Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1891)
- ----- - THE TELEPHONE-REGISTER M c M innvii . i . e , November - O regon . - - - 19, 1891. HOW THE BUD BLOOMED. HER EDUCATION IN THE WAYS OF SOCIETY. She Drives to a American to Picnic with a Young the Great Disappoint ment of an Englishman of Wealth and Position, but Without Youth. (Copyright, 1891, by American Press Associa- OUR G0SSI1U column . nie with a good looking American man WOMAN’S WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS. The Cry for Dress Reform Grows Strength and Volume. in LATEST FADS AND STYLES IN ~ 1 1-------- ■■■■■■JI I. ■ Line tlie jacket witli silk of the same color and interline for winter. I’ut one row of sticliing round tlie edge of the jacket. Make the coat sleeve loose. In cut ting them see that the cloth for both upper and under sides runs straight at the hand and bias at the top. This is an important point, which even reputable dressmakers often overlook. On the texture being diagonal depends the beauty of the full, gathered top, which top continues to be the mode. Do not exaggerate the fullness or you will vul garize the garment. East and South Southern Pacific Route THE FASHIONABLE WORLD. Business and professional women are gradually making up their minds that we must have dress reform if the move Intel exting Items on Thing. Strictly ment for the emancipation of women is Feminine. I.allies nn<I their Apparel’ Express Tyains Leave Portland Daily to go on. How it is to come about no Bright Bitx for the Ladies. I-KAVM. ARRIVE. body just knows, but come it must. Portland 7 .«0 p in San Francisco 8.15 sm Women who are obliged to go to office Shirley Dare in speaking of the San Fran. 7 p id Portland 7.35 am cannot continue to wade through mud graeefulnesss of the modern woman, Alx»ve train« stop only at following sta tions north of I»oM*burg: East Portland, and slush and ruin their clothing by be says: Oregon Citv. Woodburin. Salem. Albany, draggling it through filth and mire. langent, shedds. Halsey. Harrisburg, Jun The Greek athlete or the maiden for Infanta and Children. They cannot use their brains all day, ction city. Irving, Eugene think their best thoughts and keep their were not thinking whether they were Roseburg Mail Daily. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, ‘‘Castoria is so well adapted to children that health if they sit bolt upright all day in playing in good form or not. They LEAVE. ARRIVE Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, Eructation, I recommend it as superior to any prescription Portia id . 8 :05 a m Roseburg... 5:40 p iu cased in stiff corsets. This much is threw to hit the mark with the least Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di known to me. ” H. A. A rcher , JI. D., Roseburg. <»:30 a m Portland . 4 :0û p ui gestion. plain—the blood cannot thus circulate waste of effort, and, so moving, so in ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication. Albany Local, Daily. Except Sunday. properly through their brains. It is stinct, were supremely graceful and LEAVE ARRIVE. melancholy to see women try to walk models for all time. They are the least “ For several years I have recommended “The use of ‘Castoria * is so universal and Portland 5: pm Albany.. .9: pm wearing the present fashion of gown. conscious of figures, and a girl of to-day its merits so well known that it seems a work 5our ‘ Castorio, ' and shall always continue to S the testimony of Dr. George E. I Albany. ...5: a m Portland 8:55am o so as it has invariably produced beneficial of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the There is a long swaddling of garments, Waller, of Martinsville, Va., in | would be horrified at the idea of throw results.” intelligent families who do not keep Castoria I'lilliiian Buffet Sleepers, like the wrappings of a mummy, with reference to Ayer’s Pills. I)r. J. T. | within easy reach.” E dwin F. P ardki , M. D., C arlos M artyn , D.D., just a feeble wriggle at the top and bot ing lier arms out to their full length or Teller, of Chittenango, N. Y., says : — “ The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave., * Tourist Sleeping Cars, New York City. tom of the thing. There is no more springing in yard wide steps in her New York City. “Ayer’s Pills are highly appreciated. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. For accommodation of second class passen “give” or willowy, gliding movement to game on the lawn like her forerunner They* are perfect in form and coating, gers attached to express trains and their effects are all that the most the waist of the ordinary corseted girl in marble. Her movements arc in a WEST SIDE DIVISION T he C entaur C ompany , 77 M urray S treet , N ew Y ork . careful physician could desire. They than there is to the body of a ■wooden circle bounded by the diameter of lier Between Portland and Corvallis. have supplemented all the pills former tobacco sign. The moment girls and hips. ly popular here, and I think it must bo Mail Train Daily, except Sunday. long before any other can be made that women are educated to see that this LEAVE ARRIVE She may move her arms as far as will at all compare with them. Thoso woodeny, crippled body is not beautiful Portland 7:30 a in McMinn' 10:10 am who buy Ayer’s Pills get full value.” they will extend, with her elbows McMinn’ liirioam Corvallis. 12:10 pm or artistic, then and not till then “ I regard Ayer ’ s Pills as one of tho Corvallis 12:55 pin McMinn' 2:5Hpm will they let their bodies have nat sticking toher ribs, but that is a ges most reliable general remedies of our McMinn' 2:5(1 pm Portland . 5-30 p m ural play. Most women will tell you ture reserved for extremities. Her times. They have been in use in my At Albany and Corvallis connect with family for various affections requiring a they need corsets to hold them up. Na step never falls outside the circle of her trains of Oregon Pacific' purgative medicine, ami have given un ture furnished them with a very strong hips. Indeed if she were bandaged Express Train Daily, except Sunday. varying satisfaction. We have found set of muscles around the front of the from the waist to’the knees she could them an excellent remedy for colds and LEAVE. ARRIVE. light fevers.” — W. It. Woodson, Fort waist and stomach for them to hold them Portland. 4:10pm McMnn .. 7.25pm walk almost as well as she does ordina Worth, Texas. McMinn ’ . . 5:45 am Portland. 8:20 am selves up with. They have weakened “I prescribe Ayer’s Pills in my prac these splendid muscles by corset wear rily. And so we have to hear the dic tice, and find them excellent. I urge ing, but any woman who has grit enough tum of learned observers that a woman their general use in families.” — John can yet overcome this weakness and cannot throw, she cannot kick or run W. Brown, M. D., Oceana, W. Va. EAST AND SOUTH. learn to hold herself erect without being with grace or effect. I For tickets and full information regard boarded up. As to the awful, dragging ing rates, maps. etc., call on the Company’s She can’t throw a ball, forsooth, be Ely'» Cream Balm it not a liquid, »nuff or powder. Applied into the nontrilc it it I agent at McMinnville dress skirts, the suggestion of Frances cause her shoulders are not as square quickly absorbed. It cirante» the nead, allay» inflammation, heal» — PREPARED BY IR KOEHLER, E. P. ROGERS, Willard is a good one, that every woman as those of her brother. She cannot % || a the »ore». Sold by druggut» or »ent by mail on receipt of price. Manager. Asst. G F. P Agt shall shorten the length of her walking Dr. J. C. Ayer Sc Co., Lowell, Mass dress to the ankles. She can wear such kick a foot ball, thougli I should like Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. a gown without attracting unpleasant to know why she should not excel in attention, particularly if she is neat and kicking, as her hips are much wider THE YAQUINA ROUTE. —LIQUOR HABIT—In careful about her feet. A foot need not and stronger in proportion than a DRUNKENNESS all the World there in but one cure, Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. even be small if it is well shaped and man’s. It may not seem essential that can l>e Riven in a cup of tea or coffee without neatly shod. The women who wrjte she should be a kicker; but the fact is the It knowledge of tho person taking it, effecting a and permanent cure, whether the patient is a about fashions cannot help much, for she cannot be thoroughly graceful speedy moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousand« of drunkards have been cured who have taken tho they are expected to write to please the Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowl carriage women. The reform must, be without learning to kick. She needs edge, and today believe they quit drinking of their T. 3E. Xïog-g-, Receiver. free will. No harmful effect results from its gin with the brave, strong ladies whose that strength, that propulsion from hip own administration. Cures guaranteed. Send for cir and knee which forwards the ball, to —ANI'— cular and full particulars. Address in confidence, privilege it is to earn their own living, and whose lot it is to go outdoors in all lend buoyancy to walk and dancing. G olden S peoihc C o ., 185 Race Street, Cincinnati. O. weathers. One last word. Kicking is the exercise At Ashland, Pa., is a coal mine with a of all others which gives strength and woman superintendent, Mrs. Frances mobility to the organs on whose good Woodbridge. • 225 Miles Shorter—20 B ioiifn I chu condition all her health and happiness time tlmii by any other route. Rev. Mr. Isham, pastor of Grace depends through life. Methodist church in Lincoln, Neb., says If there is anything in particular ■ ^First class through passenger and freight that the present activity among the that girls ought to be allowed or set to line from Portland and all points in the Wil lainette valley to and from Fan Fiancbco. feminine sex means the “removal of the do it is to propel weights like wheelbar grave clothes which have bound woman rows, to run to kick vigorously to de Time Schedule (excel t Sunday«). hand and foot through the centuries.” termine blood and nerve force to the LeavcAlbanyl?:2o pnijLeave Vauuina 7 am The men who do not want women to great muscles of the loins and alxlomen •• 'orvalis 1:03 pm CorvalklO :35 am Arr’vYaquina4 :35 pm, ArrivAlbnnyll :13am work in what they call “men's occupa which give out under the strain just O. & (' trains connect at Albany and Cor tions” ought to take the contract of sup vallis. porting all the women without work. when a woman ought to enjoy the full above trains connect atYAQriNA with ness of her life. We train our gilrs as It Is IB-LXild.in.g' Vp. the The Women would probably submit to it. Oregon Developenient Co's. Line of Steam ships between Yaquiiia and San Francisco. Women are the pillars of the Meth if they were never to lie called on for N. B.—Pas^ongors from Portland and all Wil- Boon Lots will be scarce and Command a Higher Trice. odist church. It was a woman who stress or work as long as they live. amette Valley Points can make close connec HAVE YOU TKIED THE tion with the* trains of the Y aqvina ItorTB at It is abject cruelty to turn a girl i started the movement that founded the or Corvallis, and if destined to San church, yet in the ecumenical council of from easy, ]>ettcd maidenhood fo house S B HEADACHE CURE ? Ì E-CL37- IT©"w Befoio Too I-iSte. Albany Francisco, slionld arrange io arrive at Yaqnina Methodists,from all over the world, in keeping and cares of a family. She the evening before date of sailing. If you have not, you have doubtless sick which the woman question was dis may learn the routine very quickly, ened yourself unnecessarily many limes by Price Ranges $50 up. For full particulars apply to Sailing Hates. taking pills for the blood, kidneys and con cussed. not(a woman delegate was pres The Steamer Willamette Valley will sail J. I. KNIGHT A CO., THE INVESTMENT CO., but she cannot teach her muscles to do stipation. ent and not a woman was asked to FROM KAN FRANCO« O FROM YAQUINA. 49 Stark St, Portland, Or. As a regulator of the blood it beats sarsa- November 3tli November 8th speak. I wonder how much longer easily and without straiu what they parila, Beal Estate Agents, McMinnville. F. BARNEKOFF A CO.. if taken in half teaspoonful doses. I’Uh ” Bth McMinnville Flouring MiUe. women in the churches will stand this have not l>een used to do from child “ 23th “ 28th GUARANTEED BY ROGERS BROS. hood. sort of thing? December 2th December (>th Passenger and freight ratea always the low Margaret Kiiight invented the machine Headquarters for New and Second-Hand eat. For infoi mation, apply to By all odds, the most beautiful dress for the making of the paper bags with (’. C. HOGUE. re-enforced bottom, now in such common fabrics of tlic season are those prepared j Gen'l. Frt. A l‘as«. Agt., Oregon Pacific IL Co., CorvaDis, Oregon. use. for the street. It fairly make one hap B WEBSTER Including fine Linen and Carbon papers, Ribbons,etc. General agent for Gen’l. Frt. A P. ifh . j W New York has two skillful and suc py to see the rough cheviots and tweed j Agt., Oregon l’evelopniri.» (> Montgomery Street San Francisco, O cessful girl jeiwelers,,Emma and Minnie of North Britain clothed with dyes that Schultze, who work in their father’s es approaeli the splendor of cashmere. | tablishment. Tlie vigor of Scotland appears in them, > E liza A rchard C onner . mingled with tlie fire of the south. from Terminai or Inferior Points the These textures, so thick and warm and FORTUNE FOR A MISSING HEIR. (Three thousand copies from one original.) at the same time soft and clinging, are A Scion of n Southern Family Who Was RACINE AUTOMATIC STEEL COPYING RESS. tlie perfection of winter fabrics. Their 1 Cast Off for Wedding a Foor Girl. COOK’S ^.■CTTC^C^.TIC: POSTAL SCALE, A romantic story of the disinherited colors, yet low toned and harmonious; I (Tells you instantly amount of postage required for any mailable package.) scion of one of the most aristocratic of an artist’s brush seems to have laid I M c M innville , - O regon . South Carolina families, which contains them on. The salesmen call them i the elements offthe popular tale of fiction, “mixed effects.” They have, for the | Notice of Final Settlement. with the thread;'lost in San Francisco, has Send for Catalogue. T71. "VU . LRE'Z'lSrOXjZDS, is the Line to Take most part, grounds in stripes, or broken just come to lirfit. 29 Stark Street, Portland, Oregon, The I jccs of South Carolina trace their spaces, of natural brown or gray,(which NOTICE is hereby given that the under ancestry back for a couple of centuries. being of the same tone, that is to say, signed as executrix of the estate of W II It Is the DINING CAR ROUTE. It runs One of theirrgreat-grandfathers planted his Bingham, deceased, has filed her final ac without contrast of light and dark, | Through VESTIBULED TRAINS cotton seed and tobacco with the pioneers count in said estate in the county court of Every Day in lhe Year to of the Carolinas. Each generation added make artistic background for narrow Yamhill county, Oregon, and‘said court to the family possessions, until thirty years lines of pure color, and flaky dots of has set December 8, 1891. at the hour of 10 ago the possessions of the I5ee estate ex many hues, which ail combine into an o’clock in the forenoon of said (lay at the county court room at McMinnville, Yam tended for miles on either side of the old <No Change of Cars) family manor house and the planter count agreeable color 'composition. Tlie way hill county, Oregon, as the time ami place ed his slaves with three ciphers. Then the these grounds are keyed in hue to or of hearing said final account Composed of IHMMl CARS Therefore, all persons interested in said war came. The Lee gold was contributed ange, or to red, or to whatever colors (unsurpassed) estate arc hereby notified and required to generously and the Lee blood flowed freely are spread over them, so that instead of! appear at said time and place and show in the cause of t he Confederacy. PlLIJAIIhR AWIX« MOM SLEEPERS cause, if any there be. whv said estate be When the end came the Lee% though being crude they are hot and glowing, not finally settled and said executrix dis (Of Latest Equipment, > their magnificent estate had been sadly di makes one take heart to believe that we i charged. TOI RIST SLEEI’W« CARS Dated this 4th day of Novemlicr, 1891. minished, found themselves still rich, but, moderns are not, after all quite color Best that can be constructed and in MARIA BINGHAM crushed by the failure of the cause for which Rcoommodations art for hol Executrix of Said Estate, which they had sacrificed so much, they blind. If any fault is to be found with ' ders of First or Second-cpiss Tick retired to their country home and lived in these material it is that there are too i Ilamsey <& Fenton, att’ys for estate. ets. and the exclusiveness of the little world en many eccentric figures, zigzags and Pension. Postal. Land and Indian Dep-i ELEGANT HAV (’■■ACHES. compassed by the boundaries of their lightning effects, but tlie variety is j plantation. The years went on, and D. redation Claims. A Continuous Line connecting with all great and these can lx 1 avoided. McCord I.iee, the eldest son and the hope lines, afTordiug direct and unin ERY soon after Rose Budd was really out the summer time came, and she DROVE OFF TO THAT PICNIC. thought of the And her mother put up her lorgnette, days when she used to romp and moaned with despair, “Sir Wil through the loughby, what can we do with the Amer meadows and to ican girl?” And Sir Willoughby, with disappoint climb about the rocks, and when ment on his face and a monocle in his she used to take eye, looked after the ponies as they raced her early morn down the road, and answered, “You ing rides at that might as well give her what she wants, fashionable paradise known as Newport. for, by jove, you know, she’ll get it any I sabel A. M allon . But everything was different now. She how.” was no longer the pretty girl inher cotton Women’s Wages and Their Eating. frock, and with her hair in long thick And now they are trying to make out braids coming from out her broadbrim that the cause of low wages among hat. Oh, dear, no; she still climbed the woman workers is that they eat less rocks, but it was in the evening under than men and are content to go on eat the escort of a young man who belonged ing less. If they ate more their wages to our set, and who rather liked taking would be raised. Is not the inverse the little Budd girl out because she proposition the more probable? If their “didn't talk and she didn't ask a fellow wages were raised would they not eat to talk.” Pretty Rose was still romantic euough more? The real reason of the injustice to stand there on the rocks and look at constantly met with by self supporting the moon and wonder. It’s true that women lies deeper than that. Indeed she still went to gay picnics in cotton there is no one reason for it. But the gowns, but then they were cotton gowns women themselves have the matter that Worth had made, and it was known largely in their own hands. * Let them to be very bad form to wear anything assert themselves as n class rather than but cotton when one was young and as individuals and see how quickly their condition will improve. one's position in society assured. The accusation that women are natu It is true that she still rode out early in the morning, but it was because her ral snobs is scarcely just; their Bnobbery English cousin did it, because she rode is a matter of education. People have so well, and because her habit fitted her so long confused the terms, eqnal and so perfectly. From a social standpoint identical, and the young woman Rose was being educated. She spoke has for so many generations been impressed with her duty to “make one evening to a pleasant woman who happened to be near her in a crowd, and a lady of herself” that it is not surpris her mother said: “Never, never, Rose, ing that women are slow about boldly let me see you speak to that woman and bravely declaring themselves work again. She was idiot enough to abso ers. Most of them are not ashamed to lutely fall in love with a man who died, work, but they object to being classed. and though she's quite past thirty her They expect that inevitable man to come along and rescue them from lives of toil. mother still permits her to mourn for him They regard their work as merely tem and to say that she will never marry!” Somehow Rose didn't quite understand porary. Suppose they do marry and marry well. Some other woman steps this, and she into the vacant position and she suffers asked her in the low wages paid her liecause the mother: “ Is other woman and the other women were love bad form? too selfish or too indifferent to help her Is faithfulness to demand more. in bad taste?” There are about 1,800,000 women And her workers in the United States. In New wordly wise York city alone there are 200,000. Of moth or an these less than 5,000 belong to labor or swered, look ganizations. Of the 5,000 an overwhelm ing into the ing majority are foreign born. The clear blue eyes Typewriters and Stenographers’ union is of the girl, exclusively American, but it is very "Love? Yes, small. Tho presumption is that the why, of course, majority of typewriters would prefer to my dear, you she still climbed THE good wages the possibility of captivating must love your rocks . their employers. R. L. C. father and me, and when you marry you must love your husband.” “Yes,” The Furs of tlic Season. said Rose, “but oughtn't I to love Seal and mink are to be the fashion my husband before I marry him? able furs this winter. Seal as a matter Oughtn’t I know that he loves of course and mink as a matter of re me and wants to make me his vival. This really beautiful fur has not wife?” “Certainly not,” responded her deserved the obscurity in which it has mother in a very indignant tone. “I’ve so long rested. If you have yonr grand always regretted, Rose, that you were mother’s immense muff, cape or boa not sent abroad to school. You have packed away in the garret, get them out probably got all those ridiculous Ameri and have them made over for yourself. can notions about loving your husband The probability is that they are some and being true to him. My dear, all what faded, but if the skins were really that society asks is that you shall ap good the furrier can renew them at pear to like him, and, well, for my own small cost. Astrakhan and fox are still part, I’ve always thought it lietter form stylish, but otter and beaver are going to be polite to one's husband when one’s out. They were too easily imitated. alone with him, for, after all, even with The dry goods steres have well nigh a husband, that old saying of St. Fran ruined the fur trade. They have forced cis de Sales is very wise, and ‘Sugar does the furriers to make up and sell inferior catch more flies than vinegar.’ ” goods, which otherwise intelligent peo Rose pondered over this a good bit. ple prefer to buy because “it looks quite but there was a picnic on hand, and as well,” until now it is hard to tell when one is eighteen and beautiful one when you are getting what you pay for. doesn't philosophize very long. Rose There Had Been a Revolution. was to drive her own trap, In a recent issue of a well known and when she French paper appears the following put on her big notice: leghorn hat “M. Blank begs to state that he was with the Buffering from mental excitement when wreath of roses he published an advertisement stating about it she that he would not be responsible for thought of debts contracted by his wife, who had somebody who left his house. He retracts this state had sent her a ment; his wife never left his house and bunch of roses, he has absolutely no complaint to make and when she against her.” clasped the lit- The imagination gloats over the do of the family, grew to manhood. There tle silver mestic revolution which finally resulted was a great future intended for the band- buckle that in the publication of that notice. What some boy, and money was spent lavishly in held her waist ribbon in place she took a last chapter of a novel! What a hero, his education. a real rose from a jar and stuck it in and above all, what a heroine! All went well until be met and loved pretty Gretchen Flemming, a young Ger her belt; and then she looked in tho man maiden of t he neighborhood, who had looking glass and blushed at her own re A Descendant of Pocahontas. flection and wondered why her mother Mrs. Theresa J. Freeman, prominent nothing but her beauty and a warm heart was so severe about love. Waiting for among the literary ladies of Missouri to exchange for the patrician name and wealth of her suitor. Young McCord told her were the prettiest pair of ponies in and a leader in preparing tho state's lit his father of his attachment for the lowly Newport, and they deserved their names. erary exhibit for the World’s fair of child of the people, and there was a scene. Silk and Satin, for they were so glossy. 1893, is a native of Paris, Ky., and sev The elder Lee stormed, but to no purpose. Their little mistress fed them with lumps enth in descent from Pocahontas, the The son was obstinate and refused to yield of sugar, and a big, handsome man held Indian princess of history, song and ro to family prejudice. There were stolen the tiny basket wherein the sweets were, mance. She was the second daughter of meetings and delicious rambles for months and he said to her as they were trying to Thomas and Clara Morris Eldridge, of until McCord, finding he could never gain And the very last lump of sugar, “You Virginia, who not only cultivated her his father’s consent, boldly married the in the little village church. The mes will drive me over to the picnic, won't tastes and talents from childhood, but girl alliance was the last straw to the family you?” And Rose, because she was a bit secured for her a good academic train pride of the Lees. The son was disin coquettish, looked up at him and asked, ing. herited by his father, and the doors of his "Are you sure you want to go?” At the age of seventeen »lie married childhood home were closed upon him for Then before he had time to tell her W. T. Freeman, a wealthy planter and ever. Young Lee determined to make a start how much it would mean to'liiin the lawyer of Louisiana, and after living in stately dowager approached, bringing that state eight years was left a widow in tho world for himself, and, with his with her such a man! He looked as if with two son3. These have since grown young wife, came to San Francisco. That was twelve years ago. Finely educated, he had been made of parchment, and as but totally unsuited to the ordinary ways if they had forgotten the bones in his of gaining a livelihood, the struggle for ex face because his cheeks hung down so. istence was hard. Then domestic troubles He wore a wig and had bad, little, keen began, and the home of the young couple eyes that looked up from a low fore was far from happy. Four years ago a separation was agreed upon, Mrs. Lee re head and that meant determination. turning to Germany, where she soon after He spoke and Rose shuddered. He put died. out his hands aud she felt as if a toad During all of these years nut a word had had touched her, and her mother said, passed between the estranged son and any "Rose, my darling, I want to present to member of his family. The father kept you Sir Willoughby de Vere, who thinks well his word, and the son was too proud that you are the only American girl that to seek a reconciliation. he has seen whom he really considers After the separation from his wife Lee disappeared, leaving no clew by which his absolutely good form.” future could lie traced. A few days ago a What Rose said was probably very lady of this city, who has been intimate bad manners; and there was a flush with the family since her childhood, re in her cheeks that made you think, when ceived a letter from the missing man’s you looked at lier eyes, that the red, brother in South Carolina stating that the white and blue of American independ father and mother had died, leaving the ence lived in her heart and spoke estate to the children, and asking that the through her lips, but she announced, I lady should make every effort to ascertain I the wherabouts of D. McCord Lee.—San “In that case wouldn't it be wiser for Francisco Chronicle. the gentleman from England to take MRS. T. J. FREEMAN. some girl that isn’t quite as good form ODDS AND ENDS. and train her in the way she should go?” old enough to join the National Associ Sir Willoughby looked as only such a ation of Sons of the Revolution, as their Chicago will build a home for working man could look when an American girl father was a descendant of Captain John girls. had the impudence to do anything more Freeman, who fought under Washing There is nothing for which a man has to than adore him. He murmured some ton's immediate command. so dear as he does for the privilege of Besides much miscellaneous writing, pay thing about “Miss Budd being so witty being stingy. Mrs. Freeman has written and published and so charming, and so seldom one He is the worst enemy of a woman’s found a woman who was so bright, and, “Silver Lake, or Belle of Bayou Luie” reputation who seeks to defend it when he and “ Huntington, or Scenes from Real by jove, a fellow wants an American h:is not the right. wife to amuse him, and wouldn't Miss Life.” She originated tho Writers’club “Trawl deep while sluggards sleep, and exhibit of books at the St. Louis expo Budd cut a dash in the prince's set when you’ll have fish to sell and keep,” is the sition, and will aid in doing the same Monhegan version of an old proverb. she went over there, and really he didn’t mind a little chaffing,” and Miss Rose work for the state at Chicago. She is a In cooking vegetables always remember Budd, who'd only seen seventeen devoted member of the Episcopal church that boiling water evaporates rapidly on and an active church worker, having as the approach of a storm or when it is rain Fourths of July said: “Yes, I am like the prince, very. I carry around my sisted in building St. Peter’s church in ing. Serpentine striped materials are made up own checks with me, and one is a check Paris, Ky., and St. John's church in to bad manners by never pretending to Springfield, Mo. Personally she is grace so as to bring them wound around the ful and attractive, and has many de body in a zigzag, snaky manner which is see them." rather startling. And Rose Budd drove off to that pic- voted friends. SHASTA LINE. “Safe and Certain" I s a & rrh V C oloread HAY-FEVER Ayer’s Pills, Through Tickets to all Points s* A L j| 3UL ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. OUC OREGON DEVELOPMEN COM PANY'S STEAMSHIP LINE. Lots in the Oak Park A-DDITIOK ARE SELLING FAST! IRA A. MILLER TYPE-WRITERS and TYPE-WRITER SUPPLIES THE SMITH PREMIER TYPE-WRITER EDISON'S MTM I < )G HA Irl 1 Northern Pacific Railroad Victor S1 5 Tyx>e-YVriter. To all Points East & South ST. PAUL AND CHICAGO terrupted service. Pullman Slwpcr reservations ran !><■ *çcur ed in ad vifhce through nuy agent of the road LAW OFFICES o:-' Tlie winter eL evicts and camel's hair are in simple colors mixed with white UNDER TIIE DIRECTION OF in the weaving, and are plain or in broken figures of self color. These j white mixtures are more becoming (Editor A’ Prop. San Francisco Examiner.) I JOHN WEDDERBURX, than dark solid colors. They run Manager. through shades enough from greenish 618 F Street. Northwest. gray to red to satisfy the most exacting ' WASHINGTON. D. C. complexion. The prices for the forty-j six width run from $1.50 to $2.50 and I Will practice in tlie Supreme Conrt of the United States, the Court of Claim», the sev $:>. A very good one may be.hail for eral Courts of the District of Colombia, be tlie first price, and .though the more fore Committees of Congress, and the Ex ecutive Departments. expensive ones will be richer, it is well We obtain Pensionsand Patents, Indian enough for persons with small pocket- Isicks to reiuemtier that additional ex Depredation Claims and all classes of Land Claims, Mining, Pre-emption and pense in quality will not give one iota Homestead Cases Prosecuted lieforo the ’ more style. For an ideal street gown General Land Office, Department of the In take of loosely woven cheviot, or cam terior and the Supreme Court. els hair, seven yards; of velvet, a yard and a quarter; of lining silk, three MRS. GRAHAM’S yards; of taft'eta silk for underskirt, eigl’.t yards. Choose a dressmaker anti whose specialty is fitting, or else ehoon a tailor, fertile style of this gown de pends entirely on its cut. !<et her make for tlie bodice a jacket leaching nearly half-way to the knees, fitted in front Is not a cosmetic in the sense in which term is popularly used, but perman without darts by means of the under that ently beautifies. It creates a smooth, soft, arm seam, falling ojien down tlie front, clear velvety skin, ami by daily use gradu with rounded corners, like a man’s ally makes the complexion several shades whiter. It is a constant protection from cutaway eoat. It may have revers and the effects of sun and wind and prevents one button and button hole, though sun burn and freckles ami blackheads will never come when you use it. It cleanses there is more beauty when the outline the face far better than soap and water, falls in a straight line from the neck. nourishes and builds up the skin tissues : thus prevents the formation of wrin The shoulder and under arm seams are and kles. It gives the freshness, clearness and sewed over onto the back in the welt. smoothness of skin that yon bail when a EXAMINER BUREAU OF CLAIMS, Cucumber Elder Flower Cream T Kidney Disease —is the cause of no end of suf fering. A safe and certain remedy is DR. HENLEY’S Oregon Kidney Tea. : 5 It can do you no harm. It may do you much good. Here is the testi mony of one sufferer who has been made a “ a new man.” I bad been troubled many years with disease of the kidneys when kind Providence sent Dr. Henley with the Oregon Kidney Tea to my hotel. It had an almost miracu lous effect and in a few days I was a new man. G. A. TUPPER, Proprietor Occidental Hotel, Santa Rosa, Cal. I It has cured thousands; [ why not you ? To-mor- , row may be too late. Your druggist will tell you about it. Ask him. iro,n M Englund ’1 end Europe can be pint btc-vd at any liulcet office of this conmanv. Full information »•oi:< iTiiing rates, time of trains, routes rod oi I mt details furtiisliad on application to anV uyent. or A D < HAKLTON. Asst Gt nera I Passenger A g» nt General Office <»r tlie Company, N«», 1U1 First St., C«*r. Wallington, l’ortand, <>». Tlirmidi lllHHirll Tit LN To ARE YOU GOING EAST! I If bo be sure and call for your tickets via the fap li -THE- Ever since the establishment of the first paper on the bay of San Francisco, which we believe was 1 the “Alla,” removed from Monterey in 1849; the | inhabitants of the Coast generally have been inter ested in the news from San Francisco. The “Alta,” i like many other pioneers of’49,has succumbed to the inevitable and gone over to the great majority, and, like other pioneers, has been succeeded by ! younger generations. The “Examiner” has taken perhaps Cie most prominent place in the j newspaper field cf late years, and its Weekly I edition is very gcnerallj’ taken by those who | want an interesting and reliable paper published at “The Day.” Everyone i.i familiar with I the Premium Offers made by Mr. Hearst, the | ’‘liraminer’s” enterprising publisher, and it is only necessary to say that this year the aggregate value of the premiums—of which there are 5,003— I is $135,033, which are distributed among all the I subscribers to the paper. In addition to these pre miums, which range in value from .'3 cents to | $7,503, every subscriber receives ere cf the four i great premium pictures, which wi'l l>e mailed to j him in a tube direct from the “ Examiner” office ' as soon as the subscription is received: little girl. Every lady, old or young ought to use it, as it gives a more youthful ap pearance to any lady, and that permanent ly. It contains no acid, powder or alkali, and is as harmless as dew ami as nourish ing as dew to the flower. PRICE $1 00. at all druggists ami hair dressers or at Airs. Gervaise Graham’s establishment. 103 Post St., San Francisco, where she treats ladies for all blomlshes of the face or figure. La dies at a distance treated by letter Send stamp for her little book “How to be Beau tiful?’ Sample BottlO mailed free to any la dy on receipt of 10 cents in staimw to pay for postage and packing. Lady «agents Each of these pictures js 21x2 > inches, and they wanted. are elegantly reproduced in lac simile, showing MRS. GRAHAM’S every tint and color of the great originals, either ; one cf which could not be purchased 1. ;-fxoc,x;o. . I )KA 1 BLEACH, Cures the worst eases of freckles, sun burn, sallowness, moth-patebes. pimples ami a’l skin blemishes. PRICE, $1.50, Harmless and effective. No samples can l>e sent Lady agents wanted. The Druggist in this town who first I orders a bill of niy preparations will have his name added to tins advertisement My preparations are for sale by whole sale druggists in Chicago and every city west of there. "Women anl Cillircn First,” ty C. Raji. E;_. "Clirist Leaving the Prstorinm," tv Gustave Lc.' Each cf these pictures is reproduced i i ph j gravure, size 21x28, and eminently fitted lu. Iran: ing, aud will adorn the wall;of the most rc^ne home. y The subscription price of the “Weekly TV.-tru:- . ner ” is $1.74), and subscriptions may be sent eiUur / direct to W. R. Hearst, Publisher, San Francisco, through the Ixx'al Ageut < t the ”J.xiniif. r” uii the PustiUdStcr. CSS Hi» positively the shortest and Ann. line to Chicago and the «■ast and aonth and the only sleeping and dining car through Scientifically treated bv an auristof world ioe to ITS (ATSES AND (I KE! wide reputation. Deafness eradicated aim eni¡redv cured of 10 to 30 years’ standing, after all other treatments have failed. IIow 1 lie difficulty is reached an<l the cause r<- inove<l fully explained in circulars with af- tidavits and testimonials of cures, mailed free D r . A FONTAINE. 9-21 91 Tacoma, Wash. t*maba, Kan... City, anti alt Ml.aoarl Itlv.r Point. Ita luaguiticeut steel traçk, unaurp»M«<1 trajn tertIce *h4,^)é»aht dining and Heaping Cara haa honestly earned for it tlie dtle of Phe JRoyal Koute ay imi tate .UuLwne can surpass it O.V C/I- DEN VE i-' " The Retreat from Moscow,” iy HeissoElcr. " The Roman Chariot Race," by A. Wagner. FACE Mmy. ET FAUL. ST. LOUIS, AND ALL POINTS r'ast. North ?? South — A.T----- OK., GEO. S. TAYLOR’ Ticket Agt Corner First and Oak Sts.