Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, October 19, 1894, Image 4

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    THE MARRYING AGE.
\ A n I n c id e n t In a N ew E ngland M inlstetAl
from the fact that the
l cheap baking powders contain
A
B o th th e B r id e an d B r id e g r o o m M ay B e
O v er T h ir t y and U nder F ift y W ith A d ­
v a n ta g e — H e r r
alum , which causes indigestion and
extravagant.
It takes three pounds o f the best
of them to go as far as one pound
of the Royal baking Pow der, be­
cause they are deficient in leavening
gas.
There is both health and econ­
omy in the use o f the Royal Raking
Powder.
T h e E r r o r o f an I n te r v ie w e r .
H ou n d t o S ell T h e m .
Crusty Customer—You say those glasses
are three times as valuable a» I wear. I
can’t aee it.
Bright Salesman—Certainly not, with
those imperfect old glasses.—Jewelers’
Weekly.
T O P U T ON
i
rrj
H. RIDER HAGGARD AT HOME.
H a p p y L ife o f th e N o v e list a t Ilia C o u n try
H o m e , D ltch ln g lia m H ouse.
H. Rider Haggard, tho novelist who
wrote “ She” in six weeks and was re­
warded by worldwide fame and a com fort­
able fortune, has found more terrors con­
nected with the lion hunters of London
than tho lion hunting of tho dark conti­
nent, and has permanently abandoned his
tow n hotiso in London for his country seat
In Norfolk, where he can, uhdisturhed, de-
voto himself to agriculture, stock raising,
good shooting and profitable novel writ­
ing. Mr. Haggard is now a country squire,
a gentleman farmer and an enthusiastic
sportsman, and his talk savors more of
farming and livo stock than it does of Ac­
tion and literature.
Ditchinghnm House, his country place,
Is about 150 years old und is surrounded
by as many acres as it has seen years. It
is a quaint, picturesque place and just tho
tort of home such an imaginative und ro
needed flesh, no mat­
ter how you’ve lost
it, take Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Dis­
c o v e r y . It w orks
wonders. By restor­
ing the normal ac­
tion o f the deranged
organs and functions,
it builds the flesh up
to a safe and healthy
standard —promptly,
pleasantly and nat­
urally
The weak,
emaciated, thin, pale
♦
and puny are made
strong, plump, round and rosy. Noth­
ing so effective as a strength restorer
and flesh maker is known to medical sci­
ence; this puts on h ealth y flesh not the fat
o f cod liver oil and its filthy compounds.
It rouses every organ o f the body to ac­
tivity, purifies, enriches and vitalizes
the blood so that the body feels refreshed
and strengthened. If you are too thin, too
weak, too nervous, it may be that the food
assimilation is at fault. A certain amount
o f bile is necessary for the reception o f the
A NEW PORTRAIT OT H. RIDER HAGGARD,
fat foods in the blood. Too often the liver
holds back this element which would help mantle writer as Haggard thoroughly en
digestion.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical joys. The Haggard household consists of
Discovery stimulates, tones up and invig­ the novelist, his charming wife, their two
orates the liver, nourishes the blood, and little daughters, half a dozen servants and
the muscles, stomach and nerves get the several big dogs of the mast ill breed. Tho
rich blood they require.
master of Dltchlngimm House does very
littlo literary work in summer, anil his
Spent Hundreds of Dollars with no Benefit.
mornings
ore spent in looking after the
M. J. C o le m a n o f
S a rg e n t S t., R o x b u ry ,
affairs of his farm or in shooting. He is
AfassT. w rites: “ A
suffering
dyspepsia
______ _ . from
..
yspei
an excellent marksman and is quite a pic­
.ml constipation with uu-
turesque figure as he strolls through his
told agony for at least 18
months. I am more than
game preserves clad in a brown shooting
pleased to sny that after
jacket and knickerbockers and with his
using Dr. Pierce's Golden
double barreled shotgun ready for use tho
Medical Discovery and
• Pleasant Pellets ' for one
instant a grouse breaks cover. He has a
mouth. I was entirely
tall, athletic, sturdy figure, the flush of
cured, and from that day
health is on ills sunburned face, and he
to this I do not know,
hardly looks the 87 yours Father Tim e has
thank God, what even a
slight headache is. 1 paid
credited him with.
n doctor on Treniont St..
Mr. Haggard docs most of ids writing
Boston, in one day ( for
in tho w inter time, and when ho shuts
n il advice only,) the sum
_____
o f Slo ts» with ft so for __ . _
'
himsolf in his study in the afternoon or
medicine, and derived no M. J- C o l e m a n . E sq ,
oven Ing it is one of t ho ironclad rules of
benefit. I got more r e lie f/» one h o u r from your
tho household that he must not bo inter­
medicines, ns Cat as my stomach was concerned,
than from all the other medicine I used.
rupted. His den is a Npucious apartment,
11 . .1 n \ I- ! .'ii wli.- - ids tin-, is mi tiering from containing two tallies, at which tho novel­
dyspepsia or constipation and will use your
ist writes, and the library shelves are filled
medicine as 1 have done, he will never regret it."
with historical books. Ho lias his plot
well formulated before ho Itegins writing,
nnil when In' takes up ills pen works wit it
great rapidity. Mr. Haggard is a reli­
gious man and every morning l>cfnro break­
fast. reads a chapter from tho old family
of disease feed on llfo, and Hi bio to tlio assembled family and serv­
are only overcome by the ants. When Ills novel is to l>o of a his­
torical character, ho siH'iids months In
making of sound, healthy study and usually makes a personal visit
to
tho country in which tho scene of tho
tissue.
proposed romance is to bo laid.
Germs
Scott’s
Emulsion
I
B
p
the Cream of Cod-liver Oil,
is an easy, palatable fat food
that makes new tissue quick­
ly and gives strength. Phy­
sicians, the world over, en­
dorse It.
Don't bo deceived by Substitutes!'
Pr«par«d by Boot» A Down«, N V
All H n i« i.U
• O
Dr. William** Indian Pile
- X O intm ent will cu re Blind,
w Bleeding irid Itching Piles.
_a l t absorbs the tumors, allays
tho itching at on ce, a eu as a ponl
tire, jrlvea Inatanlrelief. Dr. w ill-
I lam'd Indian Pile Ointm ent 1* prepared
lor Plica and Itching o f tho private
parte. Every box la warranted. By drug-
• lata, hr m all on receipt o f price, 50 cent»
ind ft «O WILLIAMS MANUFACTURIN'.» CO .
Proprietor», Cleveland, Ohio. ________________
Ely’s Cream Balm
W i l l. « I KK
CATARRH
tu MM. M Inna M. la* Ian
'
'
Bei « I Boar«.iiig Be oot for (Urla. Kighteenth
j ia r . Nineteen leaebsra.
For illustrated «• • Ut logue address
KKY. hi*W B. « Hi K( II, A. M., Principal.
A World’s Tribute.
“ A million people out o f work,” says a
H as
D e d u ce d
| Tennyson during a visit to Farringford
some four or five years ago. They were sit­
ting under the shadow of home great mag­
nolias that cover one side of the house, and
the conversation turned upon the super-
| natural and the possibility of communica-
' tions from the other world.
Tennyson then told of a dissenting min­
ister in one of the New England states
noted for his powers as a preacher, who
one Sunday morning, instead of reading a
text and giving a discourse in the usual
way, suddenly in a most dramatic manner
began to recite "The Charge of the Light
Brigade.”
The congregation listened
breathlessly to the end, but before the
service had concluded elders and people
were loud in their anger at the way ki
which tho chapel had been profaned. Their
murmurs found the minister wholly un­
prepared.
He had gone into the pulpit intending to
speak about the need for charity and was
wholly unconscious of what he had done.
Convinced at length by testimony which
he could not withstand, he was filled with
remorse, went sadly to his room that night,
and watched through all the hours till
morning, seeking consolation and not find­
ing any. A t daybreak they brought him
word that a man looking like a tramp
wanted to see him urgently.
The minister, half from habit, decided to
see him. The stranger came straight into
the room and simply said, "I come to thank
the man who has saved my soul.” The
minister stood in silence, wondering wheth­
er this was some new mockery of his senses.
I The stranger went on: “ I was all through
the Crimea, and I was in the thick of the
fight at Gettysburg, but never till I heard
! you recite that poem in the chapel yester­
day did I know what I had to thank God
for. Sir, from that hour I determined to
change my life, and I want to thank the
man to whom I owe my salvation.”
The mortality of young children U yearly
decreasing. The decrease is ascribed to
| various causes. Some say that it is due to
! progressive improvement in the human
race. Others attribute it to an increase of
| proper precaution in the care of the young.
! Still others contend that the cause of fewer
i death» among children is to be found in no
longer permitting them to eat unsuitable
food and to wear unsuitable clothing.
Few infer from the present rate of mor­
tality that the marriages of parent» have
been made at more proper ages. Yet in­
vestigation by scientific men has proved
that if hereditary diseases be excepted
there is nothing so dangerous to the life of
a child os the marriage of its father and
mother at certain ages.
It is only recently that any inquiry Into
this subject ha» been undertaken. Hut the
results which have thus far been obtained
are such as to show that men and women
must marry at particular stages of their
lives if their offspring is to be mentally
and physically sound.
It is to Herr Korosi, the head of the sta­
tistical department at Buda-Pesth and al­
ready well known for the importance and
accuracy of the conclusions he has arrived
at from statistical inquiries in other field»,
that we are indebted for the discovery of
tbi» new factor in determining the welfare
of the human race. The result» which heob-
i ruined from a casual examination some 10
years ago of the relations existing between
¡ the mortality of children and the various
ages at which their parents were married
were so striking that they induced him to
make a more exhaustive investigation.
For the pu»t 10 year», therefore, Dr. Korosi
has been careful to ascertain, whenever the
A D iscu ssio n A b o u t P u d d in g s.
death of a child was registered, the ages of
One runs onto many bits of nature in a
its father and mother, as well as that of the I down town retail store. With a little close
child and the cause of its death. He bus observation in the busy throng you can
noted in all 29,813 separate cases, which, in learn more in 10 minutes about human na­
making his deductions, he divides into two ture than in a decade in some other places.
distinct class«», the deaths caused by heredi­ Men and women are alike unconscious of
tary diseases and the deaths caused by di®- themselves and of the impression they make
euses which were contracted after birth. on others when shopping. They have been
The former class is manifestly of the great­ doing a good d«*al of shopping lately. W om ­
est importance for his purpose.
en have thought nothing of squandering
As the condition o f the mother is evident­ two hours to save a nickel, nor of bringing
ly more instrumental than that of the fa­ [ the wrath of the salesman down on their
ther in its effect upon the child Herr Korosi I defenseless heads by their indecisions and
has compiled his first table on the results their blocking the way.
guined from observations of the mother’s
It was amusing to notice with what satis­
age merely.
faction one salesman took a slight revenge
The statistics in this instance are:
on one woman with whom he had been la­
A ge o f Mothers.
Percentage o f Deaths. boring. He had been telling her all about
U nder 20 years................................................... 22.31
plum pudding—plum pudding sold in cans.
20 to 30 years.........................................................14.41
30 to 35 years........................................................ 12.85 He told her how by an hour’s steaming
,
they
came out as fresh, as famous aud just
Over 36 years........................................................13.45
Deaths resulting from tuberculosis were the same as the original English plum pud-
j ding. He told her what an awful lot of
eliminated from these calculations.
From this table it is evident that the I trouble it saved her. She examined the dif-
most desirable age, as far as the health of j ferent sized cans. She read the directions
her children is concerned, for a woman to I on each. She listened to his talk, and she
marry is between the ages o f 30 and 35, the asked him many questions. Then she laid
mortality of children resulting from mar­ down the last can of pudding and w alked
riages at that age being but 12.35 per cent. away.
He looked after her with disgust and the
It also appears that a woman Hhould marry
when she is more than 35 years old rather signs of a storm in his face. A woman who
than when she is between 20 and 30 years of I was waiting for one o f the cans said:
‘ ‘She evidently had her doubts about the
•flBtb
Mothers under 20 years of age are, accord­ I quality of your puddings.” ‘ ‘ Doubts? Not
she.
1 have been talking to her and telling
ing to statistics, more liable to bear sickly
children than at any subsequent period in j her about them for an hour. Plum pudding
is too good for her. She is one of those peo-
their life.
The mortality of children by women in I pie that can live all their lives on suet pud­
their teens is nearly double that of those ding.” —Chicago Tribune.
whose mothers were married between 80
A D isgu sted Cab D river.
and 35 years.
He had been driving a cab for four years
Concerning deaths due to tuberculosis
and
got
a little bit more weary looking
and atrophy, the statistician finds that
twice as many deaths result from consump­ every day.
“ I can’t stand it no longer,” he said at
tion and three times as many deaths from
atrophy when the mothers are under 20 as last. “ I ain’t going to have any more worn-
| en finding fault and claiming that they
when they are over the age of 20.
Herr Korosi also recognizes that the . didn’ t have courteous treatment.”
physical atul mental condition o f a father I There was a woman standing at the next
leaves, to the same extent, its impress on | corner. Instead of the customary “ Cab,
his children. He has accordingly prepared a ma’am?” he stopped his horse, dismounted
table of greater length showing the results ! from his porch, and going toward the curb­
of the ‘ ‘age combination” of both parents. stone lifted his lmt and inquired:
“ Do you propose making use of this ve-
Men are »lower in develtiping than women;
hence the relative difference between their | hiclt' today?”
“ Sir?” she said in tones of astonishment.
ages in the table:
Percentage of
“ Do you wish to ride in this cab? If so,
Deaths From
Ago of
Ago o f
I will gladly escort you to it. I aim to
Mothera. Uterine Causes. please.”
Fathers.
ao to 40............ .......... 30 to 35.. ...................... 12.02
“ Why, I never heard such impertinence!”
2u to:«»............ .......... 30 to 35.. ...................... 12.30
Over 10.......... .......... over 35.. ...................... l-.IW she stammered. “ I di«l intend riding In
au to 40............ .......... over 35.. ...................... 13.81 | your cab, but I shall certainly wait for the
30 to 40............ .......... 20 to 30.. ...................... 13.34 S next one. And you may expect a complaint
40 to fit)............ .......... over 35.. ...................... 13.30 from me at the police stutiou concerning
a) to 30............ .......... SO to «10.. ...................... 15.30 your couduct, sir.”
40 to 60............ .......... 30 to 35.. ...................... 15.40
He remounted his seat and pulled his hat
.......... 30 to 35..
down over his eyes.
“ ’Tain’t no use. Geddupl” was all he
so to ao............ ...........over 35.. ...................... 18.80
Over 50............ .......... 20 to
......................21.21 said.—Loudon Tit-Bits.
20 to <10............ .......... under 20.. ...................... 21. n
au to 40............ .......... under 20.. ..................... J 7 M
Lout to Sight.
bear. But there is one thing that Is never
idle; always at work, unceasingly in search
of those thus deterred, it seeks to cure such
and help them to grasp a chance when it
comes. This is the mission o f St. Jacobs
Oil. Am ong the millions there are thou­
sands suffering with neuralgia. For this
it is a positive cure. Use it and there will
be a thousand sufferers less and a thousand
chances more to get work and hold it. Bet­
ter times may soon come and there is noth­
ing like the great remedy for pain to help
you out o f painful troubles and into place
again.
T ra in in g a Cat.
Cat» can be trained to almost anything
If taugnt when th«*y are young. We havn
a number of Persians, which sit with equa­
nimity upon the top of our bird cages watch­
ing the canaries hopping merrily about
from perch to perch, making no attempt to
touch them, nor ever dreaming of inserting
a velvet paw through the narrow w’ires to
the discomfiture of the fluttering inmates.
They are left alone with the birds by the
hour together, yet an overturned cage or a
slaughtered canary is an unheard of catas­
trophe in our household. Chickens, too,
i>ur cats fully realize are forbidden to figure
In their menu. They ramble about at their
own sweet will among numberless broods
of the tiniest bantam chicks, yet one of the
latter is never missing, and they quite seem
to recoguize the fact that a plump little
mouse or an unwary bluebottle caught
buzzing upon the window pane is their
only legitimate prey. Sometimes we hear
•f cats creating t«*rrible havoc in the poul­
try yard, killing chickens by the dozen and
making lift*a perfect martyrdom tothedis-
tracted mothers.
The best way to cure pussy of this fatal
habit is to take the dead chicken from her,
pepper it well, and then fasten it round the
delinquent’s neck. Place her in a room
and leave her thus for an hour or two to
ruminate over her wrong doings. It is 10
to 1 if poor puss will ever err again.
Once released from this somewhat severe,
if necessary, punishment she will make off,
with tears in her eyes (whether from emo­
tion or the pepper it is impossible to say),
ami for the future she will avoid the poul­
try department with strange persistency
and regard with distrust the fluffy little
denizens of the chicken coops.—London
Lady.
A p p a l l i n g D e p t h s o f Spa ce.
In his lecture to juveniles at the Royal
institution in London, Sir Robert Ball said
that a telegraphic message would go seven
times around the earth in a second, and if
a telegraphic message could be sent to the
moon it would reach its destination in a lit­
tle more than asecond. It would take some­
thing like eight minutes to arrive at the
sun, but how long did they think it would
take to get to Alpha Centauri, traveling
thither at 180,000 miles a second? Seconds,
minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, would
not be long enough. It would not take less
than three years, traveling all the time at
that tremendous pace, before it would reach
its destination.
If that w as the case with respect to the
nearest of the star», what must be said of
those which were farther off? There were
stars so remote that if the news of the vic­
tory of Wellington at Waterloo had been
flashed to them in 1815 on that celestial tel­
egraph system it would not have reached
them yet, even if the message had sped at
1 the pace which he had indicated and had
been traveling all the time.
Nay, more, if the glad tidings of that first
Christmas in Bethlehem 19 centuries ago
hod been disseminated through the uni­
verse, there were yet stars o f which astron­
omers could tell them pluuged into space
in depths so appalling that even the years
that have elapsed since that event would
not have been long enough for the news to
reach them, though it traveled at a speed
of 180,000 miles in every second.- '
LIF E
OK
DEATH ?
It Is o f vital importance that it Hhould be un­
derstood by persons whose kidneys are inactive
that this condition o f things is finally inductive
o f a state o f the organs where life hangs in the
balance. Bright’s disease, diabetes,album inuria
are all disease» o f a very obstinate character in
th<*ir mature stage, and all have a fatal tendency.
They often battle the m ost practiced medical
skill and the most approved remedies o f mate­
ria m edica. But opposed at the outset—that it
is to say, when the kidneys begin to discharge
their functions inactively — with Hostetter’ s
Stomach Bitters, the dangerous tendency is
checked. Very useful also is this household
med cin e for those ailments o f com m on occur­
rence constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia and
nervousness, it is a safeguard against malaria,
and averts ch ron ic rheumatism.
“ Do you h a t 3 m e?’’ he faltered. "T h is in sol
sudden," she rejoined in confusion. And so j
they were divorced.
SAFE,
BU R K
AND
M I'E K D T .
No external reme iy ever yet devised has
so fully and unquestionably met these
three prime conditions as successfully as
A l l c o c k ' s P orous P l a st e r s .
They are
safe because they contain no deleterious
drugs and are manufactured upon scien­
tific principles o f medicine. They are sure
because nothing goes into them except in-
gredients which are exactly adapted to the
purposes for which a plaster is required.
They are speedy in their action because
their me«iicinal qualities go right to their
work o f relieving pain and restoring the
natural and healthy performance o f the
functions o f muscles, nerves and skin. Ask
for A l l c o c k ’ s . and «io not be induced to
accept a substitute.
B r a n d r e t h ’ s P il l s are safe a n d sure.
It will be «ceil from the table that the
“ Saw you at the theater last night, Jim .”
“ Yes, I was there.”
best results art' obtaine«! from a marriage
“ Did you enjoy the play?”
when the father is from 30 t o 40yearst»f ag«'
“ What play?”
and when the mother is from 30 to 35 years
old—that is t«i say, when both parties to the
“ W hy, the play at the theater of course.
marriage are in the prime of life. If, how­ W h at’s tht' matter with you?”
ever, the mother be of the prescribed age
“ Was there a play?”
ami tho father slightly umler 30 years, the
“ Was there? Well, I should say there
result
is
nearly
tho
same.
was. The biggest kiud of a play—best I’ve
E a r lie r B e g in n in g o f P re s b y o p ia .
M
en
this seas«m.”
The
most
important
deduction
which
can
The opinion has recently been expressed
“ Yes, 1 heard the people laughing.”
by some experienced opthalnudogists that la* made from these statistics is that men
“ Then you sat the play out? I thought
presbyopia, or the long sightedness of old between the ages of 30 and 40 cannot with
age, In which near objects cannot be dis­ safety to their offspring contract marriages you didn’t see it?”
“ D M **.”
tinctly seen unless held at a considerable with women under 20, the rate o f mortality
“ Jim, old man, come off! Were you
distance from t he eye, begins at t lie present in this case being no l«*ss than 27.88 per
cent.
This
«leduct
ion
is
o
f
exceptional
im­
asleep?”
day earlier titan was formerly the case. No
Jonea—No. I have no debt* now. B r o w n -
portance
because
of
the
marked
«lecrease
In
“ No. I sat behind a girl who wore a rose
precise «tat istics on the subject exist as yet.
H ow ’s that? Jones—I borrow ed some m oney
One of the most reliable observers in this marriages of that nature at the present j in her hat. I was a victim of the foliage and paid them up.
craze.” —Detroit Free Press.
line state« that his experience of over a time.
Marriages when the man is between 40 j
quarter of a century leads him to believe
K u ro p ra n and A m e r ic a n O yster».
that both men and women now seek aid nml 50 years old and the woman between 20
from glasses at an earlier period o f life than ami 30 years old, which are also of frequent ' The oysters of America and Europe iliffer
occurrence, are likewise shown to In* d«»tri- greatly. European oysters are smaller autl
did their ancestors.'—New York Tribune.
" I feel very thank­
m entAl to the issue.
have a coppery taste. Our southern oysters
ful for what H ood’ s
Ijostly, it is proved that it is unwise for a are larger than the northern. They are
A S to r y o f T w o F a in llle a .
Sarsaparilla has done
A singular occurrence was that o f the man who has passed the age of 50 to marry drnlged along the coast and transferred to
for me. I have taken
marriage of tw o young English ladies who a young woman, or for a woman who is oyster beds in creeks close to shore, where
three bottles and tho
ran away to America with two of their more than 35 years i»l«l to marry a man they fatten.
m edicine has made a
In Ix'iulon oyster salesmen sometimes
father’s bondservants. They afterward m under 30.
great change. I was
In gem*ral it may 1 h * sai«l that marriagi's keep oysters f«>r a few «lays in water to
turned ami were forgiven. It 1» recorded
All R u n D o w n
when
the
contracting
parties
are
both
which
oatmeal
has
been
added,
for
the
pur­
that in after years a young lady who was
from t r o u b l e and
descended from one of these bondservants j young, or when there is a difference o f more pose of rendering «hem more delicate and
overwork, aud had
refused James Huchanau because he was than 15 years between the contracting o f better flavor. When out of season—d u r-!
other com plaints com ­
m on to my sex at my
only a “ briefless barrister,” ami a descend j parties, art* likely to prove dangerous to the ing spawning time—the oyster is soft and j
aee. 4 4 years. Now
milky ami not fit to lie eaten.—New Y'ork
ant of the other sister scorned the proposal I h«*althy propagation of the human race.
since taking H ood'»
These statistics Herr Korosi has of Mail a ml Express.
of a struggling young lawyer who after
S
a r s a p a r i l l a I am
ward became chief justice of lYnnsylvania. course calculated from local observations. |
m
uch stronger aud
A
C
i>
n«lilfr*te
B
o
y
.
Investigation
proves,
however,
that
they
—•Edward Eggleston in Baltimore Sun.
apply with equal force t«' other countries ■ Little Johnny- Pa, «lid you reatl in the I w ould advise all o v e r w o r k e d g * in t i r flesh.
ed,
ami latitmles «>f the gl«>be. In m'rthern paper how a parent w as fiii«ii 125 because w e a k m o t h e r * to take H ood's Sarsaparilla
W e lc o m e 0«l«»n*.
No o<lor of the year is fuller of homely elimati's they apply m«lee«l with greater liis little boy hung ou a street car on Thud to build them u p ." M rs . G. W. w a r n m ,
Beverly, Nebraska.
Remember,
avenue?
pleasure than that of the preserving kettle. force.
Mr. Harlem Bridge—Well, what of it?
It epitomises and embodies "all the com- I In regard to the average age of marriage
Little Johnny Oh. nothin, except I
forts of home,” the warmth of the hearth, in the different countries statistics slrnw
the shelter of the roof, the brightness of that in Kuglatul It is f«»r men 27.7, for w o thought mavis* you wanted to give ms
men
25.5
years;
In
Scotland
f«*r
men
2S.fi,
for
some
uickels t«> buy car tickets. When I
the home light» through the lonely dusk,
Hood's P i l l * a t easily, yet prom ptly and
the sweet of togetherness who does not re­ women 25.7: in Ireland for men 29.9, for w o­ have car tickets. 1 don’t swing on the street efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 28c.
alize them all, however unconsciously, ami men 25.2; in France for men30 2. f«»r women cars.—Texas Siftings.
grow warm about the heart as the subli- 24.9; in Italy for men 30.2, for women 25.4.
TA K E
Get t in s R e a d y to Q uit.
I mated, rich fruitiness of peach ami plutn in Prussia for men 29.2, for women 2d, and
THE
Old Uncle Norman ha«l lived with the
i ami grain* salute«one at the opened door?— ; tu Russia for men 25.2, and for women 21 0&
A comparison of them* ages shows Herr family for many years, helping ab«nit the
BEST
\ Boston Commonwealth.
n n
^
T i H
A i T
Korosi’* «leductions t«»be reasonable.—Xsw house and yani at whatever there was to be
York Evening Sun.
A F a ith fu l S ervant.
done He was a very talkative old man.
fouil of using high somuling words, and
Carlyle told me one«* of a lawsuit pending
In sculpture «lid any «me ever call the felt his Importance very much.
In Scotland affecting the siiicession to a
Apollo
a
fancy
piece,
or
say
of
the
Iaiwv
He infoniusl one of the young ladies of
w it h
at estate of which he ha«l known some-
¡h¡ ittg The c m * ilepended on a family coon how it might ln> nuui« different? A the house one day that he woul«l have to
masterpiece of art has t«> the mind a fixed take a rest, that he could not stand such
secret known «>nly to «me old servant, who
place in the chain, as much as a planter “ laborious labor’ because be had "rhea
refused to reveal it. A kirk minister was
crystal.—Em erstm.
malic rheumatism.’ ’—Youth’s Companion.
•*ent t«* tell her she must speak ou peril of
iv t s .,
MVUL »nil
ner soul. *‘ I*eril of my saull” she said.
For young persons whose happiness li«*s
« ! .« > I M t lr .
D r o p p in g M iild k N am e».
‘ ‘And would ye put the h«mor o f an auM In outdoor life ami the stmly of nature, no
L»n. e n t A du«*.
Scottish family in c«mipetiti«>n with the department of natural science offers a more
Various celebrities have dropped «me or
saul of a p«x>r creature like me?” — Frouita's inviting atul promising fieUl than applied more nmldle names. Mr. K«lmund Goaee
It is .o ld on n ttumintM by At) dm *»
Oxford Lecture.
was christened K«lmun«l William Goase; rfstA. It out*. Incipient Consumption
entomology
And
U th . boat Counh and Croup Cum.
Mr. Robert I.ouisStevenson, Robert Ixmi*
Spinoza's favorite amusement was to set
F O R k * l IES !
Not a few men are so abnormally suscep­ Balfour Stevenson, Mr R*>bert Buchanan,
spiders to fighting, au «! he wouKI laugh tible to love In their first youth as to ex­ Robert Williams Buchanan. Mr Henry
• inn IN tit.l-li wtltb. mid b fU i.K m li
immoderately at beholding their ferocious haust their capacity for loving before they l .a hour he re, Henry du Prt Labouchert.— ( h e t n l r . l C o . (or « » <•»<« ol fem »;.
th .t « i l l not Yield to PR J. 3. KlN H ANTI-
struggles
have reached an age to love with d isc ret u>a. lx>ud«>n Tit-Bite
« m e AAXATIVIK POADIR. PriceII 00 p,r
box. For «Ale by all draniata
ForTired Mothers
Hood’ss,;>Cures
Price BO O n ta
Ap.il) H .lu» .»m e a h n o .tri
IRVING INSTI IUTE
K o r o sl
Borne In te re s tin g F igu res.
other serious ailm ents, their use is
"I could write a book,” says M. Zola,
“ called ‘The Error» of My Interviewers.'
The funniest mistake ever made by any of
them was perpetrated by De Amici», the
well known Italian writer. In an adjoin­
ing room when lie interviewed me were
two puppies, who were playing and bark
ing. I)e Amici* mistook the yelps o f these
dog» for children’» cries, and he imparted
to the world in his interview that I was the
happy father of two bouncing babies.”
ID L E .
newspaper, writing o f these hard time«.
L ife R e la t e d b y T enn yson.
EFFECT OF MARRIAGE ON TH E DEATH
I A writer in The Tablet relates a curious Added to this misfortune are the physical
RATE OF INFANCY.
story which he heard from the lips of Lord* infirmities with which thousands have to
S ID E
ROYAL BAKING POWDEB CO., 1C« WALL 8 T., NEW-YORK._________
NEVER
A CURIOUS STORY.
CURE
C
ough
S h il o h s
CURE
America Leads the Nations in
the Marcii of Progress.
Among the wonders of the World's Columbian Fair the
grandest was the exhibit of American products.
The Ex­
hibition was, in this respect, an object lesson of the grandeur
and glory of the Republic.
Among the exhibits from the
United States no article of its class stood so high as
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder.
The Chief Chemist of the Agricultural Department at
Washington, backed by an intelligent jury at the Exposition,
found it strongest in leavening power, peerless in its purity
and beyond comparison in uniform excellence.
Received Highest Award
At the World’s Fair.
The award is a matter of official record.
Nothing could settle so decisively the im m easurable
superiority of Dr. Price’s over all other powders as the
great honor bestowed at Chicaeo.
W h e n C o rn e re d f o r L u n ch e o n .
“ If you ever get in a corner and seem to
have nothing available in the house for
luncheon, just investigate the resources of
the cracker box,” said a careful house­
keeper. “ I remember one day we bad a
guest come in just before luncheon was
served. It was a sort of off day, and w#
had a spread made u^ of odds and ends.
The visitor was one whom I knew to be
somewhat dainty in her tastes, and as there
was no time to send to market for any­
thing I just didn’t know what to do. Un­
fortunately the breatl wasn’t fresh, which
was a great misfortune, for it always seem*
to me that with good bread and butter one
can make out a sort of a meal; but here we
were, when it all at once occurred to me
that we might get up a creditable dish out
of crackers, of which, as good luck would
have it, there was an abundance.
“ So I buttered a few dozen crackers and
set them in the oven, there to stay until
they were a light brown. A part of these
were placed in a dish on the back of th*
stove, and with the remainder I madesomt
cracker sandwiches out of some bits o#
roast fowl which was ready sliced in the
pantry. The meat was mixed with a little
mayonnaise and placed between tw o of the
buttered crackers. A jar of canned fruit
was opened, and with some olives and *
bit of cheese rounded out a very relishabl*
luncheon, and my guest quite enthused
over the new fashioned sandwiches.” —New
York Ledger.
W o r k e d a P r o b le m W h ile A s le e p .
An Amsterdam banker ènee requested *
professor of mathematics to work out a
very intricate and puzzling problem for
him. The professor, thinking the matter
good exercise for the intellectual faculties
o f his pupils, mentioned it to them and re­
quested them to work out the enigma.
One of the students, who had pondered
deeply over the int ricate subject during the
day, retire«! to bed. .Some time afterword
he arose, dressed, and seating himself at
his desk worked out the problem accu­
rately, covering sheets of paper with his
calculations. He had no recollection in the
morning of having done so.—Boston Globe.
■) From Face, Neck and Arms in
YOU CAN
five minutes with N tJ D E N E ,
REMOVE
w ithout pain or Injury to the
c n v c n c i linns e *kin. Send stamp for circular
MAI*
i k ™ 1
wanted. NCi EMC
j MFG. CÖ., Room 12, The Ven*
J I dom
d e. Portland, Or.
L E W I S & D R Y D E N 'S M A R I N E H I S T O R Y
O F T H E P A C IF IC N O R T H W E ST .
This exhaustive review of the marine in­
dustry is nearing com pletion; and, as we
do not wish to slight any matters o f inter­
est to marine men, we would like to hear
from you. All data or photogranhs sent
us will be returned as soon as possible. The
work will contain accurate accounts of 2,500
steam and sail craft that have made ma­
rine history in the Northwest, detailed ac­
counts o f 350 wrecks occurring here,
¡•ketches and engravings o f all prominent
old-time craft and the men who ran them,
and hundreds o f pages o f interesting ma­
rine miscellany.
Lewis A D r y d e n P r in t in g Co.,
Portland, Or.
E. W. W r ig h t , Editor.
He (hesitatingly)—I guess I’ d better go now
She (radiantly)—On, how »mart you are; you
guessed it the first time.
THE
IN L A N D
P R IN T E R
Should be in the hands o f every printer,
publisher, bookoinder and advertiser who
consults his best interest. Published by
Inland Printer Co., Chicago, 111.
By the time a man makes up with his wife be­
cause of the spring house-cleauing the fall
house-cleaning begins.
DEAFNESS
CANNOT
BE
CURED
By local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is onlv one
way to cure deafness, and that is by con stitu ­
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in­
flamed condition o f the m ucous lining of the
eustachian tube. When this tube 1 » inflamed
you have a rum bling sound or im perfect hear­
ing. and when it Is entirely closed, deafness is
the result, and unless the inflamm ation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its normal
con dition , hearing w ill be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,
w h ich is nothing but an Inflamed con dition of
the m ucous surfaces.
W> will give One Hundred Dollars for any case
of deafne»** (caused by catarrh) that cannot be
cured by Hall’ s Catarrh Cure Send ft r circu ­
lars; free.
F. J. CHENEY A CO.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists; 75 cents.
Use Knamellne 8tove Polish ; no dnst, no smell.
T r y G erme a fo r brea kfa st.
W. L. D ouclas
$3 SHOE
♦ 5. CORDOVAN,
no
•aucAK*Na.
FRINCH A ENAMELLED CALF
FINE CALF& KAN6AR0H
♦ 3 .S P POLICE, 3 S oles .
*2 .* L Z * B oys S chool S hoex
• L A D IE S -
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
BAKING POWDER.
It makes a light, live, sweet loaf. Dealer» sell
It on the m anufacturers’ guarantee, CLOSSET
A DEV ERA, Portland, Or.
! G L A D D IN G
McBEAN
&
CO
M A NU r»CTu»f*S
A R C H ITEC TU R A L
h o l l o w
t il e
TERRA
f ir e
COTTA
p r o o p in g
'
SEW ER
A N D C H I M N E Y P IP E
I P R E S S E D BRIC K DRAIN T I L E E t c
! 1 3 5 8 J. 1 3 6 0 M A R K E T S T R E E T
M A NU FA C TO R Y AT LINCOLN
S
W * L* D O U G L A S*
BROCKTON. M ASS.
Y e * CRB M T e m o n e y by w e a r ln « th©
W . L . D o u g la s 9 3 . 0 0 S h oe.
B e c a u s e , w e a re th e la rg e s t m a n u factu re r* o f
SMs gTadeof shoes In th e w orld, and g u a ra n te e th e y
ralue by stam p in g th e nam e a n d p ric e on t l a
**oUom. w hich p ro te c t you a g a in s t high prices and
»he m iddlem an's profits. O ur shoes equal c u s to m
work In style, easy fittin g a n d w earin g q u a litie s .
W e have th e m sold ev ery w h ere a t low er price* for
t i e value g i v n th a n an y o th e r m ake. Tak* n o sub*
« I tu t e . If your d ealer ca n n o t supply you, we can .
F
CAL
W. V. N. U. No. 667—S. F. n T u TK c T. 6+4
HOW TO SAVE MONEY.
Bur your GROCERIES and PROVISIONS of u*. and we will save yon m oney. We handle the best
good» an«! deliver free to trains or boat». We bay and «ell for spot cash, and sell goods cheaper
than any other firm in the country. Send u s ro u r name and address, and we will mall t o r our
new price Bat, which will be o it soon. We offer to-day:
Pr> granulated sugar In 100 lb. sacks for
$5
I Best coal oil per case.......................... .......... $1 gg
Portland flour per barrel...................
2 Is Arhnokle’s C'-ffee per pound......................
22*%
Send ns a list o f what you ueod, aud we will make you special price*. Address your orders to
M A R K L. C O H N A C O . , 1 4 0 F r o n t S tre e t. P o r t l a n d . O r .
" D O N ’T
BORROW
TR O U B LE .”
BUY
SAPOLIO
_______________ ’T I S C H E A P E R IN T H E E N D .