Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1889)
WIDOW’S S C H E M E . A C U R I O U S EPISODE* Questions W hich Courts us W e ll as Re formers Ought to Study. How She Supported H erself W ithout Per. form ing Any W ork. There was a poor woman living in one * A few days ago a young lady of good of the little shanties up-town, with a social position, and the daughter of large family of pigs, goats, goose and most respectable parents, was arrested children swarming around i t Sho sup In a jeweler’s store In Brooklyn for the ports hor family by taking in washing, larceny of some diamond rings. She nnd hor poverty and industry have so- was examining a tray of the costly cured for her the compassion and the jewels when, as she describes it, nn un washing of u number of benevolent la controllable impulse urgod her to take dles. Ono of these ladies recently a handful and conceal them about hor remonstrated with her on the sizo person. The griof and consternation of of her bills, and said that she had lier parents, when the fact was mode to pay much more for her washing than known to them, is readily conceived. she did at any of tho laundries. The They procured her release on bonds, hard-working widow admitted that this but she will have to stand her trial for was tho case, but sho respectfully, but the crime. (irmly, declined to roduce her price. In the same police court whore this “ You see, ma’am,” she said, “ I do fashionable girl was arraignod, another the very finest handwork, and it wouldn't young woman was present to answer to pay mo to do it for tho prlco the laun a similar charge. She watched lntontly dries get for machine work. If you the proceedings which had to do with Compared my work with thoirs you the novice in crime. And just us they would see a great difference. Thoso Chi were concluded, she rose and facing namen living in dirt like pigs aro taking tliejudgo, said in a voice which cut the tho bread out of honest women’ s mouths. air like a knife: I don't sco how an$t ludy can bo willing “ You aro going to make a thief out to send her clothes to them. Of course o f that girl!” they do it cheap when thoy have no Tho words thrilled through tho court families to support and can live on al room like an electric shock. Officers most nothing; but thoy tear your and spectators were aliko ama/.ed. “ I clothes all to pieces, and dear knows was once liko hor,” continued tho young what you catch from them. No, ma’ am, woman, "and my first criino was liko you’d l etter pay a little moro and have hers. I could huve been saved then. your clothes done nicely by a clean, re- If they had lot me go, I should never spectublo wc.nan, besides helping her have offended again. But thoy sent mo to support her fumlly.” to prison, locked mo up with thieves The lady wus influenced by this can and abandoned wretches, and I urn now did statement, and decided to continue what I am.” her patronago. But a few weeks after Tho sensation which this announce sho was surprised to see emerging from ment created was reported to & Sing Sing laundry In her neighbor be Intense. The episode, how hood the woll-known figure of the son ever, quickly passed, and the of tho poor but honest laundress, stag ordinary routine of tho court went gering under a hugo bundle of clothes. on as usual. Tho circumstance, how A dark suspicion crossed tho mind of ever, is fruitful of thought to thoso who the charitable woman. Having a slight are devoting thoir lives to tho reforma acquaintance with Sing Sing from a few tion of criminals. Perhaps this young previous negotiations, sho entorod the woman spoko tho truth. In her case laundry und made some cautious inqui tho punishment was tho confirmation of ries about tho boy who had just gone a criminal career. No ono will argue out. Sing' Sing readily acknowledged that tho perpetrator of a first crime that ho came ovory week with a largo should invariably be lot off without pun bundle, und it was too obvious that tho ishment. But should tho machinery of poor but honest and hardworking laun justice be always Incxorablo and impla dress was doing an easy and profitable cable? Should it never bo relaxed? Aro business by subletting the washing thero no circumstances when tho veil of given by hor customers to the much silonco should bo drawn over a crime? despised Chinaman against whom she Is thero such a thing us uncontrollable had warned them so vigorously.— Chi- impulso? Thoso are questions which cayo News. courts and reformers ought to study.— £>'(. Paul (jlotic. NO V ER M IN T H E R E . P H Y S IC A L BEAUTY. ! H o w Plain Fares Are Transformed Into Handsom e Ones# Thoro aro some mon to bo mot with who frankly admit that thoir wives are ugly, and oven hero and thoro a wife who agrees that hor husband's judg ment is correct. But, as a rulo, every man considers his own choico tho bust, and whoro thoro aro fifty minds thero will bo fifty ideas of what constitutes physical beauty. Wo all know and ad mit that personal charm and mental ac complishments can transform a plain faco into a handsome ono. and the luck of thorn deprive a woman with the countenance of a Creek slutuu of the beauty which at first sight struck tho eye. It is notorious that tho women over whom men “ play tho fool” aro ofton far from pretty. Not infrequent ly the hollo of an Indian station is the ugliest girl within fifty miles, and tho women around whom half tho men on bonrd a ship on a long voyage flutter, is very often by no means the beauty of tho quarter deck. Nina 1)’ Kudos, who hud lovers after she was seventy, does not seem to have boon a grent beauty. Nor, if wo aro to judgo from some of tho portraits of Mary of Scotland, was that Blron, with whom, ns Lord Bcoconsllold used to any, men fall in lovo till this day, by any means strikingly beautiful. Tho “ dangerous women” of history have seldom been beauties. Nature is full of compensations. Tho reigning ladle is too often silly, or, overestimating tho fascinations of her face, does not take tho troublo to bo uminblo. On the other hand, tho plain woman, knowing that she is hundienpped at tho start, does her best to compensate for her ill favoredness by attractiveness of man ner, nnd in tho end generally wins in tho race. John Wilkes, who was tho ugliest man of his day, w as in the habit of bousting that ho would give the hand somest man in Knglaud half an hour’s start of him nnd oust him early in tho running. There is, in truth, no ac counting for taste. l)r. Johnson al ways spoke of tho painted and affected widow, old enough to bo his mother, whom ho married iu tho heyday of his youth ns a “ pretty creature,” and even Joe Gnrgery, in on oof tho most delight ful of Dickon’s novels, was w illing to believe that Pip's innsculino sister was “ a lino figure of a woman. ” — Poston Herald. Hit Curiosity Fully Satisfied. Small man (on railway train, writing letter to his w ife)—It would afford you some amusement, my dear, if you could see the freckle-faced, long, lean, gam ble-shanked, knock-kneed, sneaking, Impertinent, ill-bred, half-baked s|>eol- men of a back-woods gawky that Is looking over my shoulder as 1 write this — Largo man on sent behind (fiercely) —You lie, you little scoun— (Small man (turning round) Bog pardon, sir; are you speaking to mo? Large man (confusedly)—V no! No! I didn’ t say any thing. I wasn't speak ing. I I - ¡Small man resumes his writing. Large man goes bnek to the rear plat form of the last car on the train and re lieves his mind by swearing volubly at the flying landscape.— Chtcnyo Trr lime. — Rusty black woolen goods enn also be freshened by sponging with equal parts .if ammonia and aleohol. diluted with a little tepid water, or yet it can bo snnked in warm soap suds for n couple of hours, nnd then dipped in a solution of ottc ounce of extract of logwood to a pint of worm water, added to a couple <jf gallons of warm water. Let the goods stand in this solution some hours, and rinse well, adding sumo milk to the last water; iron while still damp, and on the wrong side. — ( hristtan at Work. How a Luily In Search o f a House Mystified a Landlord. Lady—You aro sure that tho houso contuins no vorrniu? Houso Owner (indignantly and vory emphatically)—Vermin in a house of mine! Not much! Lady—Well, I’ m glad of thnt. If thoro is any tiling I do dotost it is a houso overrun with roaches and — Houso Ownor—Oh, I won’t say thoro ain't a few roaches. Most any houso is liable to have a fow roaches. Lady— And rats and m ice—aro thoro any of them? Houso Ownor—W ell, thoro might bo a mouse hero and thoro and a couple of ratB or so, may bo, but thoro ain’t nono to hurt. Lady How about bod-bugs? Houso Ownor— Bod-bugs? Well, now, of course, bed-bugs is different. Jovvor sco a house that had boon lived In at alt that didn't havo a fow? (W arm ly.) Why, tho houso I live in myself is chock full of ’om. What I do say, though, is, that thoro ain’ t no ver min in no house of mlno; no sir, not nono. When do you think you'll move iu? I.ndy—I’ m afraid your houso will not suit mo. Good-day. Houso Owner (sollloqulzingly)—Now I wonder what that woman can find fault with iu tills houso? After almost snyin’ slic’d take it and my provtn’ that (hero's nothing wrong with it, sho don’t want it. That’s just liko a woman. They ain’t got no sense, nohow. — Texas Siftings. Mr. Beecher's Estate. Henry Ward Boechor loft a compara tively small fortune. Ho had an es tate in the IVoksklll which cost him about $160,000. Ho haul insurance pol icies which footed up something liko $20,000or $'.’.">,000, anil in hot haste his heirs sold his pictures nnd books and all personal belongings endeared to his friends, at all events by many, many years of cl< sc association with tho dear old man, and now how dot's it stand? The $160,IHX) place at lVekskill has literally gone to seed. Thoso magnifi cent flower-beds, on which tho old man eloquent spent years of thought, for tunes of experience and thousands of dollars earned by tho sweat of his im perial brow, aro choked with weeds and overrun with grasses. Already tho market prlcoof the place has fallen to $86,(XXI, nnd I understand—in fact, I have seen it stated in print— that an of fer of $06,000, which was refused, will, in all probability never be made again. Auden the heels of this, with what was curiously ca ll«! nn “ nutobiogrnphy," written by ono of his sons and his son- in-law, lying as dead as Mark Twain’s own books upon tho shelves of tho stores, come a rumor that Ids simple will is also to bo contested. N. 1'. Letter. He Was Not An Indian Tramp Could you givo a bite to a l>oor man who hasu’ t eaten any thing for— I.ady of the House (shouting shrilly) — Tige! Tigo! ( erne here, Tigo! T. (loftily) You are calling your dog, madam. 1 want you to under stand that I don’t cat dog. I’ m no In dian. And he strode away in silent dignity. —Poston Courier SU G A R FROM B EETS . On« o f Ihe Most l*ro»,jeroo. and E lt f s s lv s of German Industries. The beet-sugar industry in Germany has grown to large proportions in the lust twenty years, and has been thor oughly systematized. It was intro duced ip Hanover in 1864, and sugar is now produced in all tho southern por tion of Hanover, the larger part of Brunswick, the Prussian part of Sax ony, and also in a p'tft of the kingdom of Saxony. Perhaps k.vo-thirds of all the German beet sugar is raised in those localities. It roquires very fer tile ground to raise the sugar beet, und bone dust, phosphutes, Chilian salt peter and composts aro freely used. The plunt is exceedingly exhausting to the soil, and farmers, to preserve their ground, observe strictly the rule ol rotation in crops, only planting a field In beets once in seven years, as a rule. The planting is done in May The ground is thoroughly prepared be'orehand. It is plowed twice in tho .\ill preceding, tho first plowing being to tho depth of 4 inches, tho second 16 or 18 inches. Then just before plant ing it is harrowed and rolled until it is as smooth and hard as a floor. Tho seed is drilled in rows 1 foot apart. When the young plants are about 8 inches high they aro thinned out, leav ing three or four in a hill, 1 foot apart, and these aro subsequently reduced to one in a hill. The cultivation is done mostly by plow, tho crop being plowed about four times in a season, both lengthwise and across tho rows. The women and children, meantime, aro constantly going over the field keep ing out the woods by hand. Tho gath ering season extends from September 15 to February 15. Mon go uhoad with long spades and loosen each hill, the women and children following, who lift tho roots out o f the ground and pile them together. After the tops aro removed they are either tuken directly to the commu nity factory or covered deeply with earth to preserve thorn. Tho factory system is a vory interesting part of the business. Factories are established in each neighborhood. In ull tho suc cessful ones capitalists uro rigidly ex cluded, and only farmers may hold shares. Kach farmer must, for inch share ho holds, cultivate from three to five acres in beets. The average product is 17,000 or 18,000 pounds per aero, for which tho fa-m er gets about 90 pfennig per 100. Ho is guaranteed u sure markot for his crop at a fixed price, und gets a dividend out of the profits at tho end of tho season. The pulp of tho beets, after the sugar is taken out, makes a first-class food for cattle, and this tho farmer gets also at a fixed price. Tho cultivation is sub ject to inspection by tho factory, and each inspector must be not only a first- class farmer, but a chemist. He must live close to the fuctory, and gets a good salary, besides a per cent, of the profits. Most of tho sugar goes to re fineries at the largo cities. At each factory is also a governm ent inspector, who examines each lot and fixes the tux. Kach wagon-load o f beets is sumpled by a chemist, and if thoy full below u certain grading as to percent age of sugar, thoy uro rejected. This is to prevent the uso o f inferior com posts, which would make large beets with littlo sugar in them. One nice foaturo about tho business is that on alt tho sugar which is oxportod the government returns to the farmer an amount which is more than equivalent to tho tax. This results in a very large portion of tho crop being exported. SMALL IN D U S T R IE S . T ile I n ,lg llin r » t it S h op s In W h ich th e F a - 111 oit n S h e ffie ld C u tle r y 1» M ad e. The Sheffield cutlery—one of tho glories of Kngland— is not made by ma chinery; it is chiefly made by hand. There uro at Sheffield a few firms which manufacture cutlery right through from tho milking of steel to the finishing of tools, und employ wage-workers, and yet oven these firms —I am told by my friend, K. Carpen ter, who kindly gathered for me infor mation about tho Sheffield trade—lot out some part of the work to the “ small masters.” But by far tho greatest number of tho cutlers work in thoir homes, with their relatives, or in small work-shops supplied with wheel power, which they rent for a few shillings a week. Immense yards aro covered . ith buildings, which nre sub-divided into series of smnll work shops. Some of them cover only a fow square yards, and then' I saw smiths hammering, all the day long, blades o f knives on a small anvil, close by the blaze of thoir firea Occasionally the smith may have one help or two. In tho upper stories scores of small workshops are supplied with wheel power, and in each of them three, four, or live work ers and a "m aster" fabricate, with tho occasional aid of a few plain ma chines, every description of tools— files, saws, blades of knives, razors, and so on. Grinding and glazing are done in other small work-shops, nnd even steel is cast in a small foundry, the working staff of which consists only of five or six men. When walk ing through these work-shops l easily imagined myself in a Russian cutlery village, like Pavlovo or Vorsina. The Sheffield cutlery has thus maintained its olden organization, and the fact is the more remarkable as the earnings of the cutlers are very 1 ; us a rulo; but, even when reduced to a few shillings a week, tho cutler prefers to regelate on his small earnings than to go as a waged laborer in a “ house.’' The spirit of tho old trade organiza tions, which were so much spoken of live-nml-twcnty years ago, is thus still alive. — /Vine« Krolapktn, in Sine* kenth Century. To beat the whites of eggs quickly put In a small pinch or two of salt; do —Stains may usually be removed not have one particle of the yelks with from linen by wetting, then rubbing the the w hites, or they will not froth nicely. stain with yellow soap, and laying on a — A cooking school leetil'or has on thick mixture of clear starch wet with her sick list fifteen varieties of gruel. ■old water. Rub in well and expose to Mie says that ono of the most palatublr tho sun h r several dnys, sprinkling is a combination of cream, beef tea and when dry. barley water. — To uso the glazing iron, after the — Camphor lee is an excellent oint shirt has been dressed with the ordin ment. Melt one drachm of spermaceti ary flat Iron, damp the breast of the w ith nn ounce of almond oil, and add shirt with a damp cloth and the glaz a drachm of powdered camphor; mix ing Iron being nice and hot, rub it hard well together and let it harden in small over the shirt until the desired polish cakes. is attained. — Philadelphia has G75 churches; New York, 432; Chicago, 871; Brook lyn, 300. — Brown University, of Providenco, R. I., has received the Wilson legacy of $100,000, the Lyman legacy of $50,- 000, and A5.xandcr Duncan, of Kn gland, lately added $20,000 to the general fund of tho institution. —Twenty-one schools in Syria which had been closed by order of tho Turk ish officials have been reopened. This result is to be credited to the efforts of Mr. Strauss, tho American Minister, who is a Jew, but was educated at Princeton College. — Bishop Vladimer, of tho Greek Church in America, has tho largest diocese in the world. It includes all of North America to Buenos Ayres in South America. The Bishop lives in Sitka, but spends a good deal of his time in San Francisco. SionietlilnK ¡Vow . A new ami very effective thing whieh is taking hold on the market is a valuable discovery made known through The Charles *A. VogelerCo., Baltimore, Md., proprietors of the renowned St. Jacob's Oil, and known as Diamond Vera-Cura, for Dyspepsia, a positive cure for Indiges tion and all stomach troubles arising therefrom. If not found in the stock of druggist or dealer, it will be sent by mail on receipt of 25 cents (5 boxes $1 00) in sta mps.f ¿«niples sent on receipt of two-cent stamp. It has been found on trial to I e a specific for sour stomach, heartburn, nausea, giddiness, eonstioa- tion, nervousness and low spirits, and it is spoken of and recommended by hun dreds who have used it and have found lasting benefits. C H I C H E S T E R ’S t N G L I S H Men boast o f their irreat actions, but they are oftener the effect ef chance tijsn design. Men's actions are not to be judged o f at first sight. SC HO O L AND C H U R C H . PENNYROYAL PILLS Diamond Vera-Cura In* the bottle diseont seeks for com fort, co w ardice for courage, liashfiilness for confidence, sadness for joy, and ail find ruin. White Elephant of Siam, Lion of Eng land, Dragon of China, Cress of Switzer, land. Banner of Persia, Crescent of Egypt- Double Eagle of Russia, Star of Chili, The Circle of Japan, Harp of Erin. To get ihese buy a box of the genuine D r . C. M c I. a n e ’ s C e l e b r a t e d L i v e r P i l l s , price 2.1 c e n ts , and mail us the out side wrapper with your address, plainly written, and 4 cents in stamps. We will then mail you the above list with an ele gant package of oleographic and chro I«-nnini ManufHcturiiiiM'o , Cincinnati,Ohio. matic lards. K l k m i v o B r o s ., P it t s h d r o , P a . PLOVER wywwwywwaw 6 . 0 0 0 .0 0 0 P^P10 believe ^ j)ebt to jlU.. that\ Seeda SALESMEN ^ I f afflicted with Sore Kyes, nse Dr. Isaac Thom pson's Kye Water. Druggists sell i t 26c. SEEOANNUAL For 1889 •ç U L U W E / O À ÿ f' Will be mailed FREE to ail i pplicants, and r to last year’H customers _ without ordering it. Intalu. ah'e to nl! Every person lining Earliest Cauliflower | Garden. Field or Flower Seeds in exiitence. I should send for it. Address . C dticuma R emedies C urb S kin a n d B loon D iseases fro m P im ples i f i ^ rofuuu U l-1 1 4 Michigan Avenue, Chicago. IU. A R M 8 c H A M M E R B R A N D To H o u sek eep ers a n d F a r m e r » .— It Is impor tant that the Soda or Baleratus yon use should be White and Pure same as all similar substance« ■Md for food. T«» insure obtaining only the “ Arm Jk Hammer” brand Soda Off Baleratus, buy it in ••pound or half pound” Cartoons, which bear our name and trade-mark, as Inferior goods are seme- limes substituted fdethe “Arm A Hammer” brand When bought in bulk. Parties using Baking Powder should remem ber that its sole rising property consists of bi carbonate of soda. Ono teaspoon ful of the MArm k Hammer” brand of Soda or Baleratus mixed With sour milk equals CHICAGO . AGENTS WANTED SI EINWAY. BArM.ICH Empyreal « OK E V E B Y P A C K A G E . A lw a y s k eep s S o ft With Headache, Neuralgia, Rh.' umatism Dyspep sia, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney Disease, Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague, Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Pros tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and be cured. In each o f these the cause is mental or physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria, the effect o f which is to weaken the nervous sys tem, resulting in one o f these diseases. Remove the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and the r e s u l t will disappear. PKANKA Gabler, Roeniah Pianos; Burdett Organs, band instruments. Largest stock of Sheet Music and Books. Bands supplied at Eastern Prior* MA1TH1AH GRAY OO., 306 Post Street, San Francisco J . H . F IN K . A sw a y er a n d A n a ly t ic a l C h e m l « t . Laboratory. 104 First st., Portland, Or. A nalyses m ade oi all substances. 1st Premiums. *25,000 in vise, 20 years Established. Nevi m ________ __ _ b patented Steel Tuning De vice,"hi "use” in no other Piano, by which our Pianos stand in tune 20 years, good for 100 ; not affected by climate. No wood to split, break, swell, shrink, crack, decay, or wear o u t ; we guarantee it. Ele gant Rosewood Cases, 3 strings, double repeating action; finest ivory keys; the Famous ANTISELL. Call or writo for Catalogue, free. T. M. ANTISELL PIANO CO., Manufacturers, Odd Fellows’ Ilall, Mar ket and Seventh Streets, San Francisco. Paine’s Celery Compound J as . L. B owhn , Springfield, Mass., writes “ Paine’ s Celery Compomid cannot be excelled os a Nerve Tonic. I 11 my case a single bottle wrought a great change My nervousness entirely disappeared, and with it the resulting affection o f the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole tone o f the system was wonderfu.ly invigorated. I tell my friends, if sick as 1 huve ’ been, Pained Celery Compound Will Cure You! Sold by druggists. 81 ; six for $5. Prepared only by W eli - s , R iciiakdson A Co., Burlington, VL s For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated. Seattle Dispensary, i four teaspoonfulsof tho best Baking Powder, sav ing twenty times Its cost, besides being much healthier, because it does not con tain any Injurious substances, such as alum, terra alba etc., of which many Bak ing Powders are mada. Dairymen and Farmers shonld use only the ^ “ Arm A Hammer” brand for cleaning and keeping Milk Pane Sweet an l Clean. 4 C iunoi. See that every,pound package of "A r m and H a m m e r Brand” contains full 19 ounces net, and tha pound packagesfuU euneee net. Soda or Baleratus same as speci fied on each package. 1 M ASK If*You Are Sick ; r Iffii Q r .S P IN N E Y TBADK S Q D A or S A L E R A T U S 8T. LOUIS Distance no him lranet Big Profits. Pub. House, St. Paul. Miuu. OCB P a c k e d in C a rd B o a r d B o x e s . O PEN CtN DO JUSTICE TO THE K8TKRM IN w hich the CUTICURA R U U D I I I are held by the thousands upon thousands whose lives havo been made happy by the cu re o f agonizing, hu m iliating, itching, scaly and Dimply diseases o f the skin, scalp and blood, with loss o f hair. C u t ic u k a , tho great Skin Cure, and C u t i c u r a S o a p , an exquisite Skin Heautifler, pre N K A T T L K , %V. T . pared from it, externally, and C u t ic u r a K k - b o lv k n t . the new B lood Purifier, internally, M C D U n i l Q Docility, Loss o f Vigor, Semina! t l Y ¥ w v 3 Losses, Weak Memory, Despoil are a p ositive cure for every form o f skin and dency. Sic., due to excesses or abuse, cured. blood disease, from pim ples to scrofula Y O I I N O M C M suffering from the effects Sold everyw here. Price, C u t ic u r a . 50c.: 1 v u n u n n t n o t youthful follies or indis S o a p , 25c.; R khoi . v k n t 91» IVenared by the cretion should avail themselves o f our treatment. P o t t k r D r u q and C h e m ic a l Co.,B oston,M ass. A positive cure guaranteed in every case. Syphilis, Urinary and Venereal Diseases all unnatural dis ja rS e n d for “ H ow to Cure Skip TM senses,” charges, promptly and safely Cured. gS T Pim ples, blackheads, chapped and oily 'xrX Mi Who are trou gW skin prevented by C u tic u ra S o a p . bled with dis- -o of V>1 Kidneys nmurjB ut jiinuuri, Weak » r » a Back, ilack, Nervous NerVOUS ase or Bladder, Rheumatism, K idney Pains and W eak bility. Wasting o f Sexual Sti Strength, etc., cured lability. n e s s speedily cured by C u tic u r a A n t i land restored to healthy vigor. in P laster , the only pain-killing plaster. N. B. Persons unable to visit us may be treated at their homes, by eorrespondence. Medicines ant’ instructions sent by mail or express. Consultatioi Free. Bend 4 cents in stamps for l a c Young Man’i Friend or Guide to Wedlock. N MONTGOMERY WARD A CO. D. M. F E R R Y & GO., Detroit, Mich. NEW YO RK ftM Y -»BEAUTY D. M. FERRY A CO. are acknowledged to be the argest Seedsmen In th o w orld. !D M. Fr.r.BY A Co’n Illustrated. Descrip tive and Priced T r y O x h h r a for break fast. L ie n te e l ( ( n a r k s . “ Yes, it p ays,” said a big fat physician, with a name w hich Is know n throughout the m edi cal world. “ I have a oraetice worth 440,000 a year.” “ W om en ” ? “ Yes, you’ ve guessed it first time. T h ey nay $10 every time they com e into my office. W hen one gets on my list 1 tell you she stays” ! and Dr. H----- laughed long and Us superior excellence proven in millions of homes for loud. This is quackery—gilt-edged, genteel mote than a quarter of a century. It is used by the quackery—to keep suttering woman paying United States Government. Endorsed by the heads of tribute year in and year out. and doing them the Great Universities as the Strongest, Purest and most no good. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Healthful. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder does not cures the peculiar weaknesses and diseases o f oontain Amni<mia, Lime or A!urn. Hold only in cans. PRICE BAKING POWDER CO. women. It does not lie to them nor rob them. F o r C 'ou gliM , A s t h m a a n d T h r o n t Disorders, use “ Brown’s Bronchial Troches." 25 ets. a box. O F e r r y ’s S e e d s Dissimulation is the only thing that makes society possible. W itnout its amenities the world would be a bear-garden.—Guida, There is a mean iu all things. Virtue itself has its limits, w h ich, not being strictly ob served, ceases to be virtue. T h . B U T E B B ' G U I D E 1. lsaued March and Sept., each year. It 1. an ency. clopedia o f uaeful infor mation for all who pur. chaae the luxuries or tha necessities of Ufa. W e can olothe you and furnish you with all the necessary and unnecessary appliances to ride, walk, dance, aleep, eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church, or stay at home, and in various sizes, styles and quantities. Just figure out __ what is required ¿0 do all thssl'things COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair estimate of the value o f the B U Y E H 8 ' G U ID E , which will be sent upon receipt o f 10 cents to pay postage, of the largest and most reliable house, and th. / use The gift o f gifts is love, and there is no other in the world that can hide its lack or make good its scantiness.—ttoselcnf. N lio r liiitg A c c id e n t . So read the headlines o f many a newspaper colum n, and we peruse with palpitating Inter est the details o f tile catastrophe, and are deep ly impressed by the saeraflro o f human lives involved. Yet thousands o f men and women are falling victim s every year to that terrible disease, con sum ption (scrofula o f the lungs), and they and their friends are satisfied to tie lieve the m alady incurable. Now, there could he no greater mistake. No earthly power, o f course, can restore a lung that is entirely wast ed, hut I>r. P ierce's Golden Medical Discovery w ill rapidly and surely arrest the ravages of con sum ption, if taken iu time. Do not, there fore, despair, un til you have tried this wonder ful remedy. A perfect specific—Dr. Bage’s Catarrh Remedy reliable reliable pill for «ale. Piever Fail. Aak for nuckufrt Engluk Raaawed Wot 1 , 1 1 1 «. BenewedNov., 1886. Mr ft. B Kyle Tower Mr. Jro. H Wall, 1 1 « S. bon. At Uruftlfita Accept Hill,Appomattox "a. ,V* , 4th it , S. Boston, Maas.: no other. ITT pills in paste write«: "Had acute rheu board boles, pink wrapper*, are a danger matism several year«; "Buffered acuta pains f ous counterfeit. Send 4c. (stainpsi for grew worse; eminent months In both knaas; an particulars and **Hellef for Ladlea,” *» physicians attended me; bad could notgatnp 1____ \ Utter, by return mail. 10,000 teetl- nad spasms; no relief; not rotn LAKES who have used them. Name Paper. expected to live for hours; stairs. Applied Bt. Ja Chichester Chemical t o.,Madison Sq.,Phila.,Pa. rubbed all over with Bt. cobs Oil at night; much Jacobs Oil; first applica relisvsd In tha morning. tion relieved; second re Tried It again; pain Anal moved pain; continued ly left me entirely. I JR. PIERCE S NEW BELT use cured me; no relapse have had no return of pain AND SUSPENSORY* in four year«; do as much since. I am completely (Pat. Oct. 11 ’87) cares all I workasevsr.” cured." Nervous ana Chronic Dls- | < nst* o f both sexes. Price* AT DRUGGISTS AND DFALERS EVERYWHERE and upward. Send 2c THK CHARLES A. V0 GELER CO.. BtKImor«. Md. f or sealed pamphlet N o.2. i !l I T I l i i: I f ruptured send stamp for Pamphlet No. •’ ILK*. N ew Invention. Send 2c fftninp for Pamphlet No. 3. Ad ress; s* POR D Y S P E P S IA . M. E. T. <’o .,704Sacramento St. , San Franrinro. ( ’a). A MUTITI CUBI rom utdiobtiob ABS AJA Itemi «h Troublée Arising T her sfrena. f f i r T e MR a Day. Samples worth 91.60, FREE. Lines not under the horses feet. Write B bkw . Tour Dntffffitt or General Dealer %riH pet Fer» . w V /b t M H S afety R uin H older t o . H o l l y ,M ic h . CWa fo r fou if not already in dock, or it teiü bo t try maü on receipt qf 2b » cte. (5 (6 f boxee |1.00) 4e Sample rent on receipt of 1 Rather than the Cheapest IBI CHARLES A. fOGELER CO.. Bfiltooft. HA. PORTLAND BUSINESS Bale Propri atoes and Manali« tarer». C0UEGE. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Portland, Oregon. W e wish a few men to sell our goods by sample | Perfect equipment, liu .oii^h instruction, c<ab- to the wholaalo and re- j lisheti reputation,growing |M>pulai1ty. Business, tail trade. Largest manu- I Shorthand, Common School and Penmanship Depart f r s In our line. Enclose 2-cent stamp. W agts|3per! ments. students admitted at any time. Cata Day. Permanent position. No postals answered. ! logue and specimens of penmanship sent free. Money'advancedfor wages, advertising, etc. f e n ' J. A. WKW'O. M ac ’ s . A. P. ARMSTRONG. Pria. Pools sud sensible men arc equally Innocuous. It is in tin* half-fool and half-wise that the duu- ger lies.—(iuethe. The gain o f lyin g is n othing else but not to he trusted by any, nor to be believed when we say the truth. S C :SC33 SXAMCrc BS1KS. Original, beat, only frinita* nileeind end ONCE CURED NO RELAPSE. OrltHal statement," 1 S& urutinal sutement, 1881 . A r c H r 1 » l l u i r A n o t h e r I»a r1 > Some political prophets aver ttiat we shall. Be that as it may. tin- battle w aged by inedieui aeienee against disease will never cease until we arrive at that utopian epoch when the hu man fam ily shall cease to bo atfiictcd with bod ily ailments. One o f tto-m ost potent weapons w hich the armory o f m edicine furnishes, is Hon- tetter's Stomal h bitters, which is o f special utility as a fam ily remedy, us it is adapted to the imm ediate relief and ultimate cure o f those disorders o f the stom ach, liver and bowels whieli it-e o f com m onest occurrence. Indiges tion. biliousness and constipation are insep arable com panions, ami these ailm ents are co m pletely ein-ileated by the Hitters. Hut the reme dial scots of this superlatively whnlcscm c and genial m ei'ielue takes In also nervous ailments, rhcumatisi and kinducy troubles: its action iu these, as in the other com plaints, being char acterized by iineqiiaied thoroughness. Warranted to color more goods than any othei dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take no other. THK COW BRAXD. U nequalled for all F a n c y and A rt W o rk . At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free. W E L L S . RICHARDSON 1 CO,, Piops., Burlington, V t or WHOLESOME BREAD USE D w ig h t s C ow -B rand S oda °"S aleratus . A B S O LU TE LY PURE. FOR EVERY PURPOSE. ALWAYS UNIFORM ANO FULL WEIGHT. Sold on Trial ! « • * * r* thM there U e picture o f « Cow on your package .m l you w ill v aT, th . to .1 B od. Bud«. , Investment small, profits l:\tge. Send *0c for mailing 'large illustrated Catalogue with full particulars. Man ufactured by 41? A an som o S tre e t, «a n F r a n c is c o . Cnl. of COD L IV E R O IL H Y P O P H O S P H ITE 8 . V A N P R IV A T E NOS. N#M b y a ll Thruwinto*. M O N C I S C A R o f (Io r r l.o n rA \ W R I G H M trrrt. T , P o r t la n d . O rr io n . ADVANCE ENGINES THRESHERS AND POWERS D ISPE N SA R Y . 133 a n d 134 T i l l III) S T R E E T , Portland, Oregon. Is ' 1 pensury in Portland or on the Northwest Coast. where patients are success fully tnat.d forall NKRV I i'l S. CHRONIC AND PRIVATE DISEASES m youti£ or old, single or mairitd. such as LOST MANHtKiD, Nervous debility, seminal WITH It is Palatable as Milk. It is throe tines as efficacious a: plain Cod Liver Oil. It is far superior to all other so- called Emulsions. It is a perfect Emulsion, dees not separate or change. It is wonderful as a flesh producer. It is the host remedy for Consump tion, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wast ing diseases, Chronic Cough and Colds. Foot THE COW BRANT). General Agent for the T H E W HY YOU SHOULD USE SCOTT’S EM U LSIO N Z . GOULDS & AUSTIN, 1 «? 1<!i> L a k e fit., C H IC A G O . ILL. i J. R. CATES & CO.r PROP’S. IO j c e n t s . A Child can use them!' Garments Renewed — TO MAKE — -X DELICIOUS BISCUITS WELL DRILLS l.unff Trouble«. FOR \ D W IG H ris7 XV. i». X linuuil Il liklMt; IL» V IMI I !» I I» .» I Ant lim a /" C o u g h «," C o ld «,- C roup, I n flu en za, UronehitlM , C a ta rrh , W h oop - in g -C oiigli, L oss o f «V oice, In cip ie n t C o n su m p tion , and £ a ll ^JTtaroat and 1 A Dress Dyed A Coat Colored losses, fading inemery. J syphilitic eruptions, ef fects of mercury, kidney | ami bladder troubles, gon- orrhea, gleei, stricture etc. C O N S U L T A T IO N F R E E . BUY TIIK BEST. TAKE NO CHANCES. ! MEXICAN SALVE THE C R E A T HEALER. Cures Cut-, Sore-, Salt Rheum, Boils. Pimple*. Felons, Skill Diseases, and all ailments (or which a salve is suitable. For taking out soreness auil healing it acts like magic. 25cents ibex, at all druggist.-. PI 9 0 S CURE CQRCONSIKIPTIOIM B E S T AND F A S TE S T TH R E S H FR S IN T H E WORLD. 1 e.pecfiilly reque»t those con tem plating purchasing either «n Engine or Thresher next season to look up the record o f the ADVANCE. It is IV only maehint ever sold on the Pari/lt Coast that bus given entire satisfaction. I also deal in Laundry Machinery, Marine Engines. All kinds o f Brass Goods, Inspirators, Injectors, Oilers, Reapers, Mowers. Chemical Fire Extinguishers, and Engines, Oils, Belting, Hose, Wrenches, Etc. TH E ONLY DEALER OF PACIFIC COAST That «hip« ? Som p vp*r* me-* T WM th row n from *lior**»ln M cLennan cou n ty , unti reon \ e.l a (Yt*htfiil » "m u! on one o f m y lec*. F or m oro than a y war I un able to w alk. T e w ou n d u lor ruled and r»*tUMfd to ht al. and e v e r y on e thought I W t o ld have to au mit to am putation. S.S.S. waa ree« m m ended. and 1 m,«it tt fY eelv.am l I shall never get through thanking s. s , s . fo r Raving m y leg. and re*t ring m e to perftvt health. G a hi a no W iih . Palentino, Texas, Ju ly, 24. ' A ■end fbr treatiro» on Bb*«w| and Hkln IHae— a ; mailed fre*. *W IF T 1FIC C U . D ra w ers, Atlanta, «¡a. N. r. X. U. No. ¡M8 s. F. N. U. No. 34S IX CAR LOADS. PRICES GREATLY REDUCE All sixes in stock from 40 pounds to l.#C. for R E D U C ID PRICES. S«nd Remember it lx s pleamra to show goods or answer question* If roa cannot call writ«