Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, January 06, 1893, Image 4

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    R A W S IL K D i A M E R IC A
w
IT S
C U LTU R E
E A R L IE S T
BEGAN
W IT H
TH E
C O L O N IZ A T IO N .
T hough Silk .Mill» F lo u rish , T h is Coun­
try F alls to Produce the K a w M aterial.
Cocoon N urtu re
Is P o s»lb le
iu Three-
fourths o f the Country.
î^LUTELY PURE
Where the best food is required, the
Royal Baking Powder only can be used.
I have found the R oyal Baking Powder superior,
to all Others. — C. Garju, late Che/, DelmtmitJe, .V. K
An E l«c e rlc «i H .l.i-t lr * .
Hai'drthlpa o f a f-U lie r u ia n ’ s I .if « .
clever piece o f detective work,
which must appeal with sad and crush­
ing suggestiveness to the crook frater­
nity, has been done in Toledo. A barber
for some time missed cigars from the
case in his shop. A t first only a few
cigars were taken, but presently the
thieves became bolder ami took whole
boxes. A watch was set anil detectives
were employed, but till in vain. A t last
the barber struck on the idea of having
an automatic detecter tixed in the shop
and he called in an electrician. A cam­
era was arranged so as to cover the cigar
case, and a flashlight apparatus and the
camera were connected by wires with
the sliding door o f the cigar case, so
that when the door was opened tho wires
would be brought together. The circuit
thus formed would produce a Hash and
secure instantaneously a picture of the
thieves. For tw elve days the cigars
were unmolested, hut on the morning of
the unlucky thirteenth tho thieves were
prompted to try their hand again.
The plate was taken from the camera
and deveh>i>ed, anil on it was seen a
unique and interesting picture, contain­
ing tho likenesses o f tw o juveniles who
wore in the uct of stealing tho cigars.
Every detail in the shop was distinctly
seen, tho clock showing the time at
which tho youngsters’ little iqierations
were interfered with, and tho mixture
o f cunning uml caution on tho face of
tho boy who was evidently taking the
active part in securing the booty wus
intensely amusing. Tho Isiys were at
once recognized, were arrested, tried
and sent to a reformatory, and the judge
commended from tho bench the ingenu
ity of the means of detection employed,
— N ew York Telegram.
The Gloucettter ftsberrneu sail away f .1;
of hope ami with a full larder. Arri
1
on the grounds they anchor in about lort>
or fifty fathoms, and set their trawls
These are long lines, anchored on the bot­
tom, uml extending out from the school)«*
many bund reds of yards. To these at in­
tervals of a fathom (tin; distance varies
for different fish) are attached shortei
lines. These lines have to be attended in
dories, each containing two men, whe
haul, bait and land the fish ill the boat tc
lx* transferred to the schooner. Herein lie
the danger and hardship, for tlie strong
tides of tin* banks and the shoal water pile
Up great combing seas. The cold is cruel
and the work hard. Suddenly down cornea
a fog, not the soft mist of summer or au­
tumn, but a thick, heavy bank, soaked
through with the penetrating cold of the
icebergs farther north. Horns are blown
from the vessel, but every year many dories
are lost.
One would think that common sense, it
not law, would make each dory carry a
breaker o f water and pilot bread, but none
does, and eit her experience does not teach or
the fishermen like such chances, for year
after year conies the same old story of a
lost dory and two men starved or dead of
thirst. When the fog lifts they are many
miles from their schooner, and are carried
by the swift tides they know not whither.
Then come days of hunger and thirst,
hands are frozen to the oars, madness
haunts them, and then—death. Some­
times they make land or are picked up
by a passing vessel, in which case they
often return liefore their own schooner,
but that, great happiness is rare. Then
their vessel, which so gayly sailed out past
the light, comes home with her Hag at half
mast.—U. Cleveland Coxe in Century.
A
Tile A n tiq u ity o f llie Aralilaii Horse.
T h e Solution Licit Deep.
Mazzini in his day saw clearly, and never
failed to see, that the man who thinks to
solve the riddle of tho time by simply solv­
ing its political or economic problem lias
got but a little way beneath the surface.
The new synthesis which alone can satisfy
must take account of every capacity of
man and every hunger of his heart. Tho
paid attorney for the defense and the paid
preacher will not succeed by any poor
minimizing of material things to blunt
the shafts of the industrial reformer or
blind the eyes of tiie poor man to the vision
of freedom which comfort gives.
Hut if we were all comfortable tomor­
row, all well fed and well tailored and.
easy payers of the income tax, and still
without the love of justice in our hearts,
without the love of beauty there, without
aught eternal there and absolute, without
any light there upon the great mystery
Into which the most comfortable among
us must hasten tomorrow, our perfect
commissariat would be but a poor prison,
and we, when lit the end of t he week its
new was worn off, of all men most, miser­
able—more miserable far than those ten­
der women among the lions of the coli­
seum, than Muss and Hooper in their tires,
than those poor persecuted covenanters,
or than the Pilgrim Fathers harried out
of Kngland, all with heaven in their
heart«.—New Kngland Magazine.
H ow far back do tho pedigrees run
and what is the origin o f the Arabian
horse? These quo d ions it is impossible
to answer delinitely.
Tho Bedouins
themselves believe that Allah created
tho equine genus on their soil. "T h e
root or spring of the horse is,” they say,
“ in tho land of ;
Arab.” This pious
belief is shared 1>> a few generous souls
In England uml America, a small but
dovoted band, who gallantly defend the
cause o f the Arabian burse against bis
only rival, the modern English thorough­
bred. Chief among these faithful was
the late M ajor It. 1). Upton, who visited
the desert himself and who has recorded
his experience and his views.
M ajor Upton concluded that tho horse
was found in Arabia “ not Inter thun
about 100 years after the deluge, if in­
deed he did not Hud his way there ini
mediately after the exodus from the ark,
which is by no means improbable," uml
this probability the author then proceeds
seriously to consider. According to Ma­
jor Upton and a few kindred spirits all
other breeds are mongrels, and the only
P r e fe r r e d A n o t h e r K in d o f llnnk.
way to procure horseflesh in its best and
He was a business man of more than
purest form is to go back to the fountain
ordinary prominence. He is still. Sev
bead—to the horse o f the desert.
eral fellow citizens, also prominent, asked
him to accept a bank presidency with a
95,000 salary attachment and nothing to
ely s
do. There was hut one condition. He must
cease to play poker
"Gentlemen,” said In*. " I appreciate the
honor you would do me. hut 1 must de­
I S W O It T i l
cline. The disparity 1 k * i ween the salary
you offer and the amount 1 can rake in at
poker is too great.”
And anot her man presides over the linan
Cial institution that sought his services.—
TO A N Y M A N ,
Washington Star
W o m a n o rC hlld
'
C atarrh
CHUM BALM
$500
A Summer Arrangement.
Husband \\ lint « pity that Kmiua had to
go and throw Mr. PohUuap overboard, for I
bought our onul from him ln>t winter. Now,
NOTa LIQUID or SNUFF
next winter I'll have to pay tho fu ll price.
A partb'le is applied into each nostril, and is
W ife -Calm yourself, husband, she is go­
agrtMtnble. Price, M) cents nl «1 run#tuts' or bv
ing to renew tho engagement in the fall. You
mall.
KI.Y BROTH KRH.
56 Warren street, New York.
see, she broke It in order to Invotne engaged
to Mr. Cooler, the man wo buy our ice from.
"M a y heaven's richest blowing rest upon
that daughter.”— Time.
MUtVrrlnic from
C a ta rrh
H A Y - ¡EVER
i mum mi
D R . P A K K K R 'N HI l(K C O U G H i t'U K .
One done will atop a rough. It never fails.
Try It. iTtoe, 25 cent« k bot le. For sale by «II
druggist«. Pacific <\>Hht Agents,
GEO. L AHlBt NOEH A CO . Druggists.
914 K e arn y Street, Man F rancisco, t'al.
A Conscientious Official.
Lone Passenger ion last cable car out for the
night)—Conductor, as 1 am the only man
aboard, ami as I am going to Sixty third
street, 1 don’t s*xv anv need of your calling
out the names of all these streets.
Conductor (stiffly)—Y o u n g man. Pm paid
to call out these names ami Pm a-going to
earn my salary. If you don't like it you can
get off. Thirty-fourthl—Chicago Tribune.
D o c to r s d is a g re e .
They
h a v e to.
T h e r e a re d iffe r ­
en ces o f o p in io n a m o n g the
A Modern DUmae.
b e s t ; th e re w ill be so lo n g
Dr. La Mod» A case of extreme nervous
as k n o w le d g e is in co m p lete. I exhaustion. (W rites prescription and do-
But th e re is o n e su b ject part«.)
lead er of Fashion tafter reading it)— Life
on w h ich all ph ysician s a re is not worth living any longer. (Turns her
c o m p le te ly in a cco rd , and face to the wall and expire«.)
I It reads; "M ust uot carry her parasol out
that is th e va lu e o f c o d - liv e r more than twice a week, or els»» have half its
o il in co n su m p tion and scro ­ handle cut off.”— Detroit Free Presa.
fula, and m a n y o th e r c o n d i­
Admitted to ( Iftmtohl}»,
"M a ry .” said the ntUtiv * <>f a Cass avenue
tion s in w h ich th e loss o f fat
I resilience to her cook the other morning,
is in v o lv e d .
A n d c o d - liv e r "isn't that new beau of yours a Germ anf”
"H e was, ma'am, until last night.”
o il has its g re a te s t usefulness
| "W h a t happened last nightf"
in S c o t t ’s E m u ls io n .
I ” Why, he declared his intentions, ma'am,
T h e r e is an in te restin g and we are to tie married in the fall.”— De
troit Free Presa.
b o o k on the su bject; sen t free.
HBU*
lAigte.
I f W. W. Cleaver, of Unadilla, who is
reported as having 25,000 silkworms at
work, can demonstrate the possibility of
making $100 a month by silk culture on a
small scale, he may bring on another craze
like that of 1838. A fter nearly 300 years of
experiment it is pretty well established
that the silkworm may be made to thrive
in this country and over quite three-
fourths of its area; but in spite of this the
silk manufacturing Industry has grown to
great proportions in the United States
without material aid from growers of na­
tive silk, and the native product cuts no
figure in the consumption of the mills.
The experiment of growing raw silk has
gone on persistently almost since the day
that the first permanent colonist set foot
upon the continent. Cortez brought silk­
worms to Mexico in 1522, and James I tried
to send eggs t*> Virginia iu 1009, only two
years after the settlement of Jamestown,
but failed because of a shipwreck. Ten
years later Virginians were urged to raise
silk, and penal statutes were passed en­
joining the industry upon the colonists.
Nearly every state in the Union be*»
sought to encourage silk culture, and all
.sorts of societies have been formed to pro-
inots^Jieindustry. The victims of John
Law ’s West India scheme were allured
with the hope of successful silk culture in
America. When Georgia was settled iu
1732 grant* of land were made, with tin
stipulation that for every ten acres lot
white mulberry trees should be planted
Georgia developed the industry to a greater
degree than any other colony. The lir-t
shipment of Georgia silk to Kngland wii «
made in 1735. It weighed eight, pounds.
A filature for reeling raw silk was » stab
fished at Savannah in 1750, and iu K'i!
Gtiorgia exported 10,000 pounds of silk to
Kngland. A fter that cotton came in, ami
being more profitable than silk drove tin-
latter out, just as tobacco had driven it
out in Virginia more than 100years b.-fon-.
Some silk was raised in Georgia even »lin­
ing the Revolutionary war, ami there was
a small export trade as late as 1790.
For nearly 100 years there was a deter
mined effort to grow silk in Connecticut.
In 1H19 five tons of raw silk were grown at
Mansfield, and for several years tin- value
of Connecticut's raw silk product »exceeded
$100,0» mi p» r year. President Stiles, of Y a le
eollege, grew’ silkworms and wrote a book
on silk culture. During the last twenty
five years of the colonial period experi
inenta ill silk culture were made in Penn
sylvania, New York, New Jersey and
Maryland. The Revolutionary war, how­
ever, interrupted (lie experiments, arid a
plan of Heujamin Franklin's to build a
filature for reeling silk in Philadelphia
was given up.
The industry had so much decreased i ;
17>>t» that a newspaper of the day mentions
ns a*remarkable fact that a family in
Maryland had 2,000 silkworms at work.
Now, an ounce of fertile eggs will produce
nearly 40,000 worms. In 1790 there wen*
fifty families iu New Haven raising silk­
worms, and a local paper hoped it wonl I
soon lie disreputable for a lady or gentle­
man to he found wealing t.hick silk not of
native growth. A company iu Rhode
Island had 30,000 mulberry trees growing
iu 1835, and the legislature offered a bounty
of fifty cents a pound on raw silk grown
within the state. A newspaper declared
that Rhode Island was likely to take the
lead in the manufacture of silk as of cot­
ton.
in 1840 so greatly had tlie industry
grown that tho United States exported
01,552 pounds of raw silk, and in 1844 near­
ly 400,(MX) pounds, but in 1850 the export
was only 14,763 pounds. It was in the
period between 1825 and 1850 that the great
craze for silk raising seized tho middle
states. A company with the president of
a learned society at its head was formed
for the furtherance of the industry in Penn­
sylvania. A Frenchman came out from
Lyons to teacii the art of managing silk­
worms, and elaborate instructions were
printed. The craze spread into Delaware
and Maryland. It was urged that this in­
dustry could lie carried on at home, and
that it furnished easy ami profitable w’ork
for women and children. In those days
American women were more easily im­
pressed with the glamour of royalty, and it
was represented that, royal ladies in all
times hud been deeply interested iu silk*
culture. Huudrcdsof homes became the
scene of the industry and dainty girls
sedulously gathered mulberry leaves to
feed those ravenous worms. Everybody
was in a flutter of excitement at the pros­
pect. Thousands of mulberry trees were
planted, and some of them or their de
scendaiits still linger.
An almost fatal disaster, attended with
curious manifestations, overtook the silk
growers of Pennsylvania in 1838-9. It was
represented that the Chinese or South Sea
mulberry was iu every way us suitable
as the white mulberry t»i feed silk­
worms. Thereupon there begun to ! h ) a
great speculution in t he ( ’hinese mullierry.
One nurseryman ordered 5,(XX),000 of the
plants from France, and sent over #80,OK)
iit gold to bind the bargain. Tiny twigs
brought one and two dollars apiece. au«l
were sold two or three times in rapid suc­
cession, each time at an advance. The
speculation was like that which raged in
the »laysof tlie tulip craze. Late in 1839
the colla{>se came, and in the spring of
1840 the Chinese mulberry sold at two and
three cents each. W hile the speculation
was at its height #300,(XH) changed hands
for plants »luring one week in i ’ hilmicl
pliia alone.
In 1844 many of the Chinese mulberry
plants were killed by a severe frost, and
even Connecticut was discouraged.
It
was then that the New Kngland capitalists
set about building mills and Importing
raw silk.
Tito hope of growing raw silk has per
sistently maintained a foothold in Phila­
delphia, and that city is the home of the
Woman's Silk Culture association. I.orin
Hlodgett told the Franklin instit ute alsmt
ten years ago that there could be no doubt
that it was possible to grow raw silk in
this country at a moderate profit. He
thought it must he done on a small scale
as incident to other departments of farm
work, and it must I k » left in large part to
women and children.— New York Sun.
T h « P ra c tic e o f llo rriiR ln x Hook*.
The practice of borrowing books Isos
seiitialiy an evil one in those who can
afford to own Ixxvks, and public libraries
serve to encourage and foster the evil,
though they are of very great value to the
poor student. We think that upon general
principles people should own the books
they rea»l. We befit ve heartily in buying
)*ook-c reading book* and keeping books,
but t)"t in borrowing book*. As a refer­
ence a public library serve* an admirable
purpose, and in many instances it is of un­
doubted advantage to the people. Hut one
who would be surely profited by books
should own them if he can and should
have them for companion* continually
alnnit him < Incmo News
He* *1 l«t ion.
We an* all prone to retaliate for personal
S cott A D ow ns , Chemist*, i ) t South jth A venu«, I "Then, my dear sir, we will agree to
slights, but perhaps the funniest Incident
Now York.
of it is one of an old Irish woman who, see­
Your druggist keep* Scott'* Emulator! of cod-livvr I differ.”
« I —»II druggist* ev«ryw h«ro do. $i.
"N o , sir, we won't do any such thiug, be^ ing a funeral to which she had expected
cause you’re wrong.”— Pick -Me- Ufa
an invitation pass her door, expostulated
angrily: "Oh, goon wid ye! go on w|d ye!
M orph in e H a b it Cured In IO
Trouble In the Kitchen.
g»> on wid ye! Hut maybe there’ll be a
to 90 d a y «• N •» i'»r till cured.
I OR. J. IT lP M t N I, L*t>««K>a.O*».
funeral at our house soon, and then we’ ll
Bridget Please, mum. th' fish aiu't
Mi.*'tress W hat kind of tlsh is itf
*e« w ho’ ll be ax»ed.” —iW ton Saturday Ga-
OPIUM
S. P. N Ü. So. i t i S , r. N. U. No. M l
" I t s salt tlah. uiuiu.”— T u u *
NOTHING 19 RIGHT.
AN
T h e V illa g e B ig M a n G o es t o W a s h in g to n
a n d R e tu rn s C o n s id e r a b ly W ilt e d .
ENEM Y
A M other’s Story Guns for Everybody.
BAFFLED .
There Is au enemy with whom thousands are
‘ fam iliar all their lives, because they are bora
with a tendency to biliousness. With this enemy
tney a r; c nstantlv battling with ineffectual
weapon«. Hostetler’s stomach Bitter» w ill baffle
it. Mere purgatives w ill not reform adlsord» red
condition of the liver indicated, not by consti­
pation a on , but also by sick hea** aches, yellow ­
ness ot the »kiu > nd eyeballs, nausea, furred
tong1.e and uneasiness, more particularly upon
p sature on the right »Me, upon and below the
short ribs. A void drastic purgatives which gripe
and weaken the iutesriues, and substitute thi-
world-famous anti-bilious cordial, which like-
1 wise removes malarial, stomachic and kidney
comp alnts, rheumatism and nervousness. As
a laxative of the bowels, painlcos but effectual.
' It improves appetite, sleep Mud the ability to di-
I g»*ht, aud possesses the additional advantage of a
standard t .nic.
"W h e n my boy w a» 2 % years c f age, a fall
brought on hip disease, which gradually grsw
The village of R ----- was dissatisfied with
worse until, when he
its postmaster. Several petitions were for­
was 6 , h e c o u l d n o t
warded to Washington, and as they were not
w a l k * aud we had him
immediately acted on, it was determined that
treated 9 months at the
the big man of the town should proceed to
Children’s Hospital iu
Washington and lay the case before the post­
Boston.
But when he
master general.
c a m e h o m e h e w as
The Big Man of the town lived on the in­
I
worse,
aud
the doctors
terest of his money. He was called "J ud ge.”
said n o t K i n g c o u l d
Most of bis letters came addressed to the
be d o n e . I began giv
Just received a fuii lin eoi
"H o n .” So and So. He ran a church and a
ing him Hood’s Sarsapa- P a r k e r , S m i t h , R e m i n g t o n , I t h i a
school, always headed every subscription,
Willie Duff.
r il’a aud he improved at
bossed the Fourth of July, dictated the pol­
Lefe ver, U . M . C . , E t o .
once. The 14 abscesses on his hip healed up, his
icy of the village trustees, and was the only
The most complete stock in the Northwest.
A running account at a store soon gets ahead appetite improved aud he could w’alk, at first
man who subscribed to a New Y ork daily
Send 5 cents iu stamps for 112-page Illustrated
of a man’s pocket in a go-as-you-please race.
catalogue.
paper and talked stock.
Sarsa­
The Big Mun had never been nominated for
parilla
Sudden changes of the weather often
governor, but that wus because he didn’t cause pulmonary, bronchial and asthmatic
93 F ir s t S tr e e t.
-
P O R T L A N D . OR.
want office, it was pretty generally under­ troubles. u Brown* t Bronchial Troches" will with crutches, then w’ ithout. He is now p e r ­
f
e
c
t
l
y
w
e
l
l
y
live
ly
as
any
boy."
M
rs
.
L
m
id
stood that lie could have a cabinet position allay the irritation which induces cough­
V. D u f f , Walpole, Mass.
any time he desired, and that he somehow ing, giving immediate relief.
|V|A N K ’S Q O N E Q U T T E R
influenced all the political appointments in
HOOD S PILLS do not purge, pain or gripe, but
W ill cut Dry or Gref-n
A Providential Arrangement.—'“ Man pro­ act promptly, easily and efficiently. 25c._______
six counties.
Bones, Meat, Gristle aud all.
poses.” " Yes, but he need« encouragement.”
Green Cut BONES w ill
"Gentlemen,” said the Big Man, as he
double the number o f eggs
E poses Z5‘) ,
swelled up, " I will go down to Washington
O N LY R IG H T TO T E L L .
—w ill make them more fer­
and arrange this matter
Y ou can rest
,U H E ~ G R E A f)«
t ile - w ill carry the hen«
safely through tho molting
easy. ”
The Rev. Mark Guy Pearse, the eminent
period aud put. them In
If he had told us that he was going down
condition to lay when eggs
English divine, write«:
to Washington to secure an act of congress
command the highest price
" H kuforp P lace . B ufkkll S quare ,)
and w ill dovelope your
to remove the Bunker Hill monument to
L o n d o n , D ecem ber 10, 1888. j
chicks faster than any
Chicago we should have had faith in him. He
other
food.
“ I th in k it o n ly rig h t th a I sh ou ld tell
departed. The band was at the depot to
Feed Green Bones and
C u re* C on s u m p tio n , Coughs, C rou p , Sore
honor his departure, and the few citizens he you o f h ow m uch use I fin d A l l c o c k ’ h P o -
use C r e o n o z o u e to kill
T h ro a t.
Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee.
the li»'e, and you w ill make
deigned to shako hands with at once gained eo t.’H P lahterh in m y fa m ily and a m o n g Kora Lame Side, Back or Chen Shiloh’» Porous
ififty per cent more profit*
five pounds in avoirdupois. The train had | those to w h om I h a ve recom m en ded them .
P la s te r will give great satisfaction. —25 cents.
Bend for Catalogue aud
I
find
th
em
a
v
e
ry
breastplate
against
colds
scarcely moved off before our Big Man be­
prices.
_
gan to decrease in size. There was a general and co u g h s.”
Mrs. T. 8. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn., savs: PETALUMA DICUBATOB COMPT. PETALUMA. CAL
in the car; also a millionaire; also a senator.
" S h ilo h '» V d a l U e r 'S A V E D M Y L I F E . ' 1
The trouble is that when a man needs his nerve
No one know our Big Man or paid any atten­ most he can’t find it.
tion to him. When he reached Washington
K U F T U K C A N Ii P II.K S OUKKD.
his hat was a whole size too large for him.
When he was put iu a back room on the
We positively cure rupture, pile« and all rec­
fourth floor his chest measure decreased two tal diseases without pain or detention from busi­
ness. No cure, no pay. Also all Private dis­
inches.
eases. Address for pamphlet Drs. Porterfield A j
T lu name of our Big Man on the hotel regis­ Losey, «38 Market street, dan Francisco.
Have you Catarrh? T rrthis Remedy. It will
ter produced no commotion. There was no
relieve and Cure you. Price 60 cts. This In
The Chinese pr«*fix “ Ah ” 1- a term of endear
lector lo r its successful treatment is fumlsheo
rush of cards to his room. If the administra­
uient This explains the origin of "A h there”
free Shiloh’s Remedies are sold by us on u
tion knew of his arrival it didn’t call. In the as a salutation.
iruarantee to (five satisfaction.
lobby he heard men addressed as "Senator,”
" H o w I W r o t e B en H u r ,”
"Judge,” "G eneral,” "Colonel,” ami so on
Told by »* lie nil Lew Wallace, i 3 one scrap from
until he felt that his coat was too big for him.
; til«* voluminous and superb programme of eminent
Next morning, when he started out to call on w rlteraand interestingartic le.s which T h i Y ou i h ' s
the postmaster general, no baml played. j C o m p a n io n announces It returns its place in 5o0,-
oon families by tlie versatility and the ins’ ructive
Now is a splendid tim e to apply. For
There was no send off. No one in Washing­ im 'H s o f its general articles, the high character of all
reliable, prompt, effective Bervice, or in­
ton knew whether he was our Big Man or our its stories, the brightness of its illustrations. Then
it comes every week, and one gets a great deal for
formation in any claim write to
cobbler, and no one seemed to care. Every •L75
a year. The price seat
oncew ill entitle you
LE W IS H E IN IN C E R ,
rod lie traveled seemed to produce a shrink­ to the paper to January, l«t>4. Address T hk
P . O . B o x 3 76 .
W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.
age. Ho had always supposed that he was a Y o u t h ' s C o m p a n io n , Boston, Mass.
bigger man than the Capitol building. One
VALENTiNE’ S
H O W ’S T H I S !
glance satisfied him that lie had made a mis­
J u d g e J. B. H i l l , of the Superior
We offer f 100 reward for any case of catarrh
take.
Court, W alk er county, Georgia,
Our Big Man iutended to talk very plainly that cannot be cured by H a ll’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. C IIK N EY A CO., Props., Toledo, O.
Ladies or Gentlemen.
: thinks enough of German Syrup to
to the postmaster general. He would look
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Che­
Latest improved. Is recognized by the medi-
very severe when he inquired why this tiling ney for the last fifteen years, an«l believe him send us voluntarily a strong letter
c
1
]>r
fesHion
as
tho
only
common-sense
belt
perfectly honorable in all business transactions
was thus.
W hen men o f rank made for the cure of Seminal Weakness, Pains
and financially a b lj to carry out any obligations j endorsing it.
in
the
Back,
Loss
of
Memory.
Hysteria,
Nervous
He inquired his way to headquarters, but made by their firm.
WEST &. T R l’AX,
and education thus use and recom­ Prostra ion. or an disease arising from youth­
had no sooner reached them than he found
Wholesale Druggist«, Toledo, o .
mend an article, what they say is ful indiscretion. Believes in one or two days
WALDING K1NSAN & M ARV IN ,
himself weak in the knees. His hat was now
Rheumatism, Constipation, Paralysis, Kidney or
Wholesale Druggists Toledo, O.
worth the attention of the public. Liver Troubles. P r i c e t l O . Her d l o r d cular.
two whole si/KS too large, and his vest would
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken it ternally. acting
have pinned over two inches. He half hoped directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of It is above suspicion. “ I have used Sent C. O. D. or on receipt of price. Address
O SG O O D H K O S , D r u g g h t N ,
the system. Price, 75 cents per bottle. Sold by your German Syrup,” hesays, “ for
that the I*. M. would lie out, and he wasgrati-
O a k la n d ..........................................C a lifo r n ia
fiod. The P. M. was not out, but the Hessian all druggists. Testim onial» free.
my Coughs and Colds on the Throat
who took his can 1 a r 1 looked him up and
O ld G o l d and Silver Bought; Bend your old Gold
T b t G s e m e a for breakfast.
and Lungs. I can recommend it for and
Silver by mail to the old and reliable house of A.
down iu a suspicion.
soon returned to
Coleman. 41 Third street, San Francifloo; I will read by
them
as
a
first-class
medicine.”
—
say:
return mall the cash, according to assay; if the amount
Use Knamellne Stove Polish; no dust, no smell.
"V e r y busy, sir. Leave your papers and
T ake no substitute.
O Is not satisfactory will return sold
call again.
Call next week or the week
after.”
“ But I have no papers, and I am Mr.
Ha ve been Im it a te d , b u t N e v e r E q u a l le d — th e y a re B e y o n d C o m p a r i s o n !
Smith, of Smith ville,” protested our Big
W hy?
Three things which all
Man.
W e M ake
^
________ »
"Y e s, but the postmaster general is very
workingmen know give
B ecau se
90 p er cen t.
\
busy— very busy. Have to call again, sir.
the most trouble in their
T h e y are
W e never heard of you, sir—never heard of
O f th e
you nor your town. Better make your w rit­
hard-strain work
are:
O d o r le s s ,
W i r e Mats
ten application for the postoftice and mail
Sprains, B r u i s e s
and
it. ’
S o l d in
l E v e r la s t n g
© EB H ARTM AN
F L E X IB L E S fb
Our Big Man returned home.
He was
Soreness.
|
A n d “ B e s t .”
wabbling in his clothes. He had paper in the
tW S e e that y o u r m at n a s b m ss la g a tta c h e d stam ped H a r t m a n .’ *
lining of his hat to keep it from faliiug over
H A R T M A N M F C . C O M P A N Y , W orks. B E A V E R F A L L S , PA.
his ears. His heels and toes had an inch play
T . D . ( U K S K , G c n ’ l U > H t « r n S a le s A g t . , 5 0 8 S t a t e S t., C h ic a g o .
iu his shoes. His lordly stomach had wilted
Three
supreme
afflic­
OHIO 1 . CLARKSON, JR., Portland, Or
MOLLY, MASON, MARKS & CO.. Spokane Fills. Dull.
away, and his autocratic beariug had gone
tions, which all the world
hence. Our ifig Man had met tho enemy aud
he was theirs. He had traveled beyond tho
kniftvs afflict mankind the
confines of our village, and his greatness had
The very rem aikable and certain
most with Aches and
melted away like a September frost.-
relief (riven woman by M O O RE’ S
C ures
Hood’s
H. T . HUDSON,
"SHILOH'S
■ C U R E .!
SHILOH’ S VITALIZE».
^ h i l o h W
cata r r h
FRAZER AXLE
GREASE
E M E DY. Best in the World!
Get the Genuine!
Sold Everywhere!
“German
Syrup
99
ELECTRIC BELT
THREE TROUBLES.
3
THREE AFFLICTIONS.
3
3
Pains a re : Rheumatism,
Neuralgia and Lumbago.
A n A p p a r e n t I in p o s s i b i l i t y .
T h e phrase "s q u a r in g the c irc le ” is a n ­
other w a y o f sa y in g "a tte m p tin g an im ­
possibility.” T h e a llu sio n is to the
m a th e m a tic al question w h e th e r a circle
can bo m a d e w h ic h con tains e x a c tly the
sam e a re a as a square, an d the difficulty
it to find tho precise ra tio betw een the
d ia m ete r an d tho c irc u m fe re n c e o f a
circle.
P o p u la rly it is 3.1459, etc., but
the n u m b e rs w o u ld g o on to infinity.
T h is p ro b le m has g iv e n rise to an am oun t
o f la b o r o n ly e q u a led b y that bestow ed
upon the e q u a lly im p ossible one o f d is­
c o v e rin g perpetual m otion
THREE THINGS.
to do are simply these
Buy it,
R E V E A L E D R E M E D Y has given
W om an’s Friend. It is
uniformlysuceees-
i fnl in relieving the backaches, headaches
C
J
- and w eakness
( which burden and shorten a woman’s
life. T h o u s a n d s
j of women testify for it. It w ill give health and strength
and make life a pleasure.
FOR SA LE B Y A L L
DRUGGISTS.
J it ttie name of
t r y it
and be/
prompt-|
ly and perm a-'
nently cured by
the use of
Simonds Crescent Ground Cross Cuts,
A n d A l l K i n d s of M I L L S A W S . A l s o S a w R e p a i r i n g .
I V * S I M O N O S S A W C O .. 7S F ro n t Street. P o r tla n d . O r.
The Knowledge of the Whole World
W ITH IN
YOUR
REACH.
T I T I T I I O U T a parallel in the history of educational enterprise stands the offer of the O r e g o n ia n
W
to its thousands of friends and readers. Such an offer has never been made before, and it
should have your careful consideration. The offer has already resulted in placing over
twelve carloads of these valuable books in the homes of Portland and vicinity. The O r e g o n ia n ' s
contract with the publishers, whereby it has been enabled to offer this great library at such extra­
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few days was obtained. You still have time to make this opportunity your own if you cut out one
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there are 671— more than one-third of them col­
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It ia the moat gigantic aa well as the moat highly
esteemed literary work that the brain of man ever ac­
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have been adopted as text books in the Colleges of the
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This is the Encyclopædia—this is the mine of infor­
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With this in your possession you will have the infor­
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who takes up the battle of life in thi* generation.
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Here are some interesting facta about the O r k o o n ia n
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