Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1897)
I W A S H IN G T O N BRAVE “ TIQE." \ 'm > r»»p>rste the - iirp ln s A p p le«. crop is one o f the m m of greatest loss. Many who -nnotdlsiH.se- of the crop in a fresh CT,How it to rot or fe»>d It to stock (bare found it profitable to evaporate kbit apples could not he sold fresh l»o constructed au evaporator. The tan was original with me and has forked to perfection. T h e building is fleet long. 4 feet wide and i> feet higli jibe eaves. The w alls are o f good nrd brick and 8 inches wide. The fire pi iaI Is in I lie end opening on the ptside. In tlie center o f one side is a pr 2 feet wide III) extending down ti front the eaves or to within 3 feet l»f the ground. This leaves space 3 i W«ste of the fruit It ,rrTT>x A H OM E- MA DE K V A P O K A T O I t . I feet wide on each side for trays (c) I which are 2 feet square and made of I I by 114 inch material, the bottom he. ling covered with tine w ire mesh, A Iframework extends entirely around like room o f 2 by 3 inch material, nail- led S im-hes apart, to support the drier I frames. When a fram e is tilled, it Is I easily slid into a place either on tin- right or left o f tlie door. Clone the TMtllator In the roof when the sulphur It put in to bleach the apples. The J firebox (a) is lit by 10 inches square. 13 feet long, arched with one 4 inch I thickness of brick. T h e firebox walls ire 4 Indies thick. Cold aid is admit ted on lKitli sides o f the tire liox through tines 4 inches wide, passing [ from the rear o f the box to the front of it and passing into the frame room Just in front o f lire or smoke flue. As thown in the ground plan, the smoke I passes from the flrelkox to the left, tack to the front, over the Are box. along the end wall, then the side wall, round the end wall to the chimney. In a larger building a larger tire I six and larger frames are needed. Any good bricklayer ought to be aide to put up this building.—Farm and Home. f a s t n r t n g A c r o s s n H I —h w n v . Many farms are so situated that the [ cattle must be driven across a high way to pasture. This almost always affords trouble. T lie cattle will break away up and down the highway to feed by the roadside, instead of cross ing the road directly front the pasture gate to the lane lending to tlie barn. A device is shown herewith that may prove of assistance in such oases. A narrow lane is built on each side of C O N VEN IE NT C A T T L E G UA R D . tbc road, extending w ell up to the 'trriage track but not close enough. ®f course, to prove any lnconvecier.ro ’<> travelers. T w o long Itars o f thin taards are then fitted to slide across the highway when the cattle are to bo driven across, and then back again. °nt of the w ay o f travel. A beut rod °f Iron connects the tw o ends o f the tars, so that both can be »lipped across •he road at once, the bend in the rod Permitting It to rest upon the ground *> that the cattle can pass over It. To operate this takes but a moment's time.—Orange Judd Farmer. T h ln n ln - r F r u i t . Midsummer Is the best season for •tinning all the larger fruits. Just be- f<*n> the seed begins to form nature ‘'oea a great deal o f this thinning, and *• Is perhaps as w ell to w ait until all •ta fruit that w ill naturally fall has tallen. Then pick ofT the surplus fruit •kerever it seems to be superabnnd- **•• In most cases this thinning does *•* decrease the amount o f fruit be- f,n*e it so largely increases the size of '"dividual specimens. It is the best *talt that alw ays pays best. That al- *»y « means fruit that has been Judi- thinned. M oat» H it , M"oh of the baled hay that comes to it musty. Most farmers when y bale h a , tnink It need not be dry, as the bale* are small. Bot 2|* "mount o f hay packed In them is ***■}'« sufficient to get up a violent COUNTY HATCHET. H ig h R itte tteoree. T w o record* of 104 oat o f n possible i)o a B .v r . Hie Helpless Master from 105 w ith the Ge«-Metforii rifle lmve al- * T errib le Heath. ready been made this year bv Sapper i ige is only a dog, arwl a “ .vaHer d o g 1 o B|a of the Royal Engineer« and Ser- ■ uit, ut his mixed breed has Riven Reant Dalgetty of the Berwiok-on-Tweed i in a s hrrj coat and a bushy tail, rifles. The tiring was at the reeula- I'.1, ' . lr!! *’ * s B*veu *li,u * uu)Pe tion ranges, seven shot« eaoh at 300, semse than the tuau who owns him 500 and 600 yards, in m ilitary |ioei- stands possessed of, says the Temple tion«. In both cases the men missed . r i# ». L f i l ,,o (Tex.) correspondent of the Philadel the bullseye at the shortest distance. phia Times. The highest score made with the dis Tige’s master is a rancher, so-called, carded M artini-Henry rifle under the who lives on a rocky little place south same conditions was 103. iermept unie». the . Is dried before It is nur int« .s F r®Perly o f Temide, ami who yesiterday came to A ltO I S K T O A C T IO N there were mo... ___ .. .e *“• town luinglnc a itale o f cotton on his •tay the p r i ^ f o r h^u-ntlw ' k l)al' " K rl<'k(‘t}' w« g ° n- A fte r disposing o f the A dormant liver, or you w ill suffer all the tor •letter than It is as ti ' ' >e IU,K'k <1<>,,on the good-for-nothing fellow tures incident to a prolonged bilious attack. would lie better worth it my straightway proceeded to drink up the Constipation, headaches, dyspepsia, iurred tongue, sour breath, pain in the right side, will proceeds, and before the day was far admonish you of neglect. Discipline the recal spent he and his money were pretty far citrant organ at once with Hostettrr's St >mach Bitters, and expect prompt relief. Malaria, ........ T ’« tn Cut Timothr. gone. iheumatism, kidney complaint, nervousness hef ,r - t f “ T , 'V “ 8Ually left »«te Toward evening he climbed into the and debility arc thoroughly removed by the S tZ ifn i t,tdW>8 “0t h«'ctheuu- wagon, perhaps with an idea o f going Bitters. t t f- l° ,V!,r at a“ y ‘» ‘<1 if loft home, as lie unhitched his sliaggy T h e K lv e r Ju b . ... 1. T 1 riI>e,,s- »'io li that wa England has sent an expedition to tritiou earlier Is chom/li "V " US nU' from the post in front of the titier. i„....... , 1- ° W?<M where they had been l»een stand standing explore the R iver Jub, the boundary fiber. The common m mist-.to ' ly V to w r y "'here or a [ between ihe Italian and English allowing the h , , 1S Tk.de ° f 1111 llay without a bite o f food o urled spheres of influence in Somaliland. It needs ,0 ripe!! its “ ‘,rtok water, and only T ige cut ------------ -- T I ur. yond the blossom ..... » Ket b,>' 11 •' under the wagon to keep them e com is under command of Major Macdonald, • ‘ ,. 0 ?'l‘,«*«»ni stage. Old horsemen pany. But, having gotten Into the w ag who made the survey for the railroad - mt timothy seed Is very nutritious, on, the man was overcome by a “ Jag,"’ from Mombasa to Lake Victoria. | "ould tieed to be to produce any ef- and fell down on tile floor and went to j 88 it ,K « very small part of the sleep. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS ,ea<l- " h a t really keeps up the Meantime, the poor, starved ponies We are asserting in the courts our right to the exclusive use o f the word “ CASTOKIA,” and s re‘1K' 11 of timothy-fed horses is the began grazing about, picking a wisp o f “ PITC H ER ’SCASTOR1A,” asourTrade Mark. j ‘‘ut fm l|ng Utat goes with it. The best green here and there, till presently they I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, j lme ,0 ,ut timothy Is just as It comes got out on the edge o f the town, and was the originator o f “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” nto an<* before it blossoms. The had climlied up the three feet o f rail the same that has borne and does now bear the not we*gh so much then, but road embankment, dragging the wagon fac simile signature o f CHAS. H. FLETCHER on 1 . las lllorp available nutrition than it | after them and nipping the grass be every wrapper. This is the origin al" PITCHER’S | " ' 1 lllive Inter, tween tlie cross ties. In the midst o f CASTORIA ” which has been used in the homes o f the mothers o f America for over thirty years. this state o f things the northbound Look Carefully at the wrapper and see that it is Pru ning Tomato,»«. train came around the curve, bearing the ktnd you have always bought , and has the According to a writer in Farm and straight down upon the wagon. The signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the i I- ¡reside, where tlie tomato vine Is engineer blew his whistle, but the man wrapper. No one has authority from me to use trained to a single four-foot stake the tn the wagon was too far gone to hear. my name except The Centaur Company o f which ripening of the to ; A Mexican tamale vender some distance Chas. H. Fletcher is President. mato may be slight March 8, 1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M.Du off saw the danger and ran down the ly delayed, yet the i embankment whistling to the horses, Switzerland’s new twenty-franc gold increased size and but they were too hungry to heed so piece lias on its face the head of a peas excellence of the I slight a warning. ant girl, representing H elvetia, with fruit more than But there was Tige, the dog, the 33 stars around it for the cantons. compensate for the ponies’ faithful friend. Realizing the brief delay in ripen danger on the Instant. T ige bounded H O I T T ’ S S C H O O L F O K B O YS ing. Presuming, I up the embankment and began barking then, that a flve- and biting at the horses’ heels with Accredited at the State ami Stanford univer a flrst-class Home School, Careful so- foot split stake has j such persistence that they in turn set sities, pervision and thorough trainiint ill every re been firmly set at to kicking anti backing down upon him, spect, Seventh year begins August loth. Ira Hottt, f-h. b., Burlingame, San Mateo cou n t-. each plant and the all the time getting farther and farther ti. California. tomato vine has al out o f harm’s way. till, just as the train ready beeu tied to sped by. they had gotten themselves A ray o f light from Sirius can reach f i g . 1. the stake with com and their sleeping master out of th* 1,8 only a,ter traveling for twenty-two mon twine, a daily lookout must be path of its destruction. years with a speed of 77,777 leagues a kept for the suckers which put out ! second. A F A M O U S W RITER. from the main stalk and retard the I never used so quick a cure as Piso’s proper development of the tomato I Consumption.— .1. B. Palmer, 1 ' Cure r’ure for Box M r « . M a r g a r e t O l i p h a n t W a s O n e o f 1171, Seattle, Wash., Nov. 25, 185*5. plant. The sprouts, or auxiliary suck t h e P r o l i f i c N o v e l i s t s o f t h e lln.v. ers. which push out from the bast- of The death of Mrs. Margaret Oliphant. j In the 8reat church at Mengo, Ugan- the upper side of each of the side whlch occurred in England not long lla, A frica, there are over 200 trees to branches must be resolutely pinched since, has removed one o f the most support the roof. Each of these trees off. or broken off if the pinching lias took 100 men to drug it up the bill. lieen delayed too long. If this is done and the vines have been tied to the H O W -8 T H IS ? stakes with not less than three strings, | We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for as the growth lias been continuous, the any case of Cutarrh that cannot be cured by vine when in hearing will appear as H all’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo. O. shown in Fig. 1. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. If, as it sometimes occurs, a second Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business trasactions, branch or stem !s allowed to grow from and financially able to carry out any obliga near the ground, the result will be as tion made by their firm. W est & T r ita x , shown In Fig. 2. By- Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. keeping aii super W a l d ik g , K ik n a n tfe M a r v in , Wholesale Druggists, Tsledo, O. 6 nous growth Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken infernally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur pinched back, this faces of the system. Price Toe. per bottle. Sold will grow nearly or by all druggists. Testimonials free. H a ll’s family pills are the best. quite as large as the main stalk, D o g T a x « » in Fran c#. simply forming a In France it is not necessary to have fork. Both stalks | license to keep a dog, but what amounts are to be tied to a j to practically the same thing, it is neo- single stake, unless | essary to pay a dog tax, which varies it Is deemed desira according to the species— a watch dog ble to let the side paying less than a fancy poodle, and so branches spread forth. From the returns of this tax it out upon t he FIO. MRS. M AR O AR K T O L I P H A N T . ground, where they will continue to ________________________________________ _ I ia learned that there are 2,900,000 dogs grow and ripen fruit after the staked prolific and versatile writers o f mod- in France, which tiring in an annual vines have ceased itearing. These will ern times. Ever since her first novel revenue o f 8,800,000 francs, continue to bear fruit until after the was published, when she was 21, she | There are only about 1,000 Germans first killing frost. On the approach of has had a place in tlie hearts o f a very | large class o f readers. She was an in the whole of Mexico. frost it has In-come customary by man truckers to pull up the vines and exceedingly rapid writer, turning out spread them in a well sheltered place with great regularity a three-volume W IS E WOMEN. and cover them with litter, so as to al npvel every year. She published over low the ripening process to go on. This forty works of fiction in addition to numerous biographical and historical T h o s e 'W h o H o e d th e F ir s t S y m p late crop is often more profitable than works. Beside, she was a frequent t o m s o f N e r v o u s D e ra n g e m e n t. that of the staken vines near the close contributor to the periodicals and was of the tomato season. the editor o f a series, Foreign Classics A dull, aching pain at the low er part fo r English Readers. o f the back, and a sensation o f little D raegtng A fte r P low in g. Mrs. Oliphant was 70 years old when rills o f heat, or chills running down Almost always it is good practice to she died and was born in Midlothian, the spine, are symptoms o f general harrow plowed land as soon as possi- England. Her maiden name was W1L wom b derangement. 1,1,» after it has been plowed. In turn son. I f these symptoms are not accom ing the furrow there are inevitably panied by G iv in g A w a y Brides. large air spaces left under it. which i Among the novel means by which leucorrhoea, except in very early springtime, dry it onMntich t w quickly“ to make n gioA. *>me people o f I amu I ow subsist is that they are pre mellow and moist seed bed. It is ail of giving away bride« at the altar. The cursors o f he worse if the soil is clayey in tex- custom has grown to considerable pro that weak-1 tore and has been plowed when too portions off late, and a member o f a ness. I t is wet Then the furrow between the firm offashiannblecostum eTs.lnspeak- worse than fo lly to ne drv'air under it and the dry air above tng o f it recently - « W - J o n o f it I takes into a clav brick that no plant course, recognize the fact thot in this glect these rolbs can penetrate. Bn. if the furrow is broken down soon after being turn ed the soil dries through evenly, leav. Ing It In fine condition for a seed bed. I m p r o v e d G r a i n Sh ocV . \ coord ing to a writer in the fa rm Tnomal nine bundles of grain make a j shock” than the old-fashionod better dozen. Get UP fo,ir in a crOK" ’ ,hp,i one in each o f the spaces S w ^ n T w o ° f the first four, and cap «Tth the ninth, well broken, and the ,n toward the tons the prevailing prevailing wind. If sheaf standing 0P* set. —* that is. each shea well o . own bottom and thoroughly clos OI| In at the top. such a shock will : ' a stiff windstorm and a threo days’ rain without harm. _ G ra«« Under Trees. we see trees which dry great city are score« o f hard-working girls who are miles away from their | As a friend, a relations and who have always been woman friend, too busy to cultivate many friends. l e t ■ * advise W ell, when the«e girls are about to the ns° o f L yd ia E. marry young fellow s who are similar- j Pinkham ’s Vegetable ly circumstanced the question arises as j Compound, M rs . G eorge W. B tiepard , W ster- to who shall give away the bride. . “ I can answer that question for them vliet, N; Y ., says: “ I am glad toatato at once, for I have connected with my th a t I am cared from the w orst form business an ex-major in the army, a o f fem ale weakness. Before using member o f an ancient fam ily and a Mrs. Pinkham's Remedies it seemed man, too. o f unimpeachable character. th a t I had no strength a t all. I waa He is poor, but he dresses well, has In pain all over. I began to feel better beautiful white hair and looks the a fte r taking the first dose o f V ege kindly father to perfection. I Intro table Compound. I have used five bot duce him to the bride a ml bridegroom, tles, and I feel like a new womau. I and he, for a mo«lerate fee, gives the kn ow i f other suffering women would o n ly try it, it would help them.* former away. Sometimes be takes t h e _______ _____________ ___________ ________ whole arrangements o f a breakfast and I • - ..i- ia .i.. J T S : 'n , i } M S E M IL GOODS W S . J S * welcome guest with these people after- Wt a-rfy tbe mo>, line orGjrmnastom *nd Athletic Good« on the L'oftftt. .he gran* nD,1‘‘r ,hem’ whl,e lD fhe w aM ” ------------------------ ----- SUITS A*u UNIFORMS MADS TO OSSCR. "P nShborho,Hl wq[ wil1 •* ,IW8 greener ,,ndPr When a f O U f woman ba* been re- I Send for Oar Athletic catAiogu*. same will grow — w,lirh ! ! „ u , not thus shaded. An queated to break the news o f a death W I L L * F IM C K C O .. Cal. f rohard *that has long been plowed to a * ? * * * } luinaci1.» a «'a coin' Harks* *t.. San r n i f l m orchard rn" feeding roots be- reached the supreme pinnacle as a com- __ ¡ T t i o ^ T , h e grass. On the o t h e r forter. | - - - _______________________ • - t o d under the tree where grss. ha. There 1« a vast difference between . m .n tne the true feeding roots being able to «ay prayer» that sound OD* fnp«r the surface, and when a fine, and having a broken and contrite ponte nP* r ander It lark« heart. dry time killed o «L molature «nd I» very «w u RUMPET CALLS. H a a ’ t H o r n B o u n d « ■ W a r n in g t o th a U n r e d e e m e d . O V E cuts the guardian kuot o f doubt. Satan «eta his big t r a ;< s with sweet bait. l\ ' y A A minute man is one not fourni in a second's place. A ettari ty ser- mon shouiii be il lustrateli with plates. Contentment Is the art o f doing wtth- >ut things. I f you would bo poor In the midst o f plenty, be ungrateful. Opportunity is a steed to lie ridden with the spur o f the moment. I f we would know God well, wo must become fam iliar with his Book. The more thankful we are. the more w e w ill discover to be thankful for. The better we know the Bible, ¿he 'n-tter we will know the God who gave ir. When we look to God as the Giver o f all good we will find good id all He gives. • Discontent robs us o f present good. Content puts us iu a state o f Heart to enjoy all good. Nothing that Is prompted by the Spir it ever hurts the meeting that is led by the Spirit. Ingratitude defiles and poisons e> ery sprint!, mars every pleasure, and takes the value out o f every gift. 'I here would I k - more days like Pente cost It more pulpits were filled by un-r filled with the Holy Ghost. A Clever Compari«*'»?». T lie argument for tlie existence ot God from the unifortuity o f nature Is not a new oue. tint It is nowhere more cleverly put than iu an anecdote of Oalianl. related by L ’ lliustration Eu- ropeenne (Brussels, March 21). It says; “ T o those who see In tin* existence o f the world tlie effect o f chance, a cu rious argument was op|>oaed liv Gali- nnl. ’One day,’ said lie ’at Naples, a man took six dice iu a dice-box and bet that he would throw six sixes. He suc ceeded at the first throw. I said to my self. ‘Such a tiling Is possible.’ He did it a second time; I said the same tiling. He put the dice back into the 1 m > x three, four, live times, and always threw six sixes. Hangue til Bacco!’ I cried, ’the dice are loaded!’ And so they were. “ Philosophers! when I consider the ever-renewed order of nature, her im mutable laws, her revolutions, always (■onstant in an infinite variety, tills sin gle chance of a world such as we see 11. returning unceasingly notwithstand ing a hundred million other chances o f liossilile pcrturlmtlon and destruction, 1 cry out: ’O f a truth, nature Is load ed!’ ” —Translated for the Literary Di gest. Tn K v r r v t t i * n c : T h e W in n e r N o ta G i v e T hnnlt«. A clerk and his country father enter 'd a restnurant on Saturday evening and took seats at a table where sat a telegraph operator and a reporter. The old man liowed his head and was almut to give thanks when a waiter flew up, saying: * “ l have beefsteak, codfish balls, and bullheads.” Fat iter and son gave their orders and the form er again bowed his head. The \ oung man turned the color of a blood- red I met. and touching ids arm exclaim ed In a low, nervous tone: “ Father. It Isn’t customary to do that I d restaurants!” * “ It ’s customary with me to return thunks to God wherever I am," sahl tht. old man. For the third time he bowed ills herd, and the telegraph operator paused in the act o f carving his beefsteak and bowed his head, aud there wasi.’t a it.an who heard the short and simple prayer that didn't feel a profotiudir re spect for tlie old father than if lie had been the l ’ rcsideut o f the United State». T h e “ P a lm e tto S ta te." The Charleston News and Courier thus explains the origin of South Car olina's sobriquet, “ the Palmetto State:” “ On June 28, 1776, a force o f less than 100 Carolinians, under command of Moultrie, protected by tlie rude for tification on Sullivan's Island, in Ch»rW**Ujti harbor, made o f the trunks o f the palmetto, repulsed the attack* of a British fleet under command o f Sir Peter Parker, and when the State of South Carolina was organized, the State seal, which wa* first used In May. 1777. was made to commemorate this victory. A palm tree, growing erect on the seashore, represent* the strength of the fort, while at Us bosc an oak tree, lorn from the ground and deprived o f it* branches, recalls the British fleet, built o f oak timber, over come by the palmetto.” Cam p it r fo r H is W ife . "T h ere was a farm er ut* home." he Mid, “ who used to have his occasional spree. Every one knew his railing, and neither o f the druggists In town would sell him a drop. One day he brought a quart bottle into one of tlie apothecary shops, with tw o or three big lumps o f gum camphor lu the bottom. He told the druggist that hi* w ife wanted her camphor bottle tilled with alcohol. The druggist filled It without suspecting anything. In a week the old man came again, and in a little while tlie third time. Finally the druggist discovered that the 'gunt camphor' was milky quartz, picked op in tbe Arid», and that the farm er had poured cam phor over the outside o f the bottle until enough bad crystallize«! there to look natural and smell right. The quartz didn't hurt tbe alcohol for drink ing oarpoaes.” —Tim e and tbe Hour. of one of those $ io o prizes got her yellow tickets in this way: 1. By using the tea herself. 2. By asking some friends who use the tea to give her their tickets. 3. By inducing some friends to try the tea and give her their tickets. One of her friends kept a boarding house, and sent her lots of tickets. Haven't you some friend who keeps a boarding house or a restaurant, or who has in fluence in some hospital or other public institution? They need good tea there. Rules o f contest in large advertisement about first and middle of the month. A a A StrHnge D efeii««*. A strange defense lias been offered in England by a captain who ran an excursion steamer, as it seemed, de liberately on tlie rocks near Scarbor ough. Tlie passengers thought he waa drunk, but lie wants to lie let off be cause lie was under the influence off opium, taken to relieve pain. There ming one ever seen nine feet was recently killed in W yo of tlie largest mountain lions in that state. It was almost long. “ C /ef a Sanden Belt. * * Simple Advice That Saved a Sufferer From Despair. “ Get a Samlen Belt,” a friend told him, ‘‘Get Sun den Belt, and if it don’t cure you I'll pay for it invself.” When you are sick you try everything, and after several failure« you have no faith In anything. This was the way Mr. P. s. clement, conductor on the .Northern Pacific, living at Ellcnshnrg, felt w hen a friend insist ed on his trving Dr. Sanden’« Electric Belt. H « got ore, and tins in his report : “ I would not have sold my belt for a mine ten days after I got it. Mv hack was so week that I could not sh up in tlie ear seat, and I suffered terribly. Then 1 got the belt. In ten dais I was almost a well man, and Inside of a month I was en tirely cured. That was two years ago, and not a sign ot my trouble has returned. I want you to publish this, so that the thousands of other men who are in the same fix can find the only cure for them.” It cures other troubles, including all nervou* and vital weakness, varicocele, rheumatism, etc. Get tlie hook w ith full information, sealed, fee. Address a SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 2 5 3 W e n t \ V «* li h »g t o n St., P o r t l a n d , O r . PleaHf mention thin Paper. State Agricultural College... OF OREGON SC I E N T I F I C F Q 1 I P M K N T T H E B E S T IN T H E S T A T E . Military training by United Slates officer. Twenty-two instructors. Surroundings healthful and moral. Free tuition! No incidental fees! Expenses, including hoard, room, clothing» Washing, books, etc., about $130per school year. F a ll T erm O p en « S e p te m b e r 30. For catalogue or other information addreas T H O M A S M. O A T C H , Prea., CorvallH, Oregon. , THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE!| Happy and Fruitful Marriage. Every MAN who would know the GRAND T R U T H S , the Plato Fact*, the Old Secrets and the New 1 Macowerte* r*l Medical Science an a ppHed to M a r r ie d L if e , who would atone f» r pa*t fol lien and avoid future pit- , fall*, nhouki write for our underfill little b o o k , called “ Complete Man- . ___ _ hood and How to Attain To anv earnest man we will mall one copy E n tire ly Free, in plain sealed cover. NIAGARA S T. ERIE MEDICAL CO., 69 BUFFALO. N. Y . Make money by *u<v cna.ul -»pec illation in hicago. \\* buy and well wheat there oh mar- in». Fortune» have il*ecn i>een made on «»it a si small eginning by trading in future*. Write for full particular*. Beni of reference given, eral year»' experience on the t 'hicau«» hoard ird o of f Trafic, and a thorough knowledge of the t>uai~ n en* Downing, Hopkins A Co., Uhcago Board of Trade Broker*, office* in Portland, Oregon, Spokane and .Seattle, Waal* WHEAT f A t* K W O R M expelled In from 17 niiuuiM to two hour» with requiring n o T previous or after treatment, such a» faNtinn, starving, dieting, and the taking of nauseous and poinononn drug*, cansing no pain, nick- n* »», discomfort or bad after effect» No loaa of time, meal», or detention from lousiness. h MM I H ’H T A P E W O K * Spweltie haa n e v e r failed. C.’ nra gn a ran t e e d . OverA.OOO cane* ■uceesnfulljr treated since I hk .: Write for fre e Information and question blank. Addreiui S locu m Mncctfte Auditorium building, Spokane, Washington. b n**4 for children teething It soothe« the < eu* the fuma, allays alt pain, eure« wind the beat rented v for dlarrboMk Te my fl- ran to n n t E« ìn FULL k out tti.tr know « I T I JM , U enr* for ih . A ll a T,7u «*■ O K ) N ** 8 LAOL T* ’ ’ «A IL IO Di r m i P I L E S <-nre.l no , I v til enrarf. « n d lor bonk. I t s . M an * PoKTSsnsLD, a s M ark»« » L . S u t ». r. n. »._________ S IX '■ ». I w r it in g to a d v .r t io o r ,.