The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, April 03, 1896, Image 4

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    , Tailors Will Fight.
Tailors must unbend at times, and it
teems that on the night of St. John's
ve, Jnne S3, 1806, the tailors of Oxford
were in the habit of unbending very far
indeed. It was their custom to celebrate
on that evening a festival of so prolong
ed a character that they usually did not
break up till dawn. Upon this particu
lar occasion in 1806 after midnight,
when they had a right to expect that
they wonld find the streets in that part
of the town deserted, they and their
friends went ont into High street and
commenced what was apparently some
sort of formal country dance. Their evo-
lntions, however, were interrupted by a
clerk, one Gilbert of Foxlee, who came
upon them, the account states, with a
sword drawn, determined, apparently in
a spirit of pnre mischief, to break up
the dance. Some of the party, who knew
him, held him back and did their best
to get him away peaceably, bnt their ef
forts were fruitless. He tore himself
away from them and sprang again at
the irancers, aiming a blow at one as he
eame round in the figure, which, but
for a prompt movement on his part,
wonld certainly have cost him a hand.
This was more than even an Oxford
tailor conld stand, and the whole party
seem to have turned upon the clerk. One
wounded him in the sword arm ; a sec
ond stabbed him in the baok ; a cut on
the' head from a third brought him to
the ground. It would have been well if
things had gone no further. But a tai
lor's blood, one takes it, is as apt to boil
as that of any one else, and a serving
man struck at the prostrate student with
some sort of an ax (oalled a sparsb), in
flicting a terrible wonnd in the left shin,
which, after a lingering illness of eight
weeks, proved fatal to the orgulous Gil
bert ilacmillan's Magazine.
I The) Vague Laureate. . i
It would be pleasant to think of Spen
ser as poet laureate to Queen Elizabeth,
and there are those who do so, but strict
criticism cannot allow the claim. It is
true ths Spenser became a courtier and
flattered the queen in the extraordinari
ly exaggerated -style of the time, and
that when he dedicated the first three
books of the "Faerie Queene" to Eliza
beth she gave him a pension of 50 a
year. It is true also that Spenser speaks
of himself as the wearer of the laurel
leaf. In one of the sonnets to the lady
who was to become his wife he says: ,,
The laurel leaf, which you this day do wear,
Gives me great hope of your relenting mind.
For, since it Is the badge which I do bear.
Ton, bearing it, do seem to me inclin'd.
But this is nothing more than the
usual formal reference to the laurel as
the poet's special tree. No such office as
that of poet laureate, as it is now under
stood, existed in Elizabeth's time, and
few poets who have flattered a sovereign
have had such bitter experience of the
fickleness and cruelty of a court as
Spenser. Like some of his more formal
ly appointed successors, he was indeed
buried in Westminster abbey. Yes, but
behaddiedof starvation. Temple Bar.
IBS UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL,
as Bhakespeare says, Is to poke fun or sneer at
people who are nervous, under the half-belief
that their complaint la Imaginary or an allega
tion. i Is neither, but a serious reality. Im
perfect digestion and assimilation of the food Is
a very common Onusebf neivousness.eepsclally
tbnt illKtresslng form of it which manifests it
sell In want of sleep. Hostetter's Stomach Bit
ters speedily remedies nervousness, as it also
does walarM, kidney, bilious and rheumatic
ailments. The weak gain vigor speedily through
Its use.
The secret of success in modern art Is to be
oraty in an original way. '
FITS. AU fits stopped tree By Ir. Kline's
Great Nerve Restorer. No fits aftei the first
day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S2.00
trial bottle free to Fit cases. Bead to Dr. Kline,
SHI Arch t Philadelphia, Pa.
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
f ently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
jiver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
fiebes and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale In EOo
end $1 bottles oy all leading drug
gists. Any- reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. I)o not accept any
cubstitute.
CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO.
SAN FHAN0IS0O. 0AU '
(fiaisvius, nr. imv rosx. &y.
akins?
SLIPS IN SPEECH.
Sundry "Had Breaks" That Are Made With
the Best Intentions In tbe World.
In the hurry of speech and anxiety to
be polite one is very often liable to slips
of the tongue which may put an entire
ly different construction upon the sen
tence than was intended. .For example,
upon : arriving at your entertainer's
house, you say, "I beg a thousand par
dons for coming so late," and are met
by your hostess with the words: "My
dear sir, no pardons are needed; you
can never come too late."..
Take another instance. ' At an even
ing party in Cork a lady said to her
partner, "Can you tell me who that ex
ceedingly plain man is sitting opposite
to us?" "That is my brother." "Oh, I
beg your pardon,1! she replied, much
confused,'. "I did not notice the resem
blance."..' That was certainly putting one's foot
in it, and yet was perhaps not so awk
ward as the following : After a certain
concert a well' known German canta
trice asked a gentleman to whom she
had been introduced how he liked her
duet "You sang charmingly, madam.
But why did you select a horrid piece
of music?" "Sir, that was written by
my late husband I" "Ah, yes, of coarse.
I did not mean . Bnt why did you se
leot such au ass to sing with you?"
"Aoh himmel, that is my present hus
band!" ' , .
A lady said something the other day
at a-friend's dinner that found mark
the archer little meant., There were sev
eral strangers present, and in response
to a remark made about a certain lady
of , a certain age, the fair guest in ques
tion exclaimed, "Why, good gracionsl
-she is as old as the hills I" 'and could
not imagine in the least what had caused
the general consternation. She did a
little later;' however, when it was ex
plained to her that two maiden, sisters
at the table, whose .' names she did not
catch in the introduction, were called
Hill, and were extremely sensitive on
the subject of age. ;.'
"Here, my dear" husband,", said a
loving wife, "I have brought yon a little
silver pig for luok. It's a charm, you
know, dear, , to bring happiness to a
house." . .
"Ahhow kind of you, darling 1 But
why should I heed a little pig to bring
me luck when I have you still?"
An awkward oompliment recently
rather disturbed the harmony of a wed
ding breakfast given by a substantial
farmer blessed with five daughters,
the eldest being the bride. A neighbor
ing young farmer, who was honored
with an invitation, thinking, no doubt,
he ought to say something smart and
complimentary upon the event, address
ing the bridegroom, : said, "Well, yon
have got the pick of the batch. " The
oountenanct of tbe four unmarried ones
may be imagined. New York Dispatch.
The Author of "Evelina."
Miss Barney, or Mae. D'Arblay, re
tains a place in literature partly by her
novels, partly by her exceedingly inter
esting diary. Nor must it be forgotten
that, although "Evelina" appeared so
long ago as 1778, there are many people
still living who were young men and
women when she died. She-has been
praised by Macaulay for describing real
life "with broad, comic humor," yet
in language that is never "inconsistent
with rigid morality or even with virgin
delicacy," audit is true that "Evelina"
possesses unique interest as a description
of contemporary manners and is free
from unnecessary coarseness. It is also
true that the author has a keen eye for
the ridiculous and a considerable gift of
satire. Nevertheless Mine. D'Arblay is
not entitled to any high plaoe as a novel
ist, ,Her constructive skill is small, and
her characters are for the most part
what Johnson would have called "hu
morists" that is, they are the incarna
tion of qualities rather than flesh and
blood individuals. Moreover, the author
herself is a "humorist. " Her ruling pas
sion is a morbid craving to be "gen tee L "
She has no mercy for vulgarity or the vul
gar, but she fails to see that her own wor
ship of society conventions is itself vul
gar. And hence one may doubt the pro
priety of assigning to her "broad comic
humor..'.'". She was too much of a prig to
be possessed of humor, which implicates
geniality. V
Still, Mme. D'Arblay claims respect
on the specific ground that she did much
to purify an important form of litera
ture, while she has a certain additional
claim to remembrance from her connec
tion with Dr. Johnson. Did not Dr.
Johnson kiss her, and has she not record
ed, "To be sure, I was a little surprised,
having no idea of such faoetiousnees
from him?" Comhill Magazine.
-- A Cabby's Tip.: .,'
A sensitive cab : horse and a four
wheeler drew up in front of a theater
the other night, and a portly old gentle
man alighted. ' . '
' , Having handed the cabby his strictly
legal fare, he turned round to make his
way Into the building.
"Excuse me, sir," said the weather
beaten cabby, "but would yer oblige me
by not passing in front of the old hoss?
If be sees what weight he's palled for a
bob, he'll simply drop down dead."-.
The largest pure diamond, that be
longing to the Bajah of Mattan, weighs
867 carats. The one of next greatest
weight, the Orloof or Orloff, weighs
193 carats. '; - '"
"Lend . pencils" are a misnomer.
There is no lead In their courpositloo.
MENWORSE THArV APES.
V
Revolting easterns of Some ipf the African
Cannibal Tribes. .
The cannibalism of the black secret
society known as the Human Leopards
In the country near Sierra Leone brings
forcibly before us the difference between
the east African and west African hab
its of eating human flesh. The Sherbo
cannibals waylaid .'and killed their vic
tims and afterward feasted on their
flesh. - The cannibalism of tbe east coast
is of a very different kind. The flesh of
the old people the grandfather and
grandmother of a family is dried and
f mixed with Condiments, and a portion
of this is offered, with a dim sort of
sacramental meaning, to travelers who
become guests of tbe family. To refuse
it would be a doadly insult. : To acoept
it is a passport to the privileged position
of a friend of the bouse. Many of our
travelers in east Africa have eaten thus
sacramentally of the ancestors of some
dark skinned potentate.
.The cannibalism of tbe west coast is
of a more horrible kind, connected with
fetichism, . the worst developments of
which are peculiar to that country. But
there is a hideously genuine appetite for
fresh human flesh still existing among
the negroes of west Africa. This canni
balism manifests itself in a refinement
of gluttony which has its mild analogy
in the tastes of Europeans. Young boys
are bought from the dark interior, kept
in pens, fattened upon bananas and fin
ally killed and baked. To these Thyes
tean feasts come not onjy the savage
chiefs of the interior, but also, it -is
whispered, black merchants from the
coast. : Men who appear at their places
of business in English territory in broad
cloth and tall hats, who ape tbe man
ners of their white masters, are said to
disappear annually into the interior,
where, we are told, they might be seen
in naked savagery taking part in the
banquets on plump boys, in which they
delight ., ,
Be this as it may, somehow the native
of the west coast and its Hinterland is
unlike the East or South African native
in the deep lying savagery and tbe ex
traordinary faoility for returning to it
which are his leading and very unpleas
ant characteristics. The subject claims
the attention of the anthropologist, and
certainly suggests a curious reason for
questioning the relationship of the black
man and the ape or the gorilla, seeing
that the race of monkeys seems to be
singularly free from anything like can
nibalism. London Saturday Review. -
HOLES IN THE CANVAS.
An Important Discovery Increasing the
; . . : . Efficacy of Sails... ....
An Italian sea captain, Qio Batta
vasallo of Genoa, has made a very inter
esting innovation in the use of sails of
ordinary sailing vessels. He claims that
the force of wind oannot fully take ef
fect in a sail, since the air in front of It
oannot properly circulate in the inflated
part and remains stationary immediate
ly in front of part of the sail proper. He
avoids this stagnation of air, as he calls
it, by the application of a number of
small holes in that part of the sail where
the depression is deepest when it is fill
ed. These holes are re-enforced like a
buttonhole, so that they will not tear out
Trials made in various weather have
resulted as follows : With a light wind
a boat with : ordinary sails made 4
knots, while the new sail increased the
peed to 5 knots. In a fresh breeze the
respective speeds were ? and 8 knots,
and in a strong wind they were 8 and 10
knots an hour. It stands to reason that
the doing away with a layer of air
which cannot escape pi;st the sides of a
sail must increase the ' efficiency of the
sailboat Where the wind formerly
struck a cushion of air Whiah acted like
a spring mattress, decreasing the actual
pressure of the wind against the canvas,
this current of. air now strikes the sail
direct and of course has a greater effi
ciency. Vasallo has received much en
couragement from practical sailors as
well as theoretical scientists. Phila
delphia Record.
Football In Africa.
Englishmen are proverbial for taking
their games with them into whatever
part of the world they go. Golf, as we
know, is played in the shadow of the
pyramids and in the very heart of the
Himalayas, but football in the middle
of darkest Africa is something of an in
novation. Yet football is rapidly be
coming popular on the shores of Lake
Nyassa, and at Kotakota, which a few
years ago was notorious as the greatest
depot for slaves on the western shore of
the lake, mixed teams of black and
white meet every Saturday with as
muoh regularity as do our home teams,
though the local chronicler omits to say
whether Bugby or Association has won
the suffrages of the Nyassa teams. ' One
startling feature of the game is that the
black players decline to hamper them
selves with boots and find apparently
no inconvenience in playing with bare
feet. London Cor. Manchester Guard
ian. Vv . . , ' '
Brevet Bank.
The story is told of a soldier of the
Army of the Potomao who had his own
Ideas as to his financial value, as well
as the method by which that value conld
be realized. '
He was a white man and was detailed
for service as a teamster in a train
which was driven for the most part by
negroes. The negroes were hired at tbe
rate of $25 per month, but the white
soldier received no more than his regu
lar pay of $16. .
. He appeared somewhat dissatisfied
with this arrangement and made an ap
plication to bis captain.
"I should like," he said gravely, "to
be appointed a negro by brevet, and , be
assigned to duty in accordance with my
brevet rank "Youth's Companion.
Our Busy Day.
" How many of us have sympathized at
one time or another in our lives with
the old lady who said she had so many
things to de she guessed she'd go to bed.
Semerriile Journal
TOBACCO-TWISTED NERVES
The Unavoidable Result ot the
V Continued Use of Tobacco.
Is There a Sure, Easy and Quick Way of
Obtaining Permanent Kellef
' From the Habit? . ,
Millionsr ol men
think they need
stimulants, because
their nerves are set
on lire bv tobacco.
The persistent abuse
to wnicn tne tonac
co-user subjects hit
nerves cannot pos
sibly fail to make
weak the stronger
man. Chewing and
smokine . destroy
manhood and nerve
power. What you
, ; ". caw a fluent aucti
ons disease. ;' ' '
Tobacco, in the majority of cases dead
ens the feelings. You may not think to
bacco hurts you, but how are yon ever go
ing to tell how much better you would fee
without it, unless you follow the advice o.
Postmaster Hoi brook: . s
CUBED 49 CASKS OUT OF 50.
FT ol brook, Nev., June, 18. ;
Gentlemen The effects o No-To-Bacare trulj
wonderful. I bad used tobacco for forty-tbra
years, a pound plug a week. 1 used two Mxe
ol NoTo-Bac and have had no desire for tobac
co since. I gave two boxes of No-To-Bao toi
man Darned West, who had used tobacco foi
forty seven years, and two boxes to Mr. White
man, and neither of them have ned tobacci
since, and suy they have no desire for it. Ovei
fifty that 1 know of have uted No-To Ba
through my influence, and I only know of ont
case where it did not cure, and then it was thi
fault of the patient.
1 was 64 years old last week. I have (rainec
seventeen pounds in flesh since I quit the us.
of tobacco. You can use this letter, or any par
of it, as you wish. .
Yours respectfully y - '
, . . .... C. K. Holubook, P. M.
You say it is wonderful. Indeed, it is.
No To-Bac cured over 800,000 cases just at
bad. You can be made well and strong bj
No-To-Bao. Your own druggist guarantee
a cure. Get our booklet, 'Don't Tobacoi
Spit and Smoke You Life Away," wiittei
guarantee of cure and free sample, mailet
for the asking. Address The Bterlint
.Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. ;
"The game Is up," remarked the hungry cue
tomer, as he noted the advance in price of bird
on the bill of fare.
CONSUMPTION CURED
AN ABSOLUTE REMEDY FOR ALL
PULMONARY COMPLAINTS. .
T. A. Sloonm Offers to Send Two Bot
tles Free of Bis Kemedy to Un
Consumption and All Lung Trouble
.', An Elixir of I4fe. , , ,
'Nothing could be fairer, more philan
thropio or carry more joy in its wake that
the offer Of T. A. Siocum, M. C, ot 188
Pearl street. New York. Perfectly confi
dent that he has an absolute remedy foi
the cure ot consumption and all pulmon
ary complaints, he offers through this pa
per to send two bottles free to any readei
who is suffering from lung trouble or con
. umption, also loss of hesh and all condi
tions of wasting. He invites those desir
ous of obtaiulDg this remedy to send their
express and postofflce address, and to re
ceive in return the two bottles free, which
will arrest the approach ot death. Already
this remedy, bv its timely use, has per
manently cured thousands of oases which
were given up, and death was looked upon
as an early visitor.' . -
Knowing his remedy as he does, and be
ing so proof-positive of its benehcent re
mits, Dr. Siocum oonsiders it his religious
duty, a duty which he owes to humanity,
to donate his infallible remedy where it
will assault the enemy in its citadel, and.
by its inherent potency, stay the current
of dissolution, bringing joy to homes over
which the shadow ot the grave has been
gradually growing more strongly defined,
causing fond hearts to grieve. The cheap
ness of the remedy offered freely apart
from its inherent strength, is enough to
commend it, and more so is the perject
confidence of the great chemist making the
offer, who holds out life to those already
becoming emaciated, and says: "Be
cured." ' - - '
The invitation is certainly worthy of the
consideration ot the afflicted, who, for
yearB, have been taking nauseous nostrums
without effect; who have ostracised them
selves from home and friends to live in
more salubrious climes, where the atmos
phere is more congenial to weakened lungs,
and who have fought against death with
all the weapons and strength in their
hands. There will be no mistake in send
ing for these free bottles the mistake will
be in passing the invitation by. y : :
8af an Where are you from? New arrival
St. Louis. Satan You'll freeze u death here.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,) ;
Lucas County. i
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of tue firm of F. J. Chbney b Co.,
doing business in the City of Toledo, County
and State aloresald, and that said firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eacn
and every case of Catarrh that '-annot be cured
by the use of Hall's Catarrh Curb. .
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 16th day of December, A. 13. 1886.
A. W. G LEA SON,
. . Notary Pabllo. ,
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts directly on tbe blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Bend for testl monlals, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 76o.
Hall's Family Pills are the best . ;
WHOLE-
CIRCUS
for 10 CENTS.
It makes a grand parade with elephants, cages of animals,
chariots, bands. Gives a full performance in a ring, with rips
master, clown, acrobats, bareback riders, trained dogs and sl
phants, winding up with the pantomime of Humpty Dumpty,
including all tbe oharactera a&d scenery.; -
3 Ways to Get f CAnf1
This Circus:
TO
Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, H. C. r
:, and the Cirous will be sent you postpaid. Ton will find 1 ooupon
inside aoh 2 ounoe bag, and 2 coupons inside each 4 ounee bag of
Blackwell's Genuine'
Durham Tobacco.
. Buy a bag t 'this Celebrated Smoking Tobacco, and read the
coupon, which jives a list of other premiums and ho w to get them.
S ClNT STAMPS ACCCPTID.
NHIMMII V ISMS'' 44
DRIVEN FROM THE CITADEL. 1 1
The warmth of spring and summer may
do much to relax the muscular system and
make many feel much more comfortable,
but there is this about the old enemy
rheumatism, that when he once takes
hold, he tries to hold the citadel at all sea
sons of the year. But whether this arch
enemy lurks in the muscles, joints, bones
or the nerves, he is such an enemy to
human happiness that he must be driven
out of any stronghold. It was planned
long ago to do this, and St. Jacobs Oil as a
knight in battle has soored-wonderful vic
tories. At all times he is ready to over
come and oonquer this fiend of pain, and
does it as surely and certainly as knights
ot old extirpated the Saracen. So no one
should be deceived by the mild weather of
spring to trifle with it either in chronic or
transient form Use the great remedy for
pain and get rid of it at once and for all.
Mr. Dolley What do you mean by saying that
rour father made light of my proposal. Mis,
Giggles -Well, he did. He used it to ignite bis
cigar with, ...
' Tbt Gibmia for breakfast. . .
til PS
Anxiously watch declining health of
their daughters. So many are cut off
by consumption in early years that
there is , real cause for anxiety. In
the early stages, when not beyond
the reach of medicine, Hood's Sarsa
parilla will restore the quality and
quantity of the blood and thus give
good health. Bead the following letter?
"It is but just to write about . my
daughter Cora, aged 19. She was com
pletely run down, declining, had that tired
feeling, and friends said she would not
live over three months. She had bad
Coy gin
end nothing seemed to do her any good.
I happened to read about Hood's Sarsapa
rilla and hadher give it a trial. From the
very first dose she began to get better.
After taking a few bottles she was com
pletely cured and her health has been the
best ever since." Mrs. Addis Peck,
12 Railroad Place, Amsterdam, N. Y.
"I will say that my mother has not
stated my case in as strong words as I
would have done. Bood's Sarsaparilla
has truly cared me and I am notv well."
Cora Peck, Amsterdam, N. Y.
Be sure to get Hood's, because -
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists, ti.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
sj j r fl - re purely vegetable, re
tlOOd S PHIS liable and beneficial. 260.
C T5T 7TV A
AA 1 J IVI
It the name of Woman's Friend. It is
ful in relieving the backaches,headaches
which burden and shorten a woman's
m
LrtJOOCi S
women testify for it. It will give health and strength
and make life a pleasure. For Bale by all druggists.
BLUMAUER-FRANK DRUG CO., Pobtland, Agents.
SAW
FLOUR
;r.'..
MINING Vt.
MARINE
WARE-HOUSE
CHICHESTER'S ENQUSH,
.THI ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The only Safe,
Ladle, ait DrufiriJt tor OMeWar-l AlcUaa Diamond B
boxM iealadwIUiblaar-lbtmn. Take as
All pim to aaneboard Doiea, pin wrappara, an dancerosa eouterfelt. At Draggina, or mi aa
4e,la nampa for partlealan, tantmoiiiali, and "Killer for Ladles," lour, bj return Mali.
10.000 ToilimonlH.. Same Paper. Bold by all Loeal DnnlM
omolLKSTiejl CHJUUCaJ. CO. KS 21 Miasa i'UI LaIELPUIA, PA.
' " If you want a sure relief for
limbs, use an .
Bear in Mind Not one of the host of counterfeits and imi
tations is as good as the genuine.
DON'T BORROW
'TIS CHEAPER IN THE END
10 Coupons, or
l Coupon and lO cents, or
14 cts. without any Coupons,
USEFUL BOOKS GIVEN AVAY
ART AND FANCY .WO RK
Mrs. Nella Daggett of Boston, 'has "recently
written a book, "Fancy Work and Art Decora
tions," that gives practical instructions for
making dollies, table covers, scarfs, tray cloths,
pin cushions, etc., etc., with fifty illustrations.
This book,: together with "Successful Home
Dyeing." will be
sent free to any -reader
who for
wards the atached
coupon and a 2
cent stamp to
Wells, Richardson
& Co., Burling
ton, Vt.
The above liber
COUPON.NO.J092.,
This entitles any reader of
this paper to one copy of
"Fancy Work and Art Dec
orations," . and "Successful
Home Dyeing." ,
al otter is made to
advertise the reli
able Diamond Dyes, and to get their book upon
home dyeing Into the hands of women who
want to dress well by making their old clothing
Oo1e. Jjtg new
The fact that Diamond Dyes have been the
standard home dyes for nearly twenty years,
and that their sale increases from year to year,
is proof positive that they have neve had au
equal. ; .. . . . V
take the
law in your own hands, ladies,
when you ask for
Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding
and don't get it. Sentence such a
store to the loss of yourfltrade and
give it to merchants who are will
ing to sell what you demand.
Look for " S. H. & M.," on the Label,
and take no other.
If your dealer will not supply you we
will.
oc.iu iu, BaiiiujD, allowing imovim ma maisnais.
to the S. H. & M. Co-, P. O. Box 699. New York City.
FOR
CURES SCROFULA,
BLOOD POISON.
THE
CURES CANCER,
ECZEMA, TETTER,
BLOOD
TT Tne vel7 remarkable and certain
8AJ relief given woman by MOORE'S
VXiJXXJjUJL AjiU.iXX HUB K1YVU
uniformly success
and weakness
life. Thousands of
MACHINERY S
FIBST
COST...
BY OORRE8PONDINQ WITH .
THE WILLAMETTE IRON WORKS
PORTLAND, OREGON v
RED CROSS
Diamond Brand a
Sure, and reUabU Pill tor Mia.
atker klaiL IMmtutMlwlMiaiiiWMaau.
Brand la Kcd and Ooid awlallis
pains in the back, side, chest, or
9 Porous
& Plaster
TROUBLE." BUY
SEEDS,
Perfect seeds grow
paylnsrcropfl. Perfecteeeds
,areDOtgrowa by chance. Noth-
f ing isever left to chance in grow-
' inir Ferry's Seeds, Dealers dell l
I them everywhere, write for
FERRY'S
SEED ANNUAL
for 1R90. Brimful of valuable i
Information about beat and new.
, est seeds. Free by mail. .
D. M. FERRY & CO.,
Detroit, Mich.
riV.K AKRMOTOR CO. does half th world's
mndrnll) buslnoas, because It has reduced tbe cost of .
wind power to 1.0 what It was. a It has many branch
nouses, ana supplies its goods ana repairs
at your aoor. it can ana aoes ruruino a
, Detier article xor less money inan
othera. It makes Pumping and .
Geared. Steel, Galvanlzed-arter.
Completion Windmills, 'rutin
and Fixed Steel Towers. Steel Boss Saw
Frames. Steel Feed Gutters and Feed
Grinders, On amplication It will name on.
Ill ot tbese articles that It will fumlab until
lannary 1st at 13 the nsaal price. It also makes
Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send (or catalogue.
Hoary 12th, Kockwsll and Fillmore Streets, Cartas
N. P. N. U. No. 6438. F. N. TJ. No.72
4W Va
J
- FOR CHILDREN TEETHINO -
1 1 For sal. br all Ilrngxlata. S5 Ceata a battle,