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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1896)
W A S H IN G T O N m SUNDAY READING ,ha" i llkht. Lord. Lord, open unto me. Give me a view from within i l-et nte look at the outer grounds front 1 the window of Thy dwelling. Let me he g o s p e l o f g r a c e is h e r e gaze on Thy world from where Thou E XPO U ND ED. thyself art standing. And I know that the prospect shall be changed, the „lT.-r.arjr o f the O lile.t Church In crooked shall be made straight, and the S o u th e rn 8 tu te»— Atm tr a d from the rough places plain, and the glory the Lord shall be revealed.-George g r , rtuon by the Rev. J. O. Greco* of Matliesou. hoo.;b-Get Acquainted with God. The Sin of Sinn. It causes the child to ery and the Oldeat Church in the Sonth. T a point on the aged to fret. It mars the face of beauty more than Savannah Kiver can a hot iron. - - * ... high bluff *l seals the door of service to the overlooking t h o nhie. opposite bank and It chokes and blights tho tender plant sw ift waters of the river, In Kf- ° r r i x ,P It is tho poison in tho cup of love. tlngham County, it manacles the bauds that would • ¡a., a pictur minister. esque spot, where It desecrate God's house and the soil is fertile vice. a n (1 productive It throws the pall of a blacker night 3S%g^igojaj*ij a n d the yellow jasmine and hon- over the beauties of earth. It bears the seal of society’s approval. ^ __ W e.vsuekle grow In It robs the poor man of Ills crust. profusion, can be It is at home in the family, In the what remains of Ebenezcr—the place of business. In the resort of pleas [brick church, the cemetery ami tho ure. mil old cedars -the once prosperous It creates the hypocrite. lage of the Salzburgers, It puts a thorn iu the wreath of suc enezer was settled by the Salzburg cess. n 17111, two years after the landing It erected the cross on Calvary, and Oglethorpe and the Debtors at Sa- nailed the Lord thereon. auah. and was the second settlement It closed the gates of Eden, and open that State. ed the gates of hell. my were a people Making refuge It is none tho less damnable because* BSP respectable, and no less dreadful be cause* familiar. Its incarnation is called Satan. It is, finally, plain, commonplace, un varnished. every-day — selfishness.— Golden Rule. M i 1 m S « I7C0 U n a n s w e re d Y e t. m m P ¿'•v.'-'ÄK? j !38 l Z EST M EE T IN G HO USE I N T H E SOUTH. W to-day romains of Ebenezer, Georgia uty. that prospered aTnl Kttin uiam County, the f .uly years of f the eighteenth Century, j ia cruel prosecution on account of r religious creed and found an asy- I In tais wild, picturesque and at |time Isolated spot. with the Uchee ¡in*» as near and friendly neighhons, they could enjoy that religious Jom forbidden them in their native They were Just and fair in their Went of the Indians, who became ) friends and allies of the settlers, remained so until the final expul- |of the red men from the State. 5 colony was a Lutheran organiza- jand the mother church had long the necessity for tho erection of a ;h, and finally in 1768 funds were for that purpose. Brick were ' in this country and hard to ob- 1 They were secured in Germany ) ship load was sent over as ballast Wanna h, and were there reloaded er barges and landed at Ebenezer. Tick were of a peculiar kind, of >nt clay and different shape from en in this country. They were from a dark clay full of small which gives them the appear- )f being easily broken, but such the case. They are very durable. : stood the tests of storms and ids of weather, and it is still a comfortable structure. D ependence on G od. Westbouruo Park Chapel Month- lord prints the following abstract sermon delivered by Rev. J. G. Wugh. ox-President of the Ftnp- iion of Great Britain and Ireland, Impel, before the Liberation So- |His text wa* 2 Corinthians, 6: 7. greatest saints and mightiest re- ) workers were strong in propor- they realized their own weak- nd their dependence upon God. Jsm. just because of this, pro f i l e of the finest men who ever That truth was the vital onergiz- |th of the system, underlying all fealthy and extravagant growth jldeveloped. It must be the root rfi*al spring of their religious life otherwise they were only moral climbing with cogged wheels ^wliat higher levels, an 1 their ii work was mere treadmill la- wearying of Itself and pro- few results. The incarnation t must be proved by those who cP’*e incarnations of hia loveli- d the only legitimate successors ostli s were those who translat- teachlngs Into lovely deeds, temporal power o f the church ied by those who cared not for |1 power of the church and des- ftnporal power and despised p Awards. The saints gave the * temporal power, but the tem- er never gave the church any pt had not been by its princely n or ecclesiastical pretension*. in high places that Cliris- ^id survived, for they, for the had been Us greatest ene- Just because it had always * witnesses, souls to reflect flints that were like freshly »nraits. COUNTY W***' For 01,7 T ' 1* »ueient idea of flushing the *™ au'1 Futtere of city street« with water * is ' being vigorously in ' " discussed " many place« In England it has come into such favor that a proposition is now put forward to supply the city of London with sea water. The water would be taken from the sea at a spot not far from Brighton remarkably free from pollution. It would be pumped into a reservoir of 10,000,000 gallons. Thence it would be forced into another reservoir, from which it would gravi tate to London. The present consump tion of water in London is 200,000,000 ___________ ^ ^ ¡¿t which 40,000,000 gal- gallops a day, ^ na *s used for municipal purpose* This plight be saved for domestic nur- P08** by thejntrodu.ction o£ sea water. ThG COSt ° f ^ ia Put ât? S/SM’ - 00°* “ d the soa water would bo sup- Plieti by meter for public purposes at a fraction of the present cost of fresh wa- ter. One watering of the streets with sea water is said to be equal to two, or even three, with fresh water. It pre vents the decomposition of street refuse, it is effective for flushing sewers, and particularly valuable for the extinction of fire. Of its value to health there fe no doubt, and it would be easy to sup ply it to hospitals and to schools for swimming baths.____________ • First Last and always a dverf’sed as a true Mood puii- Ser. the most w onderf'il cures on record are made aud the greatest sales are won by Hood’s de pure to •Tet H ood’a, only H ood’s S a rsa p a rilla I nunswered yet? the prayer your lips Hood’S P ills cure a ll liver ills, biliousness. have pleaded, In agony of heart, these many years? Does faith begin to fail, is hope departing. And think you all in vain those falling tears? Say not, the Father hath not heard your prayer; Yoo shall have your desire, sometime, M. M. Nicholson, who lives at the somewhere! corner of Curran and Anderson Sts., At lanta, Ga., had a cancer for years. Unanswered yet? nay, do not say un It first appeared on his lip and resem I bled a fever blister, but spread rapidly granted, Perhaps your part is not yet wholly and soon began to destroy the flesh. His father and uncle baa died from done; The work began when first your prayer Cancer, and he sought the best medical aid in different cities, but it seemed im was uttered, Several A n d God will finish what lie has begun. possible to check the disease. I f you will keep the incense burning operations were performed but the can cer always returned. This continued there. His glory you shall see, sometime, some for years until the partition in his nose and his entire up where! per lip were eaten away. A ll treat Unanswered yet? Faith cannot be unan ment having proved swered, futile, he looked Her feet were firmly planted on the upon death as the Rock: only relief. Amid the wildest 6torms she stands un “ Some one re daunted. commended S.S.S.” Nor quails before the loudest thunder h e s a y s , “ and shock. ja few bottles afford- She knows Omnipotence has heard her ,ed some relief; thus ^encouraged I con prayer. tin u e d it, and And cries. “ It shall be done,” sometime, it was not long be somewhere 1 fore the progress of the disease seem P r o k e n Id e a ls . in its In hts youth the great duke of Marl ed checked. I persevered use, and remarkable as it may seem, I borough was remarkably handsome, am completely cured, and feel like I and when a short time before his death have new life. S.S.S. is the most re he looked at a portrait of himself he markable remedy in the world, and could not help exclaiming: “ That was everyone will agree that the cure was a a man." So It Is In reference to the wonderful one.” youthful Ideals of many of us. The freshness and enthusiasm with which Cancer is in the blood and it is lolly we began work for Christ is gone, and to expect an operation to cure it. S.S.S. even If we continue to work it is more {guaranteed purely vegetable') is a real or less like machines. Speaking of a remedy for every disease of the blood, Christian worker who had become ir Books m a ile d ritable aud morose, a lady remarked. fr e e ; address “ Ah, he has fallen below his ideal in Swift S p e c ific reference both to personal piety and Co., A t la n t a , service, and that makes him unhappy." Da. His Up Gone. nATCHET. P O R TLAN D M AR KETS. Business thus far for the month of Angnst has been very satisfactory, con sidering the untoward oircumstanoea which at present beset the commercial world. Country business has slackened a little aiuoe the tirst of the month, bat the oity and lower river trade oontinuee good. Wheat and wool remain almost inactive. The salmon season just closed was an extraordinary one, and, althoogh nearly half of the period al lowed for fishing wae lost by a strike, a phenomenal ran of fish has brought the paok op to wtihin abogt 10 per cent of ^a,t W h e a t M a rk e t. The new wheat crop has not begun to move in sufficient quantities to make a very active market, although considéra ble is coming into the warehouse east of the mountains. The output from the Willamette valley this season w ill be considerably below the average. Quotations are. Walla W alla, 49 to 60o; Valley, 51 to 52o per bushel. O ur L iv e « . Think of the brokenness, the Incom pleteness. tlie littleness of these lives of ours. W e get glimpses of tx-nuty in character which we are not able to at- tain. We have longings which scorn to us too great ever to come true. W dream of tilings we ought to do, but when we come to work them out our clumsy hands cannot put them into realizations. We have glimmerings of a love that is very rich and tender, without trace of selfishness, without envy or Jealousy, without resentment. We strive to t^c sweet-spirited, unself ish. thoughtful, but we must wet our pillow with tears at the close of our marred days because we cannot be w hat we strive to be. So it is In all our living. Life is ever something too large for us. \et this Incompleteness, tills nnsntisfaetoriness, litis poor at tainment. finds its realization in the risen Christ. His is the ,ierfect life, and in him we sliall find fullness of life. —j. K. Miller. B i t « o f Things. In God's own might We gird us f<»r th£ coming fight. And. *u-"tig iu him whose cause is ours In conflict with unholy powers We grasp the weapons he bus given The Light, snd Truth, and Ixive of Heaven. -John G. Whittier. Let Me In. The spirits of truth and of freedom— ‘ lue in, that I may see Thee. n trying too long to Judge these are the pillars of society.- Ilwen. n' the outside. Let uie In. Conscience is a preacher that needs •ted my soul where Is the sign to be educated In the school of the gos " “r 1 have asked what good pel of Christ. 11 being good. I have asked It is not the heavenly vision seen, ontage the righteous have but the heavenly vision obeyed, that ■eked. I have forgotten that makes life glorious. tage can only be seen Inside I.„,s and sorrow may prove life's I have forgotten that the richest blessings. If our b e a r» but be threadbare and yet joy- humble themselves to receive the di *be painter may lie penniless *nltant. I have forgotten vinp comfort. He who seeks God if he seeks any ward of art Is beauty, that of loving Is being loved. thing beside God will not find him: but w»rd of holiness Is strength he who seeks God alone In the tnith n I shall see Thy power will find him and all that God can give boly place; In Thy light with him.—John Tauler. IT B A M E R , T R A IN OK W hich o f these have you seieefed a« a mean* of travel? No matter. W hichever it 1« recol lcct that fpr sea sichueiiE, disorders of the stom ach, liver or bowels, engendered by rough lo com otion and bad food or water, j»ud for malarial trouble«. Hobtertei's 8ioma< h Hitter« is the most useful specific you can lane with you. It is invaluable also for rheumatism, kid ney coin pin inis and nervous trouble. The only gem in the world which cannot be counterfeited ia the opal. Its delicate tints defy imitation. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the only cough mediciije used in my house.—D. C. Albright, Miffiinburg, Pa . D°o. 11, ’95. There is more catarrh in this section o f the country than all other dlieHses put together, and u ntil the last few years wa-s supposed to be incurable. For a great many v« ars doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local rem edies,and by constantly fa ilin g tocure witn local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Si lence has proven cmarrh to be a constitution al diseas*-, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. H a ll’s catarrh Cure, manufactured by K. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken in tern ally in doses from 10 drops to a teasnoou- ful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It fttils to cure. Send for circulars aud testimonials. Address, F. J. C H K N K Y & CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c. H a ll’s Fam ily Pills are the best. @2c C ¥o this year in valuable articles to smokers o f Blackwell's C o n u in o Smokinç Tobacco W.Î.BIACIrwiltj.co (¡¡*«•«.-5 AWT.BIVKWMl) Unrhtm,ffr DROPSY FOB PEOPLE THAT ARE SICE or “ Ju st D o n ’t Feel Y fe ll/ ' ife v U iV E R PILLS are the One Thing to nee. Only One for a D ose. Sold by Druggists at H o . a bo* Semples mailed free. Address $ Dr. BaMRko Med. Co. Phlla. Pa. MR FOH S. W INSLOW’S CHILDREN TEETHING f- r « r s o l e b y *11 P » f R * » t a . I - * 5 C e a ts s b o t tle . P l S C '5 C U R E : f O R " , . COKS WWtW AU t i » rAU. Ej I Bert Byrup. Taste« Good. Cte I in time. Bold by dmgglla. pff ' N 9 -U M P T I O N M eat M » r k « t . B is r —Gross, top steers, $3.25; cows, $2.25@2.60; dressed beef, 4@6Qc per pound. M u t t o n —Gross, beet sheep, wethers. $3.u0; ewes, $2.76; dressed mutton, 4 )i @ 6c per pound. V bal —Gross, small, 4X e ; huge, 3@ 3)4C per pound. Ilooe— Gross, choice, heavy, $3.00@ 3.25; light and feeders, $2 76; dressed. 3>t@4c per pound. SAN F R A N C I8 C O M AR KETS. P o t a t o e s — Garnet Chile, 60@66c; Early Roes, 36@46c, in sacks; do in boxes, 40f « 66c ; Burbanks, in tacxee, 76 @90c; do in sackit, 40@76c. O n i o n s — 3T k «40 c per sack for yellow, •0@60 lor pickle. E gos — Stove. !4@18e; ranch, 20@26e: ducks, 16@17c per dcsen. Durham Tobacco You will find one coupon in Miiliiilillliiiil tkuutitn..v side each 2-ouncc bag, and two coupous inside each 4-ouuce T h o Best bag. Buy a bag, read the coupon and sec how to get your share. I S m o k in g T o b a c c o M a d o »o o o o o o o o o o o o e 'e o o n «M M M M »n M *> a e o o o o o o < & A X LE CREASE l I g Given Away Featherbone Edge it mp to ms disappear: in ten »lays at least two-third; all symptoms removed Send for free book testimo ntalt of miraculous cure* Ten days’ treatmen free by mall If you order trial, send 10c. In stamp« oTpay postage D r . H.H « r u n A S o*«. Atlanta.Oa If you order trial retu rata is advertisement to ui Gladness Comes a better understanding of the W ith transient nature of the many phys ical ills, which vanish before proper e f MAILED FREE F resh F ruit —California apples, $1-25 @1 £0 per box; ch-rries, Roysl Anne, loose, 5c per lb, 05c a box ; Black Re publicans, loose, 5c per lb, 00c per box; gooseberries. 2(a2tic per pound; cur rants, 6c; raspberries, 4c; blackberries, 3c; apricots, 41 per box; peaches, 66c@ 75 per box; watermelons, »2(82.50 per dozen. D ried F ruits — Apples, evaporated, bleached, 4@4>%c; san-dried. 3j^@4c; pears, sun and evaporated. 5@6c • plums, pitlees, 3@4c: prunes, 3@6 per pound. W ool — Valiev. 9c, per pound; F’ast- ern Oregon. 5@7c. H ops — Choice, Oregon 2@3c per pound; medium, neglected. N uts —Peanuts, 0@7c per pound for raw, 10c for roasted ; eocoanu s, 90c per dozen; walnuts, 12j^@14c; pine nuts, 15c; hickory nuts, 8@10c; chestnuts, 17c; Brazil, 12c; pecans, large, 14c; Jumbo, lfic; filberts, 1214c; fancy, large, 14c; hard-shell, 8c; paper-shell, lu@ 12) 40. P rovisions — Portland pack : Smokfal hams are quoted at 10@ 10‘4c per lb; icnic hams, 7c; boneless hams, 7)^c; reakfast bacon, 10c; bacon, 7c; dry salt sides, 6c; lard, 5-pound pails, 74$c; 10s, 7>*c; 60s, 7 '8c ; tierces, 7c per pound. H ides —Dry hides, No. 1, 16 pounds and upward, 10,al0>4cp er pound; dry kip, No. 1, 5 to 10pounds,9c per pound; dry calf. No. 1, under 5 pounds, 12<<zl6c; dry salted, one-third less than dry flint. Salted hides, sound steers, 60 pounds, and over, 7c: do, 50 to 60 pounds, 6c; do, tinder 50 pounds and cows, 4!4 @ 6c: do, kip, sound steers, 16 to 30 pounds, 5c: do. veal, 10 to 14 pounds, 6c; do, B IA S ta if, under 10 pounds, 6@7c; green (un salted lc per pound less; culls (bulls, loth-« badly cut, scored, V E L V E T E E N stags, moth-eaten, hair slipped, weather-beaten or grubby) I T S K I R T B IN D IN G one-third less. . . B eeswax —20(822 per pound. has a strip o f Featherbone stitched T allow — Prime, per pound, 3 @ 2^c; in one edge. It both flares and No. 2 and grease, 2J£c. binds the skirt and holds it a w a y M e r c h a n d is e M a r k e t . from the f e e t ; the n ew est o f the ii S a l m o n —Columbia, river No. 1. tails, H . & M. bindings. $1.25@1.60; No. 2. tabs. $2.25@2.60, If y o u r dealer w ill not fancy, No, 1, fiats, $1.75@1.86; Alaska s u p p ly y o u w e w ill. No. 1, tails, $1.20@ 1.30; No. 2, tails, $1.90 Samples shouting labels and materials mailed free. @2.25. “ Home Dressmaking Made Easy. ' a new 72 page C o r d a g e — Manilla rope, l^-inch , is book by Miss EmmaM. Hooper.o' the Ladies' Horn« Journal, tells in plain words how to make dresses a1 onoted at 8c; White sisal, bard twisted : home without previous training : mailed for 25c. Rope, lti-ln . cir. and upward, 6>ic; 5. n . & M . Co., P. o . Box 6 9 9 . N. Y . C ity. rope, 12-thread, 6%c. B u g a « —Golden G, 438c; extra C, 4)^c; dry granulated, 5c; cube crushed and powdered, 6 c per pound; Q c per pound discount on all grades tor prompt cash; BEST \H THE W0*LD. half barrels, Qc more than barrels: It« wearing qualities are untilrpasted,actually maple sugar. 15(<*lHc ner pound. outlasting two boxes o f any other brand Fret C o V . ee — Mocha, 27<831c per ponnd; from Aliim-1 Oil«. 0 * T T H R O K M IM C . lava, lancy, 21(#2tlc; Costa Rica, 20 m FOK dALB BY OREGON AND 23>4 c ; Caracal, 22)s @25c; Salvaoor, 19 fy »W A g H IW O T O N M E K C H A N T l^ J (o22.:; Arbuckle, 419.65; Lion, $19.65; and Dealers generally. Columbia, »19.66 per case. Rica—Island, $3.50@4 per sack ; Ja pan. $3.75@4. C o al O i l — Cases, 20c; barrels, TR E A T E D FREE 17>xc; tanks, 15'ic per gallon. P o a lt lr l y C u red w it h V e g e ta b le R em edlet W h e a t B a g b — Calcutta, $4.26@4.37)i Hare cured theusand* of cases. Cure cases pro pounced hopeless by best physician«. From Orstdow for July and August deliveries. FRAZER HOATT forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant fam ily laxative, Syrup o f 1« igs. prompt ly removes. T h at is why it is the only remedy with millions o f families, and is P ro d u c e M a rk e t. everywhere esteemed so highly bv all F lour — Portland, Salem, Cascadia F I T S . —A ll fl s stopped free by D r. K l i n e ’ s who value good health. Its beneficial and Dayton, 42.85; Benton county and G r e a t N e r v e R e s to r e r . No fits after tt e first effects are due to the fact, that it is the White Lily, 42.85; graham, 42.50; bu - d a y’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 00 one remedy which promotes internal trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. K lin e, perfine, 42.25 per barrel. cleanliness without debilitatin g' the W1 Arch 8t., Philadelphia, Pa. O ats —Choice white, 32@34c per bush organs on which it acts. I t is therefore el; choice gray, 30@32c. Roiled oats all important, in order to get its bene MI8CELLANKOC9. are quoted as follows: Bags, 44.25(3 ficial effects, to note when you fp jr- chase, that you have the genuine h ici 6.25; barrels, $4.50@7; cases, 43.75. A woman is the engraver of medals H a y —Timothy, 410-50 per ton; cheat, in the royal mint at Stockholm, cle, which is manufactured by the Cali fornia F ig Syrup Co. only and sold by 40.50(37; clover, 40(37; oat, 40.50; wheat, Sweden, and has been for many years. all reputable druggists. |5.50@0.50. I f in the enjoyment of good health, It ia said to be possible to draw B ak lk y —Feed barley, $13.50 per ton; and the system is regular, laxatives or brewing, 414@16. platinum wires so fine that two of them M illmtufks — Bran. $14.50; Bhorts, twisted could be inserted in the hollow other remedies are then not needed. I f afflicted with any actual disease, one $15.60; middlings, $18@20; rye, 90c of a human hair. may be commended to the most skillful per cental. The most effective way to capture a physicians, but if in need of a laxative, B uttkb — Fancv creamery is quoted at 40c; fancy dairy, 25c; lair to good, whale is to spear it with an electrical one should have the best, and with the 17X«20c. harpoon, when it is once shocked into well-informed everywhere. Syrup o f Figs stands highest and is most largely P otatoes ,— 90@$1 for new, 90c per unconsciousness. ^ e d and gives most general satisfactiom. sack for old. Prominent citizens of Charlestown, O nions —85@90c per sacn. To any adrtresH, our P o u l tr y — C hickens, mixed. $3 00@ Mass., have urged that the Bunker H ill ......N | i«ciiil I’ r l of *« 1 .... I’riis 1.1st 3.50. bioilers, 41.25(82 25: geeae, 44.00: Monument should be illuminated with H O U SEH O LD c o o d s . e t c . turkeys, live, 10@10c; ducks, $2.00@ electricity. 3.00 per dozen. This circulnr is issued for the benefit of our A new globe, for all kinds of light, country eustomers who cannot ava il themselves E gos —Oregon, 12)^c per dozen. increases the illuminating power ten f our Daily Sp»einl ^«les, Head ns your ad C iikkne — Oregon, 9c; Califoi nia 8c ; per cent. It is grooved vertically in o dress. You w ill find both uoOdsand nrb-es right. Young America, 9c per pound. W Il L Ai KINCK CO., 81S-820 Market street. San Franeisco, Cal. T ropical F ruit — Caiiiorma lemons, side and horizontally outsido. Miss Agness Adams, of Whitman fancy, $4.00@4.50 per box; bananas, U R and E Hlind, C Bleeding U R or E Protruding for P ile P « yield I L at E once S t* 41.75@2.50 per bunch: California seed College, won the highest honors at the S Itching ling oranges, $2.50@2.75 per box; Med first annual contest of the Intercollegi DR. B O -S A N -K O ’S P ILE R E M E D Y . Su»M .wk- lug, eneoroa tumor*. A p ositive cure. Circular« *eot free. P rise iterranean sweets, $4.50 per box ; pine ate Oratorial Association of Washing 6Uo. Pwggim or mail PR . BQ8AWKO. HUI sh > » apples, $3.00@6.00 per dozen. ton. N . P. N . U . No. 663. — S. F. N. U. No. 740 O regon V egetables —Garlic, new, 10' per pound; Oregon peas, 2c; new cab- oage, lc iier lb; tomatoes, 50c@75 per »oooooaooooooooooooeoooeoeoooooaosoooo« l>ox; strir g beans, 4@5c per lb: wax, 3(<f4c per lb ; Oregon radishes, 10c per dozen; canlifiower, 70@76c per dozen; cucumbers, 15@25c per dozen; egg plant, 15@17,‘£c per lb; rhubarb, 1 jg A Real Blood Rem edy. A great number of us who are past our first youth have these broken ideals, and what we ought to do with them is to obey Christ's command: "Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost," or lest every thing be lost. HI Greatest Quantity.