a ...... In her hand she holds a curl,— Ami part of the seats. Three «lays before A soft brown curl, that ah »ne !• i’g since Thanksgiving old Mrs. Dorton said: Around the face of her first girl— "hear child." she cries, "forgottt n never, “I guess you’ll have the house full A mother's love remembers ever.” Thanksgiving. Nancy Ross was in here Endly Pearson Bailey. to-day, and she says that the whole dis »*••••••••••••••••••••••••• trict is coining, and Nancy knows if any one does, for she sjiends most of her time : A RURAL PEACEMAKER. • trotting about pickiug up gossip and re : --------- J tailing it out aagin. She is as good na • BV J. L. HARBOUR. • the local columns of a newspaper for giv news about what folks are saying {»«•••••*•«••*•*••*••••••• ing and doing, and she says that the idea of the Thanksgiving dinner in the school —O11EY did not pay much attention house was < aught like w ildfire. Nancy V|| to Thanksgiving in the country says she wouldn’t miss it for" a party.” ¿J, school district in which I taiiglit in The larger boys and girls of the school the West a Rood many years ago. Christ met me at the school house the evening mas was the chief holiday of the winter, before Thanksgiving, and we decorated and it was celebrated without any spetial the room beautifully with evergreens and demonstration, for most of the people were poor and there was not much senti ment in their general make-up. Old Han nah Dorton, with whom I boarded, was ,,f New England birth, and she had not .■ome to the West until some years after her marriage. She was a woman of a good deal of force of character, and no one in the neighborhood had a nimbler tongue. One evening ale.ut two weeks before Thanksgiving 1 said to her: "IK. the people obaerve Thank-giving very generally in this neighborhood?” "No, they do not.” replied the old lady with considerable emphasis. “Ami it ba, always been a good desl of a trial to me that so little attention was paid to a day that we made so much of back there in dear old New England. It was the great est holiday of the year to us, and bow we did enjoy it!” "Why do they pay so little attention to it here?” "Well. I guess it is just because they have never got in the way of paying any attention to it. They never celebrated the Fourth of July as it ought to I* cele brated until my busband got them started to doing it ten years before he died, and several flags we bad been able to borrow. Provision had been made for two long now we have a big celebration every tables to run almost the entire length of year.” "Home one ought to start them to cele the room with some smaller tables in the corners. brating Thanksgiving." “I suppose that we will have to be "Bo they ought. But who is to do It?" r reflected fur a few moments, and then careful bow we seat tbe people at the ta bles.” I said to Mrs Dorton. I said: "You just leave that mostly to me,” "Suppose we start them off in that di •‘1 know the people said the old lady rert ion.” and I won’t la» so apt “H .w?" asked the old lady, dropping better than you dr I’ll set ’em her knitting into her lap and manifesting to make awkward blunders, down all right.” s-aiter interest. Nancy Boss was right w "Suppose we get up a Thanksgiving Jinner in the school boose. Invite all that the whole district woul • >e folks In the district to c me and bring at the dinner. The dinner heir dinner with them. There does not 1 o’clock, and by noon the b -eem to be any social life in the neigh- ed by a merry, happy crowd, H.r ><eel unless one can call occasional most every family in the di There were baskets and buses aud ¡wiling matches and singing schools in c,. school house social diversions. The even tubfuls of turkeys and chickens and There eople never eat and drink together in a doughnuts and pies and cakes. any kind T>*«n’t you were baskets of big red apples, and Hi nerry-msking of i at the idea of a Thanksgiving ram Hawkins brought half a barrel of Fiink 1 the sc bool houae wonld take?” sweet cider. Rome one brought a ban ket of popcorn balls for the children, and Id lady reflected fur a moment there was an infinite variety of jell es think it wonld. It would be a and jams and preserves and pi-klee n every one. and I think the brought forth from botes end baskets. ••'Tbere's enough stuff here to feed an Id tnrn out big. only—only---- ” army." »aid Hannah Dorton, as she bus asked. ia. there are so many lied about fr tn table to table, the happi Mghborbood that don't est end moat active person la the house A few minutes before 1 o'clock I heard .peak to each other. I never aaw aaj- tb.nr like it. There i, oM Mamro Bent, her »eying to Mrs Kate Whiting. “Come who woa’t »peak '» «>1. da .«htet kt< sate sow, Kate; yon and your husband and Ceilings that have been mnoked with a kerosene lamp »lionId be washed oil with soda water. Chinese I Ike Americans Heet. Up to the beginning of tbe present troubles, it has been somewhat remark- able fact, according to the Philadel phia inquirer, that no Americau etti- leu. traveler, business man. diplomat or missionary, has ever been murdered in China by the Chinese. This can be eaid of the citizens of none of the other great powers which have had constant and long-continue«i intercourse with I the East. This, it ia said, is not a mere coincidence, or accident. The Chinese like Americans. Of course, the statement is made with the reser vation that they do not like any for eignere a. a resident of China, but as compared with the people of the great European powers, they like the Attieri- I 1 caus. Whenever they ask a I man of what nationality he is. ami his answer ’ is that he is an Americau. they ' at unce exclaim, "We are friends." Every Exertion a Task Every Care a Burden There is failure of the strength to do and the powvr to endure; there is weakness "all over” that is persistent and conBtant. Tlie vitai functions are impaired, food does not nourish, and the whole system ia run down. A medicine that strengthens the stomach, perfects digestion, invig orates and tones is needed. What H . xl '>.ir-.ipunlla did for Mrs t B ii:irlaiid. stia.lv, Tenn., it has done for ««tiiers. She t«s»k it when she was all rundown without ap,*at<tr. lusms ile.h, aud unable to do lier work, h r«-store«i her tpuetue. nnre.i-««i her w«-i*ht and Steers are preferred in this country made bar well and »troag. Thl» is her for beef, blit m England the butchers ow n unsolicited statement. pay one cent per pound more for heif Sarsaparilla ers. as they g've less Isiuo and more Hood choice cuts. A well-bred heifer, how Promises to cure arid keeps the ever. ia worth more for the dairy than for beef. No lieifeia should be kept promise. The earlier treatment is w hen calves unless from patents that Ix gun the liettcr—li^gin it to lay. are known to possess merit. ’s Make Yuur l.iver Lively» A laiy, languid liver keep« y <>u in bad health all the time Wake it up to lively action with Cascarela < mid) Cathartic. All <iruugi>t*. 10c, Af»c, 5tk*. Meat haa been preserved in a (rosen statu for 30 yeara. and (ound perfectly eatable at the vud of that time. A fruit tree propagator ha» produced a seedless apple. Tliesi' new apples are suprior iu flavor to the ordinary kinds, High prices are beiug paid fur the trees. Stopn tbti Gough anti Worht Off tho Gotti. lsixative Bromo-Quinina Tablets cura Mothers will tied Mrs. Winslow s Sooth- h-g Syrup the liest rv.uedy to use for lh» w s cold iu one day. Nu cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. children during tlie teething period. Before the next tourist season opens Due Chicago man has escaped jury the Swiss railway from Spies to Fouti- aerivce on the plea that he is preju geu will be completed. diced against the city. But then some men will say almost anything to es- The lu.l Prescription tor Malaria ca|>e jury duty. Chills aud Fever is a laittle of Graves. 1 iistvdeas Chill Tonic. It ia simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form, No Cure. No Pay. Price EOo. When a mau is lost to all shame, a club or a rawhide ia the only argument left. I'lso’a Cure tor Consumption ia an infs! lilile medicine for coughs and colds N W. S ami si., (levan (¡rove, N. J., Feb. 17, IMO In China a doctor’s fee varies H cents to n quarter. from PILES ••I lite torture« of the damned with pi’otrudiiiK pile* brought on by cou»lipa th'll with which I was afflicted for twenty veatN 1 ran acroae your (,’ASCARFTS in the town of Newell la and never found anv(binr to equal them To-day 1 am entirely free frotr pile* and feel like a new man ” C H. K« iti Hll J one» st. Sioux City. 1* CANDY CATHARTIC svocomo * From the Oregon Independent. Salem, Ore. The daughter of Hon. J. H. Fletcher, formerly governor of South Dakota, but now a resident of Salem, Oregon, has lately attained an enviable position. Her snccess Is remarkable, especially when the fact is known that for some time it was feared her caieer would be shortened Iwcause of ill health. Ex-Governor Fletcher in speaking of the happy event iu his daughter's life said: ‘‘E’or over two years my daughter had been declining from a strong, healthy, rosy-cheeked person to a pale, weakly and helpless girl. Kho was afflicted with terrible headaeht-a, and apparently grew weaker and more lan guid, slid apparently without cause We became gieatly alarmed and feared that her days were already numbered. ‘*1 tried several doctors, one after the other, but all without avail. Fin ally, to please a friend, I Isiught a Is'X of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and to our surprise, before it was used her headaches ceased, the color began to return to her cheeks and lips and her strength began to assert It-ei f, ’ ‘I bought five boxes more and by the time she had finished them she was completely restored to h«r health, and today our hearts are gladduned with the society of a robust, rosy aud healthy girl instead of a pale, tired and sickly one. In her case the transfor mation was rapid and wonderful, and I can never speak too highly of the splendid merits of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills." No discovery of modern times has proved inch a ls>ou to women as Dr. Williams’ Pink Tills (or Pale People. Aiding directly ou the blood aud nenes, invigorating the laaly, regulat ing the functions, they respire the strength and Health to the exhausted woman when every effort of the pbjsi- clan proves nnavsiling. For the growing girl they are of the utmost lienetit, for the mother indis pensable, for every woman invaluable. Everywhere Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are rec<>Htnx*d »■ h specific for diseases of the blood aud nerves. E’or paralysis, loooinut** alai- ia, aud other diseases long »iippo-ed incurable, they have proved their effi cacy iu thousands of cases. They are one of the greatest bleMinga ever lie »towed upon mankind. This remedy is sold by druggists generally, or will be sent, postirald, by the Dr. Williams' Medicine <7o., Hebe- nectady, N. Y., on receipt of price, 50 cents per oox. six loxes for f’J.50. Th» waste from th« hay mow makes excellent litter for chickens. Th» seeds of all kinds of grass when dry are relished i>y fowls, aud »hen the Plessanl. P»l»lshl, rownt T»,l» Oood. Oo waste from the mow is thrown ou th« Uuod, N»,»rSlvh»n Wssksn or Gniw Ilk- J&e SUS ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... flisir of the |>oultry house the fowls S»«.S, lkl*.,s. S-.r-.l. *•« iss». II» will industriously woik in the litter UA Tfi Difi Hold and «unranteert hr all drug- and find much to cuusume. NU* I U'DAU , iwi" <1 Kl I Habit ( The lumous (Jerman AVENARIUS ....Pormanontly Do»troya.... LICE AND VERMIN.. • • CHICKEN g»F*One application it all that is required. It lasts for years. If your dealer cannot supply you, write for circulars and information to the following distributing agents: Perfection Pile Preserving Co., Seattle, Wash.; Fisher, Thorsen & Co., Portland, Oregon.; Whittier, Coburn & Co., San Francisco, Cal. DOU YOU WANT YOUR SON EDUCATED FOR A BUSINESS LIFE? •c *»< I i l l<’ 4. NKUM. I>Y«»I I % It K II, < GKll’r», V NMV <'IK ITING M M HN a ft< Hur m botti» I d -I m ) and have It In the htnite It wdl -« m ' f NiiflWrlhK and doctor*« Mila HarmlawN for clilldren'« h ***. < »»nlalii« no opiate* or other hmm ful iiivie’lient«. A tiNoliitrly purr «tul <’on« »-iitrMtF<l IjkTtfr botti# «»f ano doari« fi»r |i, prepaid by mail or ri|ir«-NM, or wr will «end you < |M»»t) « trial boll I f for XT <*«*nt« A «rot» w «ntrd ISIUM IMVIIIIC CUI CMrill. «4 IB* U. ««F I" “‘AMERICAN MOVEMENT •■»♦••»•n, full) lawakHl ni-ktlftn ¡•b. pro!»>•■•» lihl llel a-IJuBlr-t k I aln an4 wn h all hnpru.aMUMta la fart >»fl• •«< Ola »i.astwiada VMb »r«Mi sswi fii . e II j |«)l| I-L> or »r,Y piece of Machloary, II 1-sLslxy will pay to write ua for cata logue and price». Rosseti A OO.. Portland, Or. 20 YEAR GUARANTEE..'' a* * 9 r*a»l»'S»»a»lrT Co . D.pl 31 Sat. Bldg, CfilCMiO. NOTHING BETTER MADE Are You Deaf?? AU raeM of DCAFNtSB nr HARD-Ht ARING Intrmati«ial loral fliiie. You can’t make a místate il you gota Mitchell Mitchell, Leuiis & Staven Co. PORTLAND. ORECON. FINE OLD Th*r* ar» « p-rhapa si . id in H > SAW MILL, ENGINE g,eara« ee<|iialkl any •<'>a»li«iuol<i Wath Marte Oh f ’ »IH and ••)"•*>■ harg> s w Illi p-ivlbga of t Nff a » * 4 111 A I IO v If «at Bali.»act- ■ . can ba ra«. raa i atour ts|«anaa q An a-a.a-.to- i lpla'a-t < ham * rtb <»na l>«.llarcf M Eo CL If» <*> It AfEt * ith orl-r Wb.rt aw s^raaa <Ml*a > dtaufll ba taut with «wrier anri 'a will ba Ahlppad t»y >-gi.i.ra4 ■ all W>ib» wbothar '«■ nto or l-adiaa. Jawalry Catilvg a fraa. »r« runt 11 «<«1 V by on r new In rent on . only tho«« bor« d-wf ar« Incurabl« Ml it» *oi«a« < kA«« IV«»M a Y»LY. iMMrrlb« ynor e«Mt J iimlnttion and adrlr« frw«, \oo can ror« yo«raalf at bom« at a nominal r»wt. Beware of Them Preserver) CARBOUNEUM During the present century 400 ho- nian lives, fl>6,000,000 and 100 ships have been lost tu finiti««» eflorta to find the North Pole. OO0OOOOOOOOOOOOO W ood WHISKY (iin. Brandy, Rum 13 full quart« »9 or Per »alIon IbW ANb MHKRHY. |l M XXX JOHN POOL», PoSTf.»wa. O bswob ran <-»• you H-e **»' tiargalns in g'<>»ral OrSsrs lor S.* <■> sn«t apwsrd 4rllvrred 1rs« tn n scliiiiary. .ngir-M, boilers, tana», pumps, hrsrvst Railroad or suamer Landinc Blank p.uw». belts and windmill» Th. new »teal t X L windmill, »okl by bim, 1» un- < and Kes* AI.L ««•<>■* <■<><>■>» Sciatica «Bd Lumbago ■ bwut. HUM I ffiaj imj, It, »• (H* '.>» <la, ; St. Jacobs Oil LOUIS CAHEN & SON XatabliabM Ä Year* ir.‘.,’;-:'.?^PENSiON Ir •ICMfOtu w»«»m*ft«A 0 C . the; will ra- II . . \ H . 8<af »/th Corps Prosecuting claim» »Ince 117a DROPSY CUTLER’SCARBOLiTEflf IODINE 13 «Aft TtUTMkT fttL » b »4. D»»y»y *•»c’"' .P.V ..7/»' tw..tv ;.tk tí. ■*.< wooi-rf«! •,t • B»»»«sf-4«»>j*k»«»- . .4 •‘••»i j j |1I1M j Bus I, AUssi», Us.