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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1902)
;iimhiihiiMM Revenge- X By (JOHN A. ST. CLAIR. THE Under shades of an August eve were stealing over me elastic haunta of Macatawa. On the lt veranda aat two lovers. Xo sweet mur murof lovers' oonfider.ces mad I he air melodious or mingled with the r.uplt of tie fN. That they were- lorera appeared rather from the proprietary air with which the younir woman, re garded her companion and thetonetof renroarh in which he aiioTesaeo pim There they aat, obvious of all around. heedless of many a cinistxinir (fiance ana significant ton of the head In their (11 rection. The lumrntr brigade from (hlcae-o waa keenly allv to the rela tion of the pair and mortifltd beyond measure that nothing of what waa la lnr place could be overlie rd. "My!" aaid tirac Jledlicott, "I never could think what Percy-Ten Uroek bw In that -ren-eyed, red-headed I)oro- thv Smith. Bhe'a older than hei. too! "Oh, I don't know," aaid Tiny Mason, "fine" certainly no Venue, that Doro thy; but what of him? Ilia face will never be hit fortune, and he haa noth ing but the few dollara beget In Law yer Shearer' office. Hie father haa to upport him. I wouldn't bava him if every hair of bit head were hung with d.imonda. "Vou didn't alwaya think ao,H a. aerted Grace. "Lett wlnteryouand he were great friend. It'a a caae of the foi and the grapea with you." "It'a a caae of green-eyei Jralouay with you," retorted Tiny, and the pair of flrlrnda aauntered down to the lake in aearch of the eternal male. Meanwhile tha lover maodlly re garded eaah eluer. Their quaj-rela had been frequent of lata and had reached a crltle. "I think it It too bad, Percy, the way you treat me," aaid Dorothy, her au burn hair gleaming like gold in the twi light, her tweet American face with Ita reminiscences of a spirited atictry beaming with intelligence, yet over east with the conaeiuusnrs of ln)u tlce. A fair picture the mute, with her lithe athletic figure and look of bou nty and hatred of all thltiga mean. "You deliberately el lull ted me Jaat night at-Mrt. lirowa'a daoce. What la the meaning of thie? You know you ara engaged to me, yet you danced with me but once and flirted outrageously with that Meillicott girl. Now you re aent my aptekiiig abent It. Do-you think I ht noapirttT Do ywu imagine I am going to tit down tameily under ia ault? Neterl Prrey. Toil know I have loved you, Through good report and ill report I havaetonl by you. I know you ara ecuravagant, I tell you ao, though I have denlr J the ttorif a when othfri hav repeated them. Though I have Indignantly repudiated tae idea when othera aaid It, I am persuaded that It ia too true that you have beet, a they aay, 'up agalnat every game that' going.' MI believe," ali went nn, passionate- ly, "that you are In debt; that your only hope la thia Philippine appoint ment that haa beeu offered yon. Yet, in aplte of all, 1 am willing to marry yon if yon will only swear anlenmly to reform. I will go with you at onca to Zamboanga. What do I car for Isola tion and want of aoelety. I ears for The atrong, deep, undying affection two kindred toula ahoulil bnve for each other. I believe In virtue, In honor, In houctty in man and woman, and I am ready to devote myaeJf to you and to our household, come what wIlL You can't aay I am unreasonable. I only aak that you love me in return. My father will object at Brat, but when he eea that my happtnea ia involved he will give way. Oh, Percy, we could be o happy!" Th young man' Bom what atolid oountenanee lighted up fur an Instant at th enthuaiaam of hi fair coin panlon. Ills better nature it tired faintly beneath ita cerement of eelf ishnes for a moment, llul imiuatlUte. ly aelf-intereat asserted ita away aad alifled the incipient pleading of buaor and honeety. "Why, Dorothy," he aaid, coldly, "you aurrly hava known me kng enuugh to hav learned that 1 never adopt a rasolntk without hav. lug carefully eutniasxl a Urea a ua lot and against It." "Did you," broke in Dorothy, ho piilaively, "exercise thla caution before you told me you loved me?" Percy flushed angrily. . "I believe," he went na, "in the old Persian prov erb, 'Undertake nothing of which thou heat nut well considered lb end.' " "An ictllnt motto, truly," eald IVirothy, ooUlly. "Hino when, may I ask, did you adopt thla rami wiaa pltilosaphy. It teemi a pity It ahaiuld have owns to you o law. Do yn think you have well onnaiilered the end you ao evidently contemplate?" Feminine instinct had already warned her of the treachery the unworthy youth medi tated. 'Oh, yea," he continued, "I know what I ant doing. I have conaiderad it all. I did avoid you laal night. I wont to bring thla thing to an tad," he added', brutally. "Don't trouble yourself, Perry Tl Uroek," replied the now tadignant girl. "It la ended." "Well, Dorothy." aaid Percy, some what nettled, for hit self-love w at hurt, "you did eeem awfully in love with me. Hut I don't blame you for Ibl iniwin demanding. You should I glad that w have both discovered our true fe Inge In time, lie for we bad become hupelesaly Imiiml to each other. It la best for you that. I thmibt leave you, liest that we ahould part. I will return you your lettera and present, and vou can throw my achoolooy rffusioti U the tre." "Very well. Percy," returned hi dla- It is 8,000 Lliles Long. Tli Iiurliogtoo Route tanks among the greatest oi tha world railroads. Over 8,ooo miles long; employing 35,0x10 men; reaching 1,300 towtn and cities to Ihe eleven itates traversed by its lines; having, through-car arrangements which extend more than half way across the continent and earn estly atriving to give its patrons absolutely uneqtialed service, it ia tha Line YOU ahould select, next time you go east Omaha. Chicago, Kanaa City, St. Lov.it and BVEKYVYHEKK beyond lltl'lllll'JI'l I r!l: ca-ni6Saco. . "I'll throw them In the re,. That aiel be the f rat time they wriH havodiits any x irin ii u, them." "aj a, ha!" ratified Percy, uneasily, lira are positively brilliant." Hi !'d not like the fact that Dorothy pave him his freedom to read'! v. It w n:e .what deprccialed the hiyh '! he vet on himself. "Helieve rue. he said, pomp'iualy, "I shall alwaja entertain the hlgheat opinion of you. lint you know yourself that your fathnr In not able to give yu a dowry, ai d that the position In the riillipp'ne it worth only $1,000 a year. How roi:!d two peo- ple live on that? 1 with my Unite and you with youra." "I don't choose to discuss the mat ter with you, now that I have released you," taid Dorothy; "hs.it be: pleased riot to refer to my last, It ia true I avaa born in luxury and areuatiimrd to have every taste gratified, but I have never let that fact ttand In my way ainee wa lott our wealth. The fact that I waa willing to ronrry you wna sufficient proof of that. However, thai ia nothing. flood-by, Perry. Keep up yonr spirit. Thit iiiaident will "on be forgotten. You have quite dispelled any foolish Uleaa I may have had. Still, we can be friends. Call occasionally, and people will think there baa never been anything hetwern us." Had Per cy known anything of what was going on In Dorothy'a mind h would have aa aoon entered a lion's drn a have caUed at the Smith mansion again. Dorothy returned to town, reaumed in earmH th training of her voice, which at Aral ah had taken up aa a pastime, and made rich good nae of bur tuition that her naturally flexible topes no -voice of wide range acquired brilliancy and came ao perfectly un der control that bright future opened before her. At the asm time fortune, a if tired of frowning on the Kinitht, gave such a turn to Dorothy's father'a bualiie that the gloomy aapn-t in his affairs that bad first frightened awny the selfish Percy vanished, and one fine morning the, merchant by a atioceesful deal wa able- to pull out of specula tion Into hia legitimate buaines with a large fortune. Perry began to think he had made a mistake, and took to frequenting the Builth residence with regularity; but Dorothy treated him with absolute franknVat. "I am wedded to my art now," ahe aaid, "even If you hnd not effectually cured me of all the folly. Next month I go to Orniany to study; but, uny dear Percy, before 1 go I wih to prove my frleiwlehlp for you. Mra. Vanaltterl la living at the Islington. She haa twodauglitera One la an angel of beauty, but poor aaa church mouse; the other haa been left .1,000,0o0 by her uncle, the nopjier king. It loan awful pity, though, that alir la ugly, dull, and inmi aay an epileptic, (io down thert. You know Mra. Vanslltart. You met her at our house last winter, (all, make yuuraelf agreeable. Make kve to the ogres. Fir million rtnlleira will gild th rarat hitter pill. I hear ahe Is full af romance and would be chnrmed If eomt on would elorp with her," A hint wa riMigh. Araric dullid Percy't ajipreUennion of everything, and be loat nn time In Ingratiating himself wllh Mra Vanslttart "Old chap, It'a all right," he ald to hi friend Hilly, the trainer, a few weeltt after hla conversation with IVir othy. "If all right, old boy. I'll pay you that 11,(100 next week. I hav the heiress hypnotitod. Maud's her lovely name. Ye goda! but the' ugly! May be I bavea't played on her poor little arnlimental heart, "Tout Into the garden, Maud," and all thai tort of thing. We might aa well lie married with her mother's consent, hut I've per uiaaued her that the old lady ia rivad against ua, and w will elope to-morrow. Next day ft will he on the road to Man Francisco, and I'll send you a check from that city, Just before we anil for tha Philippines. Slie vroultl hav in go out there, though I wished to takoan appointment at home. We'll soon be hack, though, and won't I lunke th eplle-plie's dollar fly! There'a a lot of fun ia M.uoo.ooo. I'll have her declared insane after a year or so, and then we'll are aUiut the horeea. YouTl ba In It, old ehnp. Ta-ta-auf wriederaehrn aamy old flauw, Dorothy Hiailh, would aay." Tha kpeaiiil look place writ night oo t1m. Th uulortuaat apiu-ptio, with rttlc munta'iinnce, and the fnt nuua Percy rescind San Kranc.lai-o, wbs-ra they had an explanation and a arena Leaving hi wife on th Pacific aoaat he returned to Chicago to bor row ninds, for tli deluded, aoupl were desM-rute and pennilraa. Arrived! in ChUugo, the truth of the whole affair came ojit. EverjiKxly m wondering at th loauiieul, but the woiuler gave way te merriment when the explanation was gieeu. Percy na walking miaMlily aUng mV Shore drier- the day after hia arrival, when lie met the radiant Dorothy, brautll aaiVeiiua, enlarging from, the foam of the Adriatic. "How d'ye do, Percy?" she ld, archly. "You always were changeable, jnru know; but whowou'd have thought yon won 1.1 hav surprised ymir friends thla wy? You used to soy you would never marry uoWa your fliim-r had money. What on earth made vu iro and fall In love with Maud Vanalttart ? It I very Iwautlful to know of such c!1- lalrretted affection. She'a not only plal. but poor. I thought I told yvii that her lovely alstrr Mav had Ih-.ii left $5,000,000, What? 1 told you, did I noir emrely, I rhd not mnkc a nils take. There la no telling how much on ran h deceived In a man. We nil thought you a money hunter, but It Is harming to know that pure affection ettll tilataon thia sonlwi earth. I au poae you ara aatlnipating a life of per. fc-cl lnvsliseia-love In a rottaga-a Philippine one, tool How eharmlnir! Oooii-by, Perry.' I aail tor Hamburg Saturday. Hemaoler me to Mnud. (ioo,Vbyl" I'ercy tod gating after her. think ing untitterabl thJngt.-'hicago Hcc-ord-Hnraltf. encore, A. C. Shiluom, General Agent, Cor. Third aad Siaik Sit., Portland, Ore. PATOOnSM The stomach it a larger factor in "life, lilierty and the pursuit of happineia" than most people are aware. Patriotism cad wiiimtand hung' r !ut not dyspepsia. ilie conhrmea oya peptic "ia fit for treason, ttratagema and spoils." The man who goes to the front for hia country with a weak ttomach will be a weak aoldier, and a fault fi ruler. A sound stomach niakea for good citi zenship aa well aa for health and happi ness. Di teasei of the stoiiK.cli and other organ of diges tion and nutrition are promptly and permanently cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery. It builds up the body with sound flesh aud solid muscle. "After 1 recrWed the sdvlee which vou gave me in regard lo my trrHlmenl, wr'ilr i;eu. turner. Kwj., of Iqf. rulaiiki Hlreet. HnKitnore. Maryland. MI UM(1 your -(VM- Mi-Uital Iiincfjvery ' accnr.tiiiK 10 (iiri-cltotia. AOer uIiik four ryllea 1 coniilerel myarlf cured, at I have not felt any nymlitoms tlucr. Mud tried alnlott all remrtliea that I heard of that were cod tor dysoeimia. hut with, out relk-f. Finally, r became ditcouraKed, aud wrfMe to you for advice, wilh the aliove result. Tlie dealer who offers a substitute for the " Discovery " ia only teekiug to make the little more profit realized 011 the sale of lea meritorious preparations. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser it tent free on receipt of tamp to pay expense of mailing only. Scud 21 one-cent stamps for the paper covered book, or 31 stamp! for the cloth bound. Address i)r. U. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y. How About Your Heart Feel your pulse a few minutes. It it regular? Arc you short of breath, after slight exertion as going up stairs, sweeping, walking, etc? Do you have pain in left breast, side or between shoulder blades, chok ing sensations, fainting or smothering spells, inability to lie on left side? If you have any of these symptoms you certainly have a weak heart, and should immediately take mKv Heart Cure Mr. F. H. Oak. of Jamritown, N. Y., wIm'M! gniinl (m e ntriir aUve, lays: MKceive u oi totiat-rq MrioUhly ffettnl my heart. 1 mlferetl ftevrre pains about the hrnrt, and in the left ahutiMrr and tide; while the palmtatinn would awaken me from my alren. I boan taking I)r. Mile.' Ileart Cure aad oon found permanent relief." Sold bf !! Druiglata, Dr. Miles Motjlcal Co., Elkhart, Ind. 0. R. & N. OUI-GON SHORT LINE AMI - UNION PACIFIC. it is 'l' in: Shortest, Quickest. AMI Ml 1ST Comfortable Uuiile to all 1-Utern huii1n via IVrlhunl. All Tliroui'li TitkeU rt-iuliu over tlii route1 aregKHl via: itlt I.nLonn.l Di'iircr, Low Kates Everywhere. Tii-keUoii Sule ill Suullii rn l'aril'u- I i ii.it Ollice. A. 1.. t'KAlii, tiell'l ravH'li'er Aeut, 1 ri lit ml, t Ire. BARUER'S 1ASH10H PLATES. Vkrrt Are m tea In llalr ultlua J ami as 1'herv Are In lha t'nl lsa "I I leth.s. Itsrliers, like tailors, have fashion plates, ami in v.inus sulmrbsn shoii tlir lsiet i!:it,- ii . 1 1 iliv ay to rar tin- h-i t in- m.u pasu-i! u). sny a the l'luiAilr'.li..i Kf,-.i,l The plats Ui'vott'k :l.r'F 1 : ttl !r. the "lv.al,H thr "inr,1tt-.il," tlir "t''i eiu li." liw "pro t.r." ihr "iu,!iii" ai.ti tht "tuisi-lit-s. niaii." I'!if jtii-'ur.. interest iny. Tht- "lev 1" -it Ic .h.Mvi, tmooth' shavrn ynuit ma u hit hair t-ul rvy .htirl am! p.itliil uml liru.lutl up In a smooth. In. I r.ii w ovtr t ithvr ti-mple. The "itii-.f :f,il" pu-Mire ia of a foi.iMh lonkii'i: u'i-..-n with sn im-lut-n tr nre n ml n i l h I: 'rht h.i :r 'ar t on thr s't'r miii Iwisvhe.i hnck fir oft thf lirw Tlir " Ki rt-. h" !n u -nth e. th hi. Im r m of dci:! oork lorvw ciirli Ttit- "kt-uS-- i" hi !"lir li .r. Jiit r t r.l ,ii tli. n. .t , . at-.1 .iiu-uth.d O.'Wu a!in,l to h.s el'i'-i The "professor" hat Vm ia i-.lllr.! a r. iilal cut; hia locks, thl it to i.i). i iul at a certain point on hit neck in a roui-,. ei! ina. si-..! I'.ii.nh !h n o tlie shsvrn nrck of tlir pi of. , r looks very white and eii-an Th p "hminrt man." aoeonllna to the fashion Jtlate, veart his hair short at th hack am! stiles sn.l lout on th top of hit his ", am! h-a pnrtiuo is in the m'.V'e, thu ar rantrrmeiit iMik'nk- a k i-.t of r!!o, nr iloulile ti'tni ein-lr, of lisir upon hit forcheail. "What km,! of a cut nill you hav,, .ir"" the eul.urlun r!-er now ssv "Shall it (.. me.tlral. leeal, student, Freneh or whatr1 And they point with their eonil at the fashion plate anil wait hlamllj for the custom er' reply. r Cunt ftnteit AU i-U. I Bat l uh ft-rupk Ttaat ti,u. V It. II MIA ft, t Irwtjiat ;.i:M.i'i,.rvT7T m 9 mm 't-.lVC 0 Cr1'Cl oo hariieit treated witb liureka Hu Dew il. It t- Mii the dump, kcvfMthe leath er u't and pe abtc. Slilcbe do not break. J o roufcli Mrr fCw to Chaf .Lvdc-t. 1k turneu not OCalV kwCfrt locking lik tw. but wmri tvkc s lose by tb ntof Kurekl HitntMOi f Sold VtTaMr Mult by SUrvfUrd Oil J 1 Compmy I The Wewkiy Orcgonian and the V.0I Biau ooto lor one year lor i in an- SCIENCE AMD INDUSTRY. Ao Enplluli clerfryman named Bacon 1 making ImIIooii ascent In and arountl Loi.iKii with a view to ascer taiiiiiiff the sources of London tog. In the coldest parte of Siberia a retntxivr may aoinetlinea be aeen all day Inns: in a cloudless sky. It la supposed to tie due to fine particle of snow in the air. The lliin-oni station Installed OB the anttKket lightahip haa proved to be very successful aad aaeeral trans-Atluiitic ateamera have been able to communicate aucoeaafully with the shore by its aid. It la asserted that the number of compound locumottvee in u.e In this country (as cQinared with aimple en (fines) averavra 75 per oant. of the whole number in use in freight arid paaw-ns-f-r traffic. The dauirer of lielnfr In a house thst harbors iwinstimptivea ia illustrated by the fact that of 0,271 patient of ficially uxnmiiied try the (ierman im perial hoard of health 2.177, or 34 7 wr rent., belonged to families thut included other victima of tuberviilohia. An English atrainahip company has laausd a circular hrtter offering free pajtantrra to deleffatea from lubor unions who wish to visit this country to ascertain the exact conditions of labor and warea here, and also what advantages, if any, we bare in the way. of labor-aaviiifr toola. Uacent exfierlmeiita mnd to deter mine th loss ensuing by eaposinx eonl to the weather, unprotected in any way, show, contrary to (reneni! liellef, that It ia very small. Then was a (rnln In the amount of oiyfren. but a lose of carbon, hydropen and nltropen; th loss of calorific power was slylit. CITIES SPEND HUGE SUMS. sjaallsllls the Wortd Over Es sis la laomoas Pselle In no previous period of tht world't history have su many ailira been busy at the same time with extensive nm. costly public auterprises. The daiii readvr of the news of all eotiutrito cannot full W have noticed that tin dosing years of the ninetef ulh cen tury and tha opening year of the twen tieth have been marked by the bexin liiuir or the oontiiiua.ies of miiiiicial undertakings the total cost of which will amount to hundrcda of millions of dollars, says the New York Tribune In London and I'aris and In other cap itals of Kurope local railways, under ground mid on the surface, are In course of roiiktructioii or will be begun at an early date. The tendency to im pmv? the facilities for Wat tranapor tation is widt-s'preail and seems now to have become irresietible in many quar ters. i'rnrTeeeivs eommunities with ample resources and conspicuous for population and advancement are en tering upon notable taska for the bene fit of their citizens and of strangers within their gates. Itapid transit it a watchword and a rallying cry both in the eastern and western hemisphere, and armies of wage-earners are toiling in subways, on elevate, I roads aad on the street levels In dni.ni and scores of well known placet here and abroad. Hut the principal cities of the glob are concerned with other great anrkt 'han th-'se which will effect th. swift INlributUin of hosts of patscn-ers Vliemua for the oonetruction of new locks and piers on the most ambitious scale, for the deepening and broaden Ing of harbor channel, and for the opening of wilier avenues of conrmerec and trad in Vie hest-known ports of various countries are more numerous and are planned on more generous lines than In any former era. And the provision of more abundant supplies of water for cities which eonsnnie huir iuantltlet Is drawing millions upon millions of dollars from munici pal treasuries In Ihs I'lilled Statetaud In other countries. TERRIFIC AUT0M0BILIN0. ronraler laeea la tk Reeeat IihI ssh Over l.vtslr Miles aa Uuae at Tlase. The moat woniWrfwl long lUstanco apevd automobile performance yet credited to anyone waa made by Henry FouruUr, winner of Iho ItKil I'ai is llordennx raoe, held May W. The ,ta tuiics were nuule in eight hours 44 seconds, or etusl to a rate j of speod which srouhl take the win , tier from New York lo IbilTalo In a tri'le over ten hours. Had Koumirr not Wen foreeil lo limit his spend to IS kiliMneli rs sn hour in psssing through Versailles, ( harlrea, I ba teandun, endom. Tours, t'hatellcr ault. Toilers, Uutne, Angouleme and I l.lbourne. he would hav. nude an av ! ersce spev.t which would have taken hiia from New York to lluftslo In jseien hours, or st a rate of sx-l roiisideral'ly faster than the world- famed mipire Mate eiirss Iratels. j There Is no iiistion, sars the Auto 'mobile Magnsinr. that at some parts ' of the jonrney Pournir wvnt some Iwhat over 70 nilles per hour. HI 30 miles outside of towns were made at an average rale of M mile per hour, and the average of the whole distance. Including tfie slowing up through towns, wa over 0 . miles per hour. I ue pr.ilou record for thia race waa held by I Barron, hla than being 11 hours 4 minute an, I jo seconds. I It wdl be tsi that Kouiu u redu.wd lhee figures br nearly ih.-e hour. The second arrttnl was Kirnhnm. In a IhinSaril l.eeeanr. In nloe hour and 1 minutes, while the laird man, Voia", who also niH-ratii.l a l'an- har.l-l.etiivsor, waa third in nine hours 4'J minutes and II acconds, ' both butting Chsrrou reourd. ' mm 'mm 3 OPEN MART FOa PLUNDERERS. Tfclevee Sell What The? Ileal ta tiea. aa with ksteltsia af Pablle aaa PeUesx In tha City of Mexico there Is a place known as the thieve' market that haa a large patronage, some of H coming from presumaWy respect able and honest cltlxen. That such a place should exist in any city ap pear almost Incredible, yet It eon duct bualnesa with the full knowl edge of the police, and with that of evary resident of the city. What ia mora, says tlie Chicago t.'bronielc, it ia directly opposite one side of the national palace, tlie winter home of President Dine, and ia only one blix-k from the offices of tha city adminis tration. And it is no small estrib linliitient, either, such as might he overlooked, for it occupies a court at targe aa a City block, end is crowded from morning to night with persona who are looking for bargains, and know that the p!ueo to find them ia in the "thieves' market. " Naturally, the thieves themselves do not act as th salesmen for the stoh n irood. They keep out of sicht, and either diapoae of the stolen goof's for a lump sum to 'the hucksters or allow them to sell for them on eoinmltitiion. In either ease the tMof gets little, the dealer i content with a email prnflt ami the '.roods, whom original owner ia un known, can be obtained for a tenth of their value. To the visitors to Mexico the mar ket is well worth n visit, even if scruples of consoie.t-.ee should prevent the purchsse of what nm admittedly stolen goods. There will be no trou ble In finding the place. Any policeman or any citUcn will direct you to it. It is just ci.it of the Zocalo the park of th penna and acroea the rtreet from the south front of the national palace. Kven with this k.in-vled're you nilybt prfas but a hiib wall such as fuii-round. many of the friviite homea. I'nt nt the end of the '.vrII is a htnre gnte, Inrvc enough to drive n loaded truck throu-.-b. I'nssing through this gate you enter the nmr kot. It Is a big, open court, stone paved and surrounded bv building on three sides rod l-v the wall on the fourth. .Scn'cred o- thia, ar ranged In nt.recis, are the booths, where the stolen goods are displayed for snle. These stalls arc crude affairs. I'sually they consist of a few honrds, Infd on support which raise them two or three feet off the ground. Sometimes the goods are piled up carelessly on the stone pave ment. Hut over each of them la the awning of coarse cotton cloth, sup ported on rouirh poles, which the Mexican huckster Invariably hoe. Crockery, tinware, emlery and eooklng utensils form one of the staples of the market. Tliore Is nl-ts-sy a dsmnnd for these among th" poor, and ao the rntero gathers them In wherever and whenever he can. knowing that they will find a ready sole. And it Is not only ti c poor who buy these things. One restaurant proprietor In the rit whose plnee la on of the largcit thore, admitted that nearly all hi tabic knives and forks aa well aa the pots and pans usud in the kitchen were bought by him in the thieves' market. He Is a regular visitor to the place, and not long ago he picked up a burgnin In the edible line for hi customers In the shape of n young pig, which some enterprising theif hnd gnthered in. How long the thieves' market will exist as it doe now there Is none to tell. It is an old institution, mid to on thinks of interfering with ii. Now and then a stranger, hearlnj of its nature for the first time, won ders how the city authorities can al low It to do business ns it does. I'.ut the native Mexican and the acelim ntlred foreigner accept if ns it is. and instead of objecting to it find II a very convenient place in which to pick up n bargain ami save them selves conaiderable nioiiev. sjvve I'apal lleeoratlon. In future all Unman (atholica who go lo the Holy Land will t.ae thr riirl.t to wear a special dfcorution which hat Just been created by the pope. It con tains a cross w hich resrmbli s the crois of the holy Mpuleher, to which is at tached a small iiuilal tu n ring tlu- i-tligi of Leo XIII. and the words "Leo XII I. urravit anno Ml M." (In the crust it-st-if there are also at-vt-rnl other iu seriptions. The poiililiciil decree sa,s that this decoration is to br worn ot. the left side of the hreSi-l. and is to lie held in position by means of ji rrd am! white silk ribbon. It also says tha; the decoration w-i!l be eonfi rred on pil grims bv Kb t her tllanuiiii. guardian of the holy si-pulchi r, who has hrcu nil thuriMd to do so by the sacred emigre. gation of the propaganda. A diploma will be given with eaoh decoration, and no applicant who Is a Hom.ni Catholic nnd who is renllv golnir to the Holy Land will l rejected. Tope lo ha ordered that no one is to wear this di coration In public except in his presence or on the occasion of solemn church feativuU or while milk ing a pilgrimage. -Chicago Tribune. Hone In Colors. Clara -I was surprised to see so much paint on your fnce last night. I never snw anything like It in mr life. Maude Well, If you can't afford to buy a mirror I'll lend you eoe. Chi csgo Kelly News. Scriutarellr Su. Palette- I tell you, Utnes are pret ty hard when a good artist haa to get a job as a waiter. Smiley Yea; he's like the foolish ervant In the para hie burying his talent in a napkin Town and Coun try. fumr tft. JO HORN'S atT( tmiSEliH OF kUttiW HJiitutttt..iiirutfi,nk I Vtlvi- at'J?rTa1 1 Jteai (altl4f Vaa'.atjif lau i StaWM4-T Ka aVe, I DR. .CRCAr1-0(JIAS!IDl' MlUi irUlM t tVJ ctrtnis, iraraaa ,t,a,t tW M'M rar. V I wmn Hisiafa. 4 fav , I , ry Difimiit pvai paua- laxaa aaikak " opaaifiritt rtaa wmr Ti Wn mi & be Wax ' ei A rNWsa (W tt r r i Ifv- tt, ilt ia hv raiiiavaiai .lv r 1 5aHTaiaiajS( HalLU . (h MlalHt l M aavaaa t ftA e OH JMD41 I CO.. tW tL. . Tha Eacllanent Not Over. The ruth at the dnif store ttill c jn tinitrt and daily nvret of people call for a buttle of Kemp t lUlsaui far the Throat and Lungi for the cure of Coufht, Colds, Attbuia, Utoncliiiii aad Cousump lion. Kemp' IWl.aiu. th slaadsrd fiinnly remedv. it sold on a gna'sntee and never (aill to viv entire tai itiartiou I'nce iV. aud 0O0. srniiejwwivivj je "Colds cost the Insurance Companies a million dollars a month.' That is the authoritative statement made by a leadine insurance journal. Twelve million dollars a year paid on account of colds. Who gets the money? -widows and orphans of the men who had colds, there be a more striking presentation of the fact that colds kill than this commercial statement in which the cost of human life is figured in dollars and cents? But even these figures must be inade quate to express the final monthly total of the victims of colds. Thousands of men who die as the result of colds are not insured. A very small proportion of women carry life in surance and these figures do not take account of the thousands of women who are sacrificed to colds. ' Colds kill. That is a thing to remember. Colds kill be cause many of the most dangerous and fatal diseases begin with a cold. To neg lect a cold is to trifle with danger. Offset this statement that colds cost the insurance companies a million dollars a month by another statement; almost every life represented by that million dollars could have beeu saved by the timely use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures colds, coughs, bronchitis, lung disease, hemorrhage and conditions generally which by neglect or unskillful treatment find a fatal termination in consumption. That these cures are perfect and lasting is testified to by thousands of representative men and women, : including clergymen and physicians. "I took a severe cold which settled in the nroncliial tubes," writes Rev. l-'rank Hay, of Nortonville, Jefferson Co., Kansat "Alter trying medicines labeled "bure Cure," almost without number, I was led to trv Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. I took two bottles and was cured, and have staved cured. When I think of the great pain I had to endure, and the terrible cough I had, it seems almost a miracle that I was so soon relieved.", " In 189S, one of my daughters was suffering on account of a severe cough, hectic fever, wast ing of flesh and other symptoms of diseased lungs," writes Rev. Joseph II. l-'espcmian, of Barium Springs, Iredell Co., N. C. "I promptly gave jier Pr. R. V. I'ierce'a Golden Medical Discovery with gratifying success, and she now enjoys excellent health. This experience caused me to recommend Dr. Tierce's remedies to my neighbors, who, without exception, used them with favorable results. This being true, I hereby heartily endorse your medicines." For twelve years I waa a sufferer from catarrh and was treated by one of the best physicians In the state of North Carolina, who said the trouble hail reached my lungs," writes Mr. J. M. Patton, of Clotho, Transylvania Co., N. C. " I grew worse every day until I tried Dr. Pierce's medicines. Will say Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery with one bottleof Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cured me and to-day I am well and hearty, and I will say further, that my former phy sician, Dr. W. M. Lyday, recommends Dr. Pierce's medicine to me and to others. I ain sure your medicines will cure any case of catarrh Uiat exists. I recommend them to all." "I was troubled with a bad cold, which settled on my lungs and left me with a miserable cough," writes Mr. Joseph D. Burns, of 318 Iluestis Street, Ithaca, N. Y. "I used two liottles of 'Golden Medical Discovery,' after which ray cough disappeared entirely. I cannot recommend your medicine too highly. ' These statements are made by representative people. They are reliable state ments, and those who are guided by them need not swell the list of victims who die of colds. One of the dangers of a cold, especially as it progresses, is that people will be content to use some syrup or preparation based on opium, and think they are safe. Such things are mere palliatives. They soothe and quiet but they do not retard the progress of disease. Doubtless everyone of the victims of colds used something with the intention of being cured. But they failed to use the one thing which would cure them, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It always helps. It almost always cures. There is no alcohul In the "Discovery." It is a true tonic, building up the body with solid flesh aud enriching the blood with the red corpuscles of health. Do not allow a dealer to palm off on you a substitute for "Golden Medical Dis covery," claiming it to be "just as good." The record of those who have tried "medicines almost without number" and found no cure until they used the "Dis covery," proves there is no other medicine "just as good" for colds, coughs, and lung diseases. ST ? JC"5?ff"jr W "' ,,'' CammoH Seme Medical Advltmr, the m m W aTBaiwana toremoel medical work of the dfy. la sent FREE en j wMpmnma ar mailing OHLT. Thla great work contalna orec one thouaand large pagea and mar than 700 llluatratlona. Sand SI one . conf atampa examine el mailing I tor the cloth bound volume, or only XI atampa for the book In paper covers. Addreaei DR. . Y. PIERCE, Buffalo, H. T. When Your Joints Are Stiff and muscles sore from cold or rheu matism, when you slip nnd sprain a joint, strain your side or bruise your self, Perry Davis' Painkiller will take out the soreness aud fix you righi in a jiffy. Always have it with you, and ise it freely. USE TO AND 1-KOM AM. Points East VIA Short Line to ST PAUL, DULUTH, MINNEAPOLIS CHICAGO, 1XD IVINTS HAST Through Palace anil Tourist tleep er, 1 1 n 1 ti at ami ttulTet biuukitir Library Car. I' VILY TK.VINS; FAST TIME. Ki-r Kates. Folders sncl full iiifwrniarioa r.'t.liu( T;ikcK, liouti-s, c, call on or taartia J. W. I' HA LOS, r. v. a. II. MCKS0.N, e. r. . 1'J'J Thlra aireet, I'orrland A. B. C. PKNMKTON, t. W. p. A 12 r'iret Avenue Seattle, Wah. Yoi Know What You Ara Taking When you take drove's Tasteleis Thill Tonic, b-au the formula i plainly print ed on every bottle showing that tl is im ply Iron and Quinine In a tasteless form o Cure No, l'ae. ,VV. au.ek delivery The Weekly Orecoa'aa. The Could 'M&f BY GZCtiGE EDWARD GRAf!A!V?. ,1 win ni-iniim h p 1 . ; .' Vl.;jl 11 VitLu " 1: I" 1 W-WN'T W-ti-rvElT.- mi Ik--i c r.l ! Wsi tvc.iir.i ! I'j'v' t!;trd r.H Ike k'sMiCh- r-t 3- r:'.;- the v if. !i ?ifrjr t rut tn:.,h cn-r-. u . . Leu; :jtvi.i fhtti ipfla it 6ii tv :. 11 e .i-ii." I II is II ii. n the - li.. ti ..s ! ftiti i't.-rn, .lit Kin n , ,. , , , - - - BRIGHT'S DISEASE lli largest turn ever paid lor a pra teription. thanked liamls inSnlrtn rlsco. An. 'Hi. 1-JOI. lh.. ttsnsferin v.ilve.l in n,in and atoek U2.;,0il.ll and a as pa d by a parrv o! biisini'ss nien for a tpe.-itic (or l-rniM' lisea- and Hia-l-etes, hitherto ineiirabie diseases. Tl.ey onaiinMncel (lie serious iuv-sti iration of the tfecilir Nov. j, j.hsj' l'bev mtervieaed scares oi the'rn'rrd and fied it on: rn t me'itf It j 'ifiim over three dr.en eates on tl ? tr-a'ment and aatclimtj tl,..m. Tbev ai.o -,-,,t by ticisns lo nan e , lironic, ir,cina; ie cases aud ailininiairrrd II a lib die olivsiCiti-t for I'd to Ainr. ' .i sofctiie teat ca5r;s rrr e,n,rr or prt k-r: vn; lavnrilOIV. T hem bet n(; bat tliirten per cent of failure, the panie ,.re sati.fiH and fifsed the tsenMi'tion. Tlie ruo.-e.1iMK. o! tie invii:atin roniniiitee and the rl nv-sl rei-o-ra ol the test af sre pii'.u.lied and alii be rnile-l frve rn si p. .rati iu. AJJress- J. us J hnrox Cojii aiy. J0 MoiiUomery bt-Saii KiaJ. cit-co, Cal. l , at-, lit- if, - ,-."" -1 auiitur lell.i Ibt-ui 10 tins imuk are correct." " "V ,-. A? -'4 -V.S.M'III.KV. gf -l V- "5, llii H '"" f""i' rrii;v -t (..!.. r.ipMw fir sn. M If : hi ' 1 n I V H , '.I. Vl -.'-.-ciu i;ii,,, f,.r e . ,v fi Prke $1.50, 51.73, R AGENTS t rrke J 1.50. 51.73. 5..23. $2.73, according to ttvlo cf binding d. sired. M mm wmHh Santiago I Tlie Irt'r'iil.l A-.-.lrrff.l lYe-w w.ir cum-npiimli nl, who , atH - aui Mir l s. . lini'.LiUii .mrtn lhi ruin nt' f t.,- nniit-n. lUti-nnttl niih ihoturl'h ui - nin'i utuiiiK Ust-' litem. Tha oct ScvssiionaS H Bosk sf tha B.nv. VI Tim tn: -Toiy -f t!i. famuli-, i-rni-,. f tlm Klvlim if J 'lUn.li.in i..l. r 11. 1. H-.ir.' WmiUii) St . -t L St-hlt-v. Iiit-in.l- jj ion rut i lu.vr nViK. 1 , Ct.r.lain an ni!oTi.h rn.l. m.n fii -1 p..-itniia,t ! wie J I-' r AHIl:-il fh-tili-J, I'll- i ,tl lilt I 1 II.' M ,.r . -Ill ! p., n iu 1 lias n 7 ths i;fw vnci Ht.min., !J rc-iitf :r io rnnkc lr.; J.( 1 Mv(ft oin! nf-it iri,iJ j ijcr, to rv-t is.ir n ff (U cm Im re tt.ntliitii" tlisUiiii l)U!ti , tit;-t h;.s li.t.-ifsti ci I'vir I -. ii t. !.!. inL.j t M. Am.Th-x r Univ us ' -im ; ,r . il w e..w ws tTUIIIIsiyOi 1 Hit IMNIh 1 1 I ' a "THE MILWAUKIE." A familiar name for the ChicaifO. Mil waukee A St. I'aul Railway, known al over the Union at the Great Railway rnnnim the "ruinn-r Limited" train every day and niht between St. Paul and Uhicago, and Ociaha and ClilcagD, "Tie only wrf t traint in the world. Understand : Oounectiont are mada wilh All Transi-otitinental Line, aatur ing to pa. tigers the bett service known. Lniuriout ooachea, electric linbU, atetm "eat, of a verity equalled by no otlitr line. e that your ticket readt ala "Tha Miletukee" hen roiag to are point iu the United Statet or Canada. All tick et ent tell them. 'nr rales, psmphleU or older intoi -t"a;:on, adiin-rs, i. W. CUawv, C. J.Enur. Trar. Plt. Aitt. Cieneral Agent biTTL, Wash. PoTLio,Or, 8;. utiicn that B f L4.n M la- l ,'tittiitjG., d p ti il