Scio weekly press. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 18??-1897, February 06, 1896, Image 3

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    Highest of all in Leavening Power-— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Baking
Powder
A bsolutely pure
HOODWINK UNCLE SAM
EOPHONE TRIALS.
An Invention to Concentrate Sound In a
Fog.
SAVED A BABY AND HER AGED MOTH­
ER FROM A FIERY DEATH.
The recent delays in the arrival of
ocean steamers at the port of New York
and the detention of vessels on the great
lakes from fog will be obviated when
the eophone, as its discoverer names it,
has been brought into general use. The
discoverer, or inventor, is Frank De la
Torre of Baltimore.
Professor Henry of the Smithsonian
institution and Admiral Walker 20 years
ago investigated, on behalf of the Unit­
ed States government, the nature and
cause of these curious areas, in which
fog signa Is cannot be heard. They agreed
that the distance“of the signal bell or
whistle from the ship was not a factor.
The direction of the wind and the den­
sity of the atmosphere, especially the
varying density of alternating strata of
First Rang the Fire Alarm—Made Two
Trips of Rescue—When Danger Was
Past, Became Hysterical and Fainted.
Tillie Stern, a tall, dark haired girl
of 19 years, saved two lives the other
day at her home, in a tenement in East
Eighty-fifth street, New York. One was
a life almost spent—that of her mother,
who is past 80 and helpless from inflam­
matory rheumatism, the other that of. a
golden haired child just learning to talk
—Hortense Speakmaster, 18 months old,
and the pride and joy of the big tene­
ment.
Tillie and her widowed mother live
on the second floor, and on the top floor,
Rights further up, live Leonard
The best, most skillful, and adroit en­
MANY ARTICLES ON WHICH NO
gineers and practical mechanics upon
LUTY IS PAID.
Some Dear Friend on This Side Wishes
a Dress Pattern or Some Jewelry—A
Careful Examination of All Articles
Is an Impossibility.
Speakmaster, his wife and the baby,
Hortense. The mother had just dressed
the child in its pretty gown of white
muslin at 10 a. m., when Tillie knocked
at the door. She intended just a morn­
ing call to inquire about the little one,
and, incidentally, to borrow a kitchen
utensil. Hortense showed her new gown,
and when the girl started down stairs
cried to go with her.
*
“P’ease, mamma, p’ease,” she plead*
ed, and the mother nodded consent. Til­
lie took the little one in her arms, and
old Mrs.'Stern showed her the pictures
in the morning paper. Tillie left her at
this pleasing entertainment when she
started for the grocery hard by.
She smelled smoke when she reached
the foot of the stairs. The hall was filled
with it, but she thought it came from
some careless neighbor’s stove and went
on to the store. When she came back,
she saw the smoke coming in volumes
from the speaking tubes. The halls were
stifling, and she screamed for the jan­
itor, Charles Roeder. He came, but
stood paralyzed with fear, and Tillie
thrust him aside impatiently.
“Arouse the people! Tell them the
house is on fire!” were her orders.
She ran to First avenue and fell,
half fainting, against the post contain­
ing the alarm box. She turned the han­
dle and then started back to the burn­
ing house, her mind filled with anxious,
thoughts. Washer old mother safe? Had
they saved little Hortense?
The street before the house was crowd­
ed with people when she got there. Ex­
cited tenants ran to and fro, and among
them she spied Mrs. Speakmaster.
“Where is Hortense? Is she safe?”
“She is up stairs with mother,” an­
swered the girl, her pale face becoming
even more blanched.
Instead of answering, the mother fell
in a dead faint.-
EFFICACY OF PRAYER.
It Saved a Ship When Oil Upon the Wa­
ters Was of No Avail.
A most remarkable story of saving an
ocean steamer by prayer was given out
when the Northern Pacific steamer Ta­
coma arrived from China and Japan the
other day. When 1,000 miles from Yo­
kohama and near midocean, a “twister”
struck the vessel and all but wrecked it.
The waves dashed over her, carrying
away all the upper decks.
All control of the steamer was lost,
and she went drifting about at the mer­
cy of the big waves. Then she listed and
the officers, losing hope, congregated in
the surgeon’s cabin and united in prayer.
Several hundred gallons of oil had been
cast upon the angry sea, but to no avail.
Soon after the officers joined in prayer
the storm subsided, the vessel righted it­
self and the officers cleared away the
wreckage on deck and brought the
steamer safely iiito port. No one was
Tire smoke tvas now pouring □ » dense
clouds from the opdii hallway. Tillie"
glanced at the mother’s form being
dragged to a place of safety and with
her lips tightly compressed rushed into
the hall and to the stairs.
They saw her throw her gingham
apron over her head as she dashed up
and stood breathless until, a minute
later, she came out through the smoke,
bearing the golden haired baby in her
arms. She handed the little one to a
neighbor and rushed back.
“My mother! She must be saved!”
they heard her say.
The rooms were black with smoke.
/‘Mother! Where are you? Come quick I”
she called. The old mother staggered
forward and leaned on the girl’s arm.
To return through the hall was impossi­
ble, and Mrs. Stern, helpless with rheu­
matism, begged to be left to die.
Tillie threw open the window’ and
ran over the fire escape to. the apart­
ment next door. The men were too ex­
cited to listen to her. “Come help me to
get out my mother,” she said. “She
will suffocate. ”
One of the women was touched by the
appeal, She forgot her fear and followed
Tillie back over the fire escape and into
the room where Mrs. Stern sat. They
lifted her out of the window into pure
air and over the fire escape to safety.
After she had done all this the relapse
came, and Tillie became hysterical and
staggered into a chair weak and limp.
She recovered after the firemen had ar­
rived and put out the fire, and the ten­
ants were restored to their water soaked
rooms.—New York World.
■’TJoyou'tnmK ms Kissing ner was so
much of a surprise as she says?” “I
do. Why, she even forgot to scream.”
—Indianapolis Journal.
Jost, time! in the official cbx-o»i«Ie
of
battle with the cyclone prepared by Sec­
I
ond Officer Smith, under direction of
Captain Crawford, divine Providence is
freely credited with saving the steamer
and all on board.
THE GREAT
£ Taken Internally, It Cures *
Diarrhoea, Cramp, and Pain in the
Stomach, Sore Throat, Sudden Colds,
Coughs, &c., &c.
Used Externally, It Cures
Dr. John Knapp of Mount Vernon,
N. Y., has in his possession a tapeworm
2 inches long that was found in a hen’s
egg by Mrs. Benjamin Sedgwick.
Dr. Knapp insists that it is a genuine
tapeworm. He says the finding of such
an organism in an egg is unprecedented,
and that it will suggest to bacteriologists
a new field for investigation.
Mrs. Sedgwick was breaking eggs into
a dish, when she noticedin the albumen
something that moved. She was at first
too much startled to look into the dish
a second time. Mrs. Sedgwick finally
determined to have the phenomenon in­
vestigated, and carried the broken eggs
to Dr. Knapp. Dr. Knapp at once said
that the live object was beyond doubt á
tapeworm.
Dr. Knapp says he will report the
matter to prominent bacteriologists.
Very Odd.
I
How odd a thing is love!
Or shall we call it by some other
name?
It matters little, for by any other
name the result would be the same.
Here is Mrs. Frank Higginson, a Bos­
ton heavy swell and well known in New
York society, running away with a Har­
vard student, although she is full 40
years of ag§ and the mother of four
children.
By Jove, but this thing we call love
is an awfully freakish thing!
Moreover, it seems that a woman is
never safe from it, no matter what her
age or station or previous condition of
servitude.—New York Recorder.
Ingenious Railway Invention.
1
Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Sprains,
Toothache, Pain in the Face, ^Neu­
ralgia, Rheumatism, Frosted Feet.
Mo article ever attained to such unbounded
popularity.— Salem, Observer.
An article of great merit and virtue.— Cinn.
Nonpareil.
*
We can bear testimony to the efficacy of the
Pain-Killer. We have seen its magic effects in
soothing the severest pain, and know it to be •
good article.— Cincinnati Dispatch.
A speedy cuye for pain—no family should be
without it.— Montreal Transcript.
Nothing has yet surpassed the Pain-Killer»
which is the most valuable family medicine now
in use.— Tenn. Organ.
It has real merit; as a means of removing pain,
no medicine has acquired a reputation equal to
Perry Davis’ Pain-Killer.— Newport (Ky.") Daily
News.
It is really a valuable medicine—It is used by
many Physicians.- Boston Traveller,
Beware of imitations, bur only the genulnt
K.’AWaK'"' “
DISEMBARKING FROM THE STEAMER.
J. L. Allen, a telegraph operator at
Loretto, Ky., has invented a railroad
clock that is a marvel of ingenuity. It
registers each train as it passes and the
time at which it passes, and an accom­
panying device gives warning to incom­
ing trains if another train has passed
the station within 15 minutes.
The Hospitable Dardanelles.
This talk about the Dardanelles re­
vives recollections of “The Almighty
Dollar.” Mrs. Gilflory, returned iron}
Europe, was asked if she had seep the
Dardanelles. “Oh, yes,” was the reply,
“we dined with ’em.”—St, Louis ge-
onblie*
retain in all seasons a sufficient quan­
tity to enable it to live comfortably and
enjoy a daily bath without paying
taxes for the same.
There never was an ancient setting
hen that more pertinaciously clung to
its nest after the eggs had been re­
moved again and again than does the
beaver to its work of building. Brutal
and inconsiderate man may tear down
and destroy the work of its hands, but
with the coming of night and the de­
parture of the enemy it will proceed to
fell trees and to saw them into proper
lengths for repair of damages with as
cheerful a heart as the well-worked
donkey turns homeward at dinner time.
The beaver it not confined to North
America only, but is also encountered
in northern parts of Europe and Asia;
yet has gained a firmer foothold on this
continent, or else is more successful in
eluding the pertinacious search of re­
morseless trappers. Unfortunately for
the beaver,' it gives forth an odorifer­
ous substance which it carries in two
sacs located near the base of its/tail
and is known in commerce as castor-
eum. This is a valuable perfume and
offers aditional inducement to zeal oh
the part of hunters who would scarcely
need this incentive, because, as nobody
has to be told, the beaver is itself very
valuable. What, however, with the
eastoreum and the fur also in prospect,
the hunter will swim streams and climb
mountains, go through fire, and risk
the tomakawk of the Indians in his
search after them. While hunted and
pursued; driven from pillar to post, still
commissioned by various acquaintan­
ces to make purchases—a dozen pairs
of gloves for one, a diamond pin for an­
other, a collection of pipes for a third,
some small works of art for a fourth
and so on. Under the strict interpre­
tation of the law these articles are du­
tiable and should be “declared” to the
customs officers of New York as soon
as they come aboard down the bay.
But the policy of the travelers appear
to be, “Declare nothing unless it is
separately packed and too bulky to es­
cape attention.”
Perhaps the total value of the dutia­
ble articles is $100. The traveler puts
the small articles in his pockets, dis­
tributes the others through his trunk
and valise and is reasonably confident
that they will not make a sufficient
showing to interest the inspector or ex­
cite his suspicion. Is he a smuggler?
If so, then a majority of Americans
returning from Europe are smugglers.
No one knows better than the inspec­
tors, however, that these small articles
are being brought in. The inspectors
overlook their presence and seldom
make any trouble unless the article is
so large or so valuable that to pass it
would be a gross neglect of duty. If
a man has five trunks filled with cloth­
ing there may be a question as to
whether all the garments are his and
have already been Worn. A traveler
beaver is fruitful,
except in lo­
-VA-Il-Ii one or- two ordinary Steamer tbe
calities where man n^5>yerrun stream
trunks is not an object of suspicion.
It is not to be inferred from this that as well as land, is moderately plentiful.
travelers are subject to no restrictions,
DISMANTLED WHITE CITY.
Fate of the Beautiful Statuary at the
W orld’s Fair.
It Is Two Inches Dong and Was Discov­
ered In Mount Vernon.
Many complimentary remarks rela­
tive to Judge Peckhan) have been made
by persons acquainted with the family
of the distinguished jurist. His father
and stepmother, it will be remembered,
perished on the ill fated steamer Ville
de Havre in the Atlantic years ago. As
illustrative of the high courage of the
elder Peckham, wfcfich his sons are de­
clared to have inherited, the story is
told that when the ship was known tc
be sinking, and all hope had departed,
Judge Peckham clasped his wife in his
arms and said, “My dear, if we must
die, let us die bravely.”—New York
Times.
Family Medicine of the Age.
BEAVERS AT WORK«
WAITING THEIR TURN.
The court of honor , does not look so
grand now as it did when it was sur­
rounded with the white palaces or
when illuminated at night with thou­
sands of incandescent lamps or tinted
with all the colors of the rainbow from
the electric fountains. The buildings
are gone. MacMonies’ grand work of
art is gone. All is gone save a lone
Neptune and a shivering horse or two,
and, rising majestically above the ruins,
unharmed by the fire or winter, the
statue of the republic. The monumen­
tal figure is in white now instead of
gold, but with only the sky for a back­
ground it show’s its proportions and
lines to better effect nowT than before.
Other statues have not fared so well.
Most of them wTere destroyed in the
various fires which laid waste the «en­
tire central portion of the grounds,
from the terminal station to the lake.
If Columbus should come to Chicago
and take a train out to Jackson Park in
order to get away from his specter on
the lake front he could stroll all around ;
the court of honor, where in former i
days he was so populous, ..and only find j
one of himself. The only Columbus
standing i-s the one in front of the ma­
chinery building, and inasmuch as this
is headless, it is doubtful if the real Co­
lumbus would recognize it. If he did
he would beg to be given a Christian
burial or at least to be taken to the con­
vent of La Rabida, in the bare rooms
of which he might find a more con­
genial atmosphere.-^-Chicago Chronicle.
or that an American may bring in a
cartload of foreign goods with impun­
ity. It is true, however, that the inspec­
tion of baggage during the tremendous
rush following the arrival of an ocean
liner is not the ordeal that many per­
sons imagine, and that inspectors are
not ordinarily inclined to be suspicious
and proceed on the theory that every
returning American is attempting to
cheat his own country. If they unload­
ed every trunk and valise and cross-
examined passengers as to every article
that might technically be called dutia­
ble it would require a month to “clear”
all the baggage swung from the hold of
a mammoth steamer. The passenger
who unlocks his trunk, removes the
tray and gives satisfactory answers
to a few questions is not liable to have
trouble. Lifting one or two of the gar­
According to Custom.
ments and patting to see if anything
Even after entering the Government
bulky is hidden underneath usually
schools Indian children »gfc-»01 at
constitutes the^/inspection.’^
ashamed of theiFUw^'JWiiLr’- D»t seem
to be as proud of thein as if they were
CONGRESSIONAL CONTESTS. Smith or Jones. The following list is
furnished by a teacher in one of the
Speaker Reed Will Appoint Two Commit­
schools of the Oklahoma Territory:
tees to Consider Them.
Lucy
Little Standing Buffalo, Atkins
In view of the unusually large num­
ber of contested election cases to be White Sail, Anna Bull Frog, Lee Little
passed upon by the house of representa­ Turtle, Marie Buffalo Head, Clarence
tives Speaker Reed has decided to ap­ Black Hair Horse, Jennie Boy Chief,
point two committees'to consider them. Grace Yellow7 Flower, Mary Big Goose,
This is the first time in the history of' John White Eagle, Martha Grief Pipe..
congress that the number of contests Mary Cries for Ribs, Cora Fizzle Head.
reached the remarkably high figure of
The Cheerful Idiot.
82. In the last congress there were
“Which city is it that has the name
somewhat more than a dozen, and some of the city of homes?” asked the board­
of them were not disposed of until near er who is. always forgetting.
the close of the congress. The commit­
“It is a little doubtful just now,”
tees on elections will be among the first
chipped in the cheerful idiot, “whether
appointed and will be instructed to
go to work and bring in their reports the title of ‘city of Holmes’ belongs to
without delay. It is the intention to Philadelphia or Chicago.”—Indianapo­
have all the contests disposed of during lis Journal.
the first session of the present congress.
Swallows in All Seasons.
In all the contests there is but one in
It is stated that swallows have been
which a colored man is a contestant. in England during eveiy month of the
That is the case of Murray versus Elliott, year. As partial confirmation of this
from the Charleston district. Murray assertion a correspondent writes to a
was the only colored member of the London publication that he saw7 two
last congress, and he hopes to be ablp tq at Whitely on the evening of Nov. 2.
unseat Representatve Elliott in his
pending contest. Many of the contest­
Blobbs—4‘Miss Oldgii’l would make a
ants make the fight for the $2,500 ex­ good soldier.” Slobbs «Used to pow*-
penses allowed to contestants, providing der, eh?” Slobbs—°Yes, and never de­
they are unsuccessful, and it sometimes serts her colors,’’—Philadelphia Record.
occurs that- the expenses of a contest are
not half that amount, but the contest­
You’ll hear of a woman one day that
ant is thrifty enough to put in a bill for she is about to die, and the next day
the entire amount—New York Sun.
that she is giving a receptiQa.
HOW’S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Cuie.
JEFFERSON M. CLOUGH REFUSES Hall’s Catarrh
F. J. CHENEY & CO, Props., Toledo, O.
A TEMPTING OFFER.
We.the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly
honorable in all business transactions and fin­
ancially able to carry out any obligations made
His Health Was Too Poor to Permit by their firm.
W est & T ruax ,
Attention to Business—A Great Suf­
Whole«ale Druggists, Toledo, O.
W alding , K innan & M arvin ,
ferer for Many "Years, But He Has
Wholesale Druggisls. Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inteenallyj acting
Now Recovered.
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. Price, 75c per bottle. Sold by all
From the Springfield, Mass., Union,
druggists. Tettimouials free.
There isn’t a gun manufacturer in
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
the United States who does not know
Jefferson M. Clough, and why? Be
cause he has been intimately associated
all his life with the development of i
the two best American rifles, the Rem­
ington and Winchester. For years he
was superintendent of the E. Reming­
ton & Sons’ great factory at Ilion, N.
Y.
After leaving there he refused
a tempting offer of the Chinese gov­
ernment to go to China to superintend
their government factories—and accept­
ed instead the superintendenoy of the
Winchester-Arms Co., at New Haven,
at a salary of $7,500 a year.
It was after this long term of active
labor as a business man that he found
himself incapacitated for further serv­
ice by the embargo which rheumatism
had laid upon him and resigned his
position more than two years ago, and
returned to Belchertown, Mass., where
he now lives and owns the Phelphs
farm, a retired spot where he. has five
feux^clred acres of land.
LIVE TAPEWORM IN AN EGG.
The New Supreme Court Justice.
PAIN­
KILLER
Most travelers, on returning from Eu­
rope, have a mania for and have very
few conscientious scruples against,
evading the payment of customs duties.
They bought some articles on the other
side, not to sell; but to give away.
When they started away they were
the face of the earth, next after man,
are the beavers, whose intelligence in
these directions is only equaled by their
providence in laying up stores against
the conventional “rainy day.”
It is fairly proper to state that man
conceived his first idea of water power
from the operations of these kings of
rodents. The latter were, of course,
headed off by man in the Invention of
water wheels and other machinery and
appliances for the utilization of the
power thus obtained, but man selects
a dam site for the same reason that the
beaver does—viz.: That he. may hold
the water and get out of It all he can.
In other words, the beaver goes to
the trouble of felling trees, cuts them
into blocks of from two to four feet in
length, bears them to the water, sinks
them, plasters and packs them down
in mud, and raises the wall above high
water mark solely that it may hold and
air or fog, were found to exei'cise the
most positive influences. De la Torre
was already making his experiments at
that time.
I asked Admiral Walker about the
eophone and its value to commerce.
“It is a device,” said he, “which con­
centrates and intensifies sound so that
it can be. heard at a greater distance
than with the naked ear and its source
located more quickly and exactly. It
gathers sounds into a sort of funnel and
brings it directly to the ears. If it is
what the inventor claims it to be, it
will save not only a vast amount of val­
uable time to steamers and sailing
ships, but much property and many
lives as well. ”
The United States lighthouse board is
making exhaustive tests of eophones—
one De la Torre’s and another designed
by Major Heap, U. S. N., intended to
be an improvement on the first.
GUNMAKER OF ILION
These Animals Rank Next to Man fit
Practical Engineers,
Mania of Returning Tourists.
THIS GIRL Â HÉROÏNE
BEAVERS AS MECHANICS.
Being a man of means he did not
spare the cost and was treated by lead |
ing physicians and by baths at celebrat­
ed springs without receiving any bene­
fit worth notice.
During the summer
of 1893 and the winter of 1894 Mr.
Clough was confined to his house in
Belchertown, being unable to rise from
his bed without assistance, and suffer­
ing continually with acute pains and
with no taste or desire for food, nor
was he able to*obtain sufficient sleep.
Early in the year 1894 Mr. Clough
heard of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People. He began taking these pills
about the first of March, 1894, and
continued to do so until the first part
of September following.
The first
effect noticed was a better appetite and
he began to note more ability to help
himself off the bed and to be better
generally. Last August (1894) he was
able to go alone to his summer resi­
dence and farm of 163 acres on Grena­
dier island, among the Thousand
islands, in the river St. Lawrence,
where from the highest land of his farm
he commands a view for thirteen miles
down the river, and sixty of the
Thousand islands can be seen.
Instead of being confined to his bed
Mr. Clough is now and has been for
some time, able to be about the farm to
direct the men employed there, and he
is thankful for what Dr. Williams.^
Pink Pills have done for him.
These pills are manufatured by the
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company,
Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold only
in boxes bearing the firm’s trade mark
and wrapper, at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50, and are never sold in
bulk. They may be had of all drug­
gists or direct by mail from Dr. Wiil-
liams’ Medicine Company.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. $1; six for $5.
NEW WAY EAST—NO DUST.
Go East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla
Walla via O. R. & N. to Spokane and Great
Northern Railway to Montana, Dakotas, St.
Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St.
Louis, East ana South. Rock-ballast track;
fine scenery; new equipment; Great North­
ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family
Tourist Cars; Buffet-Librarv Cars. Write
A. B. C. Denniston, C. P. & T. A., Portland,
Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A.,
St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in­
formation about rates, routes, etc.
Piso’s Cure is the medicine to break up
children’s Coughs and Colds.—M rs . M. G.
B lunt , Sprague, Wash., March 8, 1894.
H aa /I’ c ! Dillc act harmoniously with
HUUU 9 a U10 Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 25cts.
HERCULES
JV otti V.S. Journal of Medicine
Fits
Prof. W. H. Peeke, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur­
ed more cases than any
k living Physician ; his
| success is astonishing.
We have heard of cases
of 20 years7 standing
cured b)
him. He
publishes a
I valuable
I work or
this dis­
ease, which
he sends
.with
a
—
large bot-
.le of his absolute cure, free to any sufferers
who may send their P. O. and Express address.
We advise any one wishing a cure to address
Toi W H. PEEKE, F. D.t 4 Cedar St., New York
Cured
I suffered terribly from,]
roaring in my head during\
an attack of catarrht and\
because very deaf, used!
Ely’s Or earn Balm and tn
three weeks could hear as
weH as ever.—A. E. New­
man, Grating, Mich.
NOTED FOR...
SIMPLICITY
STRENGTH
ECONOMY
SUPERIOR WORK­
MANSHIP...
IN EVERY DETAIL
CATARRH
ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses
the Nasal Passages, Allays Pam and Inflamma­
tion, Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane
from colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and
Smelt The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives
relief at once.
,
A particle is applied into each nostril, and is
tgreeable. Price, 50 cents at Druggists’ or bj
mail.
ELY BROTHERS,
56 Warren 8treet, l^ew York.
REIL EST1TE M0RTG1GES BOUGHT
H. E. NOBLE
These engines are acknowledged by expert
engineers to be worthy of highest commenda­
tion for simplicity, high grade material and su­
perior workmansnip. They develop the full
actual horsepower, and run without an electric
spark battery; the system of Ignition is simple,
inexpensive and reliable. For pumping outfits
for irrigating purposes no better engine can be
found on the Pacific coast. For hoisting outfits
for mines they have met with highest approval.
For intermittent power their economy is un­
questioned.
________
STATIONARY AND MARINE ENGINES
—:MANUFACTURED BY
American Type Founders’Co.
PORTLAND, OR.
Send for catalogue.
212 Commercial Bl’k, PORTLAND, OB
SURE
CURE for PILES
Itching and Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles yield at once to
DR. BO-SAN-KO’S PILE REMEDY. Stops itch­
ing, absorbs tumors. A positive cure. Circulars sent free. Price
50c. Druggists or mail.
DE. BO8ANKO, Phlla., Pa.
MRS.
WINSLOW’S S< syrup G
-
FOR CHILDREN TEETHING, -
For sal© by al 1 Dniggists. 25 Cents a bottle.
LOOK AT
THE BOX
Mard on joiinny.
Mix-s. TCidby (to tier small soil)—“Well.
This is Waiter Baker & Co.’s Cocoa
box—be sure that you don’t g-et an
imitation of it.
John, what’s the matter?
Johnny—Sister says that she’s an ad­
vanced woman and I’ve got to watch
the dolls while she sails my toy boat—-
Pearson’s.
Sold by Grocers Everywhere.
W alter B aker & Co.,Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
A Simple Change.
“Professor, how does the hair-cut
suit you?”
“The hair Is altogether too short—-a
little longer, please.”-—Fliegende Blaet-
ter.
If you want a sure relief for pains in the back, side, chest, or
limbs, use an
Society Courtesies.
Allcock’s
Mrs. Parvenue—I am thinking of go­
ing slumming to-morrow.”
Mrs. Mayfair—Ah’ Going to call on
your relatives, I presume.”—Pick-Me-
Un.
_________ _
B ear
Is one of the most bénéficient donations
vouchsafed to us by nature. How bften it is
grossly abused ! Whether the stomach is natur­
ally weak, or has been rendered so by Impru
dence in eating or drinking, Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters is the best agent for its restoration to
vigor and activity. Both digestion and appe
tite are renewed by this fine tonic, which also
overcomes constipation, biliousness, malarial,
kidney and rheumatic ailments and nervous­
ness.
-______.
Teacher—Suppose you were a king, Tommy,
what would you do? Tommy-I’d never have
to wash my face any more.
in
Plaster
M ind —Not one of the host of counterfeits and imi­
tations is as good as the genuine.
GIFT OF A GOOD STOMACH
THE
Take Care
Of your physical health. Build up your
system, tone your stomach and digestive
organs, increase your appetite, enrich
your blood, drive out all impurities and
prevent sickness by taking
»EINHARD'S
WELL-KNOWN BEER
----- (IN KEGS OR BOTTLES)-----
Second to noue-^-
TRY IT..
No matter where from.
PORTLAND, OB.
/T
The veiY ^markable and certain
Ar
I
I ^^1 relief given woman by MOORE'S
•• .1
i ytt
. -»1 . .
REVEALED REMEDY has given
it tbe name of Woman’s Friend. It is ■»■ ■■ ■■ —, uniformly success-
IN SNOWBOUND STATES.
backaches,headaches
and weakness
which burden and shorten k woman’s
^^kney
In states and territories where snow and women testify for it. It will give health and strength «v < mgb ,—■ ■_
ice last all the long winters through, where dt
Pleasure* For sale by all druggists,
C J 1’1
men are much exposed and suffer much BLUMAUER-FRANK DRUG CO., P ortland , Agents.
from cold, it is a wonder they do not pro­
vide better against some of the conse­
quences. In some lumber camps, chop­
pers stand all day in knee-deep snow with
half frozen feet. Ihi feet are much more
tender than the hands from being covered
up all the time. Men are often lame all sum­
mer from tbe frost-bites of the previous
winter. Why it is so, is simply because
they do not know that St. Jacobs Oil will
cure frost bite in a night.
“WHER
SAPOLIO
His termou’s almost endless,
And thus his people sit
And find it very hard to make
Head or tail of it.
FITS.— AU fits stopped ire© by Dr. Kline’ >
Great Nerve* Restorer. Nofitsaftei the fin
day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and J2.0
trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline
931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.”
great saving results from the use of
•
S
A TT A I rm Now ready
1
Send for one...
...PORTLAND, or . r
Mention this paper
a
T ry G ermea for breakfast.
FRENCH —
o
F ashions
free
o
Illustrated by 6 dolls with ai dresses, 6 suits, 23 hats,
and 35 other articles, furnishing the ladies with the latest
French fashions as “well as the children with an amusing toy.
3 Ways to
( Send 6 Coupons, or
TU a a a J Send 1 Coupon and 6 cents, or
Ml © L I
j Send 10 Cents without any
coupon,to
Blackwell9s Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C., and the
Fashion Dolls will be sent you postpaid. You will find one coupon
inside each 2 oz. bag, and two coupons inside each 4 oz. bag of
?
o
< *
< *
Off. GUNN'S
< ►
o
o
-
o
Fashions. *
B lackwell ’ s G enuine
D urham T obacco .
THE AERMOTOB CO. does half the world’s
windmill business, because it has reduced the cost of
wind power to 1/6 what it was.« It has many branch
houses, and supplies its goods and repairs
at your door. It can and does furnish a
better article for less money than
H3J others. It makes Pumping and
a Geared, Steel, Galvanized-after-
• Completion Windmills, Tilting
and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw
Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed
Grinders. On application it will name one
of these articles that it will furnish until
January 1st at 1/3 the usual price. It also makes
Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue.
Factory ? 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets, Chicaio»
< >
IMPROVED
LIVER
PILLS
A Mild Physic. One Pill for a Dose.
A movement of the bowels each day is necessary for
health. These pills supply what the system lacks to
make it regular. They cure Headache, brighten the
Eyes, and clear the Complexion better than cosmetics
They neither gripe nor sicken. To convince you, wo
will mail sample freejOr full box for 25c. Sold every­
where- DR. BOSANKO MED. CO.. Philadelphia, P k
A RE IR
Morphine Habit Cured in 10
111*| 11 ■■ to 20 days. No pay till cured.
UI IU in DR. J. STEPHENS; Lebanon,Ohio.
Buy a bag of this Celebrated Smoking Tobacco, and read the
coupon, which gives a list of other premiums and how to get them.
2 CENT STAMPS ACCEPTED.
N. P. N. U. No. 634-8. F. N. U. No. 711