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Highest of all ia Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Got*: Report Powder BEAR GOVERNMENT. THE WAY OLD MRS. BRJ1N KEPT HEP NOISY CHILDREN QUIET. TIM S1MCS7 Mother Bear Cuffed the Bar* •# the Utile Oon ud Shook the CaW Bepeatedlj Reea.M the T oomgMen m e a led and Played. "I once taw a the bear art toward ter euba ja~t m I've seen women act toward their children/* said as old Zoyalaock bee hunter la»t week. "Late one August I lined a lot of wild bees to a big beech tree two mile* back in the woods on Eik mocn tain. I located the beet in a hollow part of the trunk, far up toward the top. and when I went to mark toe tree so that do one else would claim it i noticed that a bear had gone up and down the tree several lime* Mtlr a little ^ bile before. "There was a lot of luce green Uet u tarl •t the butt, and looking up 1 saw tnat * T*-ar bail been clawing and biting to g*» in the holiow where the Looey ,ay. I dids t want to cut the tree for two or three week*, a- the bees were gathering honey from the wild Cowers of late auturner, and, for fear that the tear might dig into the tree and •tea! tne honey before I got ready to chop the tree down, I decided to see if 1 could a : catch the hear at it that nig&l and shoot it in the act. "The next night I climbed the hemlock, beard the brush crack at a distance, beard •ometbixag that Sounded like the whining of a cub, followed by a low growl, and efcrytLing was as still in the woods as it had been The l*-ar didn't make its appearance at the bee tree that night, and j ; s | little after daylight 1 j •topped at the Loose of an old bear hunter an«i t«>id him of my experience in the wt*.*!*, "The old man chuckled over my lack of i know ledge concerning the habit* of beare, for he wv through it all at ouce. and then he told me that the cracking I Lad bean! I was caused by a bear s feet, and that a ' bear always makes three or four eircuiP* around a bee tree in the night before it ap proache* it. Tne bear 1 had Lean! tramp ing on the dead limb*, the old hunter said, had run across my track while it was mak j ing the first circuit, and that it had made it*elf scarce mighty quick after it Lad got ■cent of mj booia 'And I 11 bat ad . that it was a she Dear with one or twe cubs,* he abided. "Then he told rue to take a couple oi pieces of board with me when I went after the bear the next time. 'From the time you strike the woods till you get to the tree/ he said, keep your boots on the board* by taking one up from behind you and placing it in front of you ail the way D"H t let your boots touch the ground and when you reach the tree strap the boards and boot* to your back aud take them up.' "That night 1 followed the old ijear i hunter's directions to the letter. A little i af'.er n..dn:ght 1 heard the brush cracking around .n a circle, for the night was cairn ' and clear and no wind rustled the leaves. The sound of tracking came nearer and nearer, and waen three circuits had been made by tne heavy steps 1 was rewarded for my long by seeing a she U-nr steal cautious!* toward 1 the bee tree. with two cubs tagging at h> heels. I "The old bear unified around the butt of \ the tree a couple <•: times, gazed at the top i for a moment, and then stock her claws in i the bark and started to climb. Tfct • iba began to whine and whimper before their the length of her up th mother had _ _ _____ ___ tree, and immediately *Le began to stop tbem by giving a low growl and looking j back at them. Hut the cu idn't stop their noise, and aii at once the old bear backed clown, gave each cub a good sbak ing. sat it up on its haunches, cuffed its earn, shojk her fist at it and told it to stay there till she came down. "The cub* were a* still an mice, and the old be.tr quickly climbed to the top of the trunk and began to tear at the wood with h'-r teeth. I had intended to shoot the bear in the tree, but when I saw that the one that was trying to steal my honey was a mother with two young ones to look after my heart failed me. I ru'ght have killed her easily with a charge of buck ■hot, but I was so deeply interested in her cute and her work that I made up my mind to let her live and watch her while she was doing her best to dig through the wood to where the honey lay. In the course of fifteen or twenty min utes the cubs became tired of sitting on their hind quarters, got down on all four* and started to play with one another. They rolled and capered in the unde brush, Z.J ii, lau/wL/e •SO**! *x.'l look up at their mother, a. though they were coaxing her to come down. The old bear flew into a rage over the way they were acting, and hurriedly hacking down she gave them another se vere shaking, scolded them, cuffed their ears and set them up on their haunches. Then sii»- climbed the tree once more, and for nearly an hour, while she worked like a leaver with tooth and claw to get at the honey, the cubs sat as still as didn't give vent to a -ingle whimper. Hy that time the old bear had tom through the wood to the honey, and when she bad eaten a lot of it she backed down with a pawful of honey for her young on The cube gobbled it greedily, and tne old bear soon climbed up and fetched down another pawful, which they ate quickly -Mi of a -udden the old bear started the cub* off in front of her. and in a moment the bear family was out of sight. The next night I chopped the tree down and »*•* ured the r»-st of the honey 1 gr>t a wasbtub full out of tLe hollow tree, and I wa-n t a bit sorry that I had let the bem and her cub have their fill of it for once 1 -Cor. New York Tribune. In*miilty of • Naughty IW»y. Johann Meyer, 11 years old, one of the wickedest boy*in Vienna, had beer, spanked many time* for running away. Finally, to enable him to gratify his desire to escape, late at night he stole the big door key. *a-v»-d the handle through, filed the ends a« sharp as a needle point, drew them through the skin of his waist and then hammered them together, and the key hung from hi* body like a ring from the no«e of a -avage. He was thus enabled by stand ing on a chair to open the door and leave the house whenever he like^I. This went on for week* until he got in a fight with otner bad boy* and was hit a heavy blow where the key waa. He wa* taken sen*e !* J * | »* hi a hospital, arid the doctors were un nbie to remove the key till they sawed it in twro The boy s life was in danger for sev eral days, but now it i* expected that he will live to be qtauked many tim e* more A Head latter. Health Officer- Coder the law. *i r . your family must remain in strict quarantine for thirty days Ha ter fa mil las-Do you expect to be abl* to enforce the law f Health Officer—Of course. "Well, you can't do it." •Why! ps and * My w ife » made an appointment to try nr. n dress thu afternoon/'-Detroit Tnb liue. A *>ENMl£SS PRINCESS. TW MTMfr n«ht la Wkirfti ******** m Austria BwnUy ImmI HtnrU. One of the peculiarities of royal prnc« » agtw is the practice of never carry atg about any money with them, and this leads thetr into all kinds of odd scrapes and adven ; ture*. The popular notion that their peck ; et® are generally full of gold and n>.-*.e» which they scatter with a Iav.sh hand is a fallacy, and in nine rain out of teo kings, , queens. fCippr.ev a» well as princes and prince*** of the blood, do Dot have a sun V v'b OTEPHASIE A\I> HiK MrGHTtR. gle cent in their pocket*. In the fir-t place, in their o»n country no one would ever dream of a-kiug them to pay for anything in ca*h or to refu-e credit. and. srcoodlt, they rely upv>ci the purges of their gentle men and L*die* in waiting to furni-b any chance gold piece that they may need, loo sequent It when, by any unusual hazard -hey fii*l ihrmsdvH without the at ten d anctf of tbe.r suit and alone they are gen orally peam/e-A. -Yo amusing illustration of this which happened recently on tne south slope of the Svtnmer.cg mountain, an Hour or two's distance from Vienna, is told by the Mar quise de F on tenor The widowed Crown Princess Stephanie aud her 13-year-old daughter K.izabeth had undertaken a mountain excursion together and either in tentionally or accidentally had become sep arated from the gentlemen and ladies m at tendance. Hungry and thirsty, tney stopped at a small inn and Lad asked for some re fresnment.s. when suddenly the crown prin cess remembered that -tie had nothing in her pocket wherewith to par Accordingly *he took the landlady into her confidence, informed her who she was and asked her if she would trust her It is be regretted that j : , j i i ' 1 bad. as she claimed, "been there before.** She • tired and Lust covered lady and ch-ld w-r* irebdu rffseta t t —re * . with anything unless they pa*d for it in ad vance, even requesting them to relieve the iuu of the r presence :f they had no money Crown Princess Stepnanie lock the ma ter quietly enough, sensible of its ludicrous side, but tne little archduchess was infuri ated and protested with flashing eyes to the landlady, "Aber wir *md doch ebr iiche Leute." (Put I assure you we are holiest people, t In the same way the king of Denmark w as once apostrophized as h confidence man by a suspicious jeweler at H imburg and I , ---- r - \ J* i ^ao-tu that^ie had not sufficient money in i l ' : ' P' CK *' t lo W * r r ; -" trinket* t bought, he had shown someembarraa* aL,i As*e«i that they should lie sent to hotel. Print trr l' Jrrr > £ot hnanciaily strain j T - Utr batt.elielda just afu German war and w> of Wa.es and hi* led when vla ter the Franco pay *^rir hotci bill at Stslan by pawning <. 1 Teesda A Man ( < ome tin hjcaiity *atcu at the moot dc piete circumstantial evidence. rkrtesl of Munirr With the Tcuti f a I'rinteU Taimage vrmon. ic in August, IvC. a rnan named Coker was placed on trial in the criminal court of Henderson county. One of the principal witnesses against the defendant wa- Torn Fulton, and it was upon Lis evi dence that the conviction was held. lare Coker, a son of the defendant, on the even ing after the trial remarked to a young lady whom he met: "While my father is serving a term in the penitentiary Torn Fulton will lie .serving a term in hell/* On the night of the 10th of August, a few days after. Tom Fulton, while standing on hi* front gallery, was *hot ^ead by an un known as.sa.snin. The threat made by I^-e Voke, »« ,br y o«„« lady M to h» arr '"i " '"Z /T* 0 ' 1 piece* of newspaper which Lari been used as gun wadding. Coker was granted a change of venue to Canton. Vanzandt coun ty. Here two trials were given him, both resulting in mistrials. On the l»Jth of April of this year Coker was tried f >r the third time, and a decision was reached, fix ing the penalty at life Imprisonment. He was convicted solely upon circumstantial evidence. The pieces of paper found by the p^ved to be a copy of The Comanche Chief. The pieces of pa per found by the body and those found in Coker'* -hot pouch when place 1 together fit perfectly, and reading across a part of Talrnage * sermon was deciphered, which read as follows: "Who watched you last night* Who ba* been good to you ail your life* Metninks the g'sjdness of God would convert this whole audience to repentance." On the other side of the paper wa* an ad vertisement whir h rea#l evenly. This is the mo*t remarkable feature of the whole af fair—the words uttered by Dr. Ta.rnage -eerned to apply sodirectly to the murderer, whodivided the words by tearing the paper and u*ing a part for a gun wad, which was found be-ide his victim. Three sizes of shot were extricated from the body of the deceased, and three sizes of •hot were found in Coker** *hot pouch, which compared identically. The hstded barrel of Coker's gun was also examined, *nd it contained three sizes of shot, corn par ing witn the sh'A in the pouch and those taken from the dear] body. His trial was ►et and continued 10 times. The frighting McCook*. 1 he McCook family was well represented in the war of the rebellion, an l the mem bers were generally "bunched" as the "fighting McCook*." General Alexander McCook had a® one of his staff officers Ad jutant General Dan McCook, of Illinois. C/ther members«.f the f tmily were Captain Fdwm McCook, who ijeionge*! to l>/gan s regiment; Lieutenant Fklward McCorA. who was in the regular army. Major Anson G McCook, of the Second Ohio; Captain lle.iry McCo#>k. of Illinois, and Hheidon McCook, lieutenant in the nary Thej tMjtv themselves bravely and won the title "fighting McCook*'' where the battle ;agt-d fiercest. — Washington t?tar A Urate Mao. The man who ha* never needed to have any teeth pulled out is the loudeet in *d vising the eufferer to "briu^ up like a man aud have the thing out at once **— Exchange e : | : j j ; ; j | : | | i j i | . ' ! I i | j i | LOVE that loiters. » ; ; Yfcey wT/; bring t^etr hoarded kindnaa* Whw oar ear* are deaf to tow: Wv*» the t t'ses ware above Aac bewail the«r ;"rseit bUndaeua WhM we c*aaci! heed r u m Tfcey will **.'!» their shadow leara. A* each cvulJ p*y arrears Or at*: Large tne lie lag debt They most kactw we shall cm ermea SttskiBf la yo* *Ttat retreat; lifts cf life, h>«em sweet. Te: they keep them tor the grtra T h o u gh the grave has bat despair. And bat boi ow echoes wait All who knock a: that weird gala. Sin. they poor tnetr treasure there. Let th* snowy shaft aspire; We shad never read the lie; G net arrears the marble high. Ba: remorse can rear it higher. They will er ase when we are dead. W hca to love oar lip* are doak Then onr laggard friend* will .-vase And strew Cowers overhead. —Mrs. X. K Morange ia New York Advertiser AMADO. 1 had not seen Sawyer—"Cal, % as wc railed him—since we parted at Harvard upon commencement day, when, full of fervor and the class punch of *S1, we swore to keep one another in sx^ht Cal went home and into leather, and 1 to a de-k in Wall street. Now, five years later. 1 had almost run over my old college mate in my nightly mad rush for the L. 1 seized him by the arm and Iwre him along, postponing apologies until 1 had him packed into my little ap town ffxt and introduced to my wife, who wus the dearest woman on earth to me still, and who 1 knew could comfort and console the tall Californian as 1 could not. f r 1 had already discovered that Sawyer Lad c- me east in pursuit of the einige Weibhche. When dinner was over my wife slipped away to «*r* if the baby was really sleep ing as only such "bald headed tyrants'* can. leaving us unnecessary and irre sponsible m^n smoking and reminiacenc mg m my den of 5 by Suddenly a blow on the door startled Sawyer aim *st out of his chair. "His majesty wishes to cc me in," 1 said, rising and opening the door. •Wear a magnificent bruteT exclaim ed Sawyer. "Not 'brute/ if* y.,»u please. Cai, but my fneud. Amado, kindly shake hands with my old friend here and then com poM yourself. You know your are rather perva-ive in a room of this size." My mastiff gravely did as he was bid and then settled hun.r*elf at my side with a thud that made the things shake o& the table. "That's about the only uncivilised thing a> ut him." 1 -aid. laughing. He still remembers that his wild ancestors had to mak- tbrir bed in the wilderness and cm-..- : the tangle of vine and root under them." Sawyer, who was quite as much of an animal lover as myself, knelt down be side the dog. fairly running over his points of beauty and of breeding--*!is coat of delicate fawn silvery • flank and shoulder; his breadth of chest and strength of loin, the velvet blackness of his muzzle, the whiteness of his teeth, the clear brown of eyes, the pure, rich scarlet of his tongue, the black markings of the mouth and the sinewy power of his straight, wide paw*. "Where did you find snen a magnifi cent dog. you enviable fellow?** aniked Sawyer as he seated himself and re lighted his cigar. "Dear old chum! Lie is getting pas sive and rheumatic. I've owned him now three years, and I've nev^r yet regretted the small fortune 1 had to pay to get him from the former owner—a person wholly unworthy to possess even a pug. But it is for better reasons than points or pedigree that he is beloved next to the boy, and even the boy can't put his nose out of joint. He was the dens ex machina that gave me my w;f*r." "Ah! That sounds interesting," said Sawyer. "Tell me the whole story. I've confided to you my plight, and you won't find a better listener." 1 had never before Mt the least in clination to babble of rny own affairs, pant or present, but if 1 could *«xitheand distract the mind of this old classmate that was plainly my duty. "Very well, then, here goes for it. You will find it a# mild as a homoeopathic pellet, but it was interesting enough to me." 1 said this with well affected indifference, but was really eager to begin. "Margaret—my wife — and 1 had grown up together in a little town in southern Ohio. You know the kind p**r haps—everything pastoral and religious, all church and no chaperons—where the boys and girls were allowed the ut most liberty, a liberty, it must be ad raitted. they did not abuse, but used arid enjoyed with a sort of sturdy sanity and self respect impossible in this sophisti cated, crowded city of conventionalities, We—she and 1—llred side by side and held long and confidential conversations over the «tiff. green ware fence that sep arated our grape arbor from her bed of tea roses. 1 saved the last sweet, frosty bunch for her. and at the first chill hint of winter helped her cover her rose* with straw, making their tall stalk* in to queer, angular scarecrow* for Jack Frost's terrifying. "My mother was a New Englander, and the thir«t for knowledge of book* and men that smoldered in her breast flamed into power for her only son. and so 1 was sent to Harvard. While Htili a freshman 1 came to regard my native town as the vanishing point in the p»-r spective of an inglorious past. With what a lofty smile 1 should have received the hint that the dark eyed little girl whom 1 had left to tie her t<a les alone might one day amply avenge ah my slights! "1 concealed my boyish delight in life tp ler the most pronounced and classic lndifferentism.' and 1 wonder even now how ever my mother could put up writ me. My old friend* laughed at my airs and my reformed accent, secretly dislik ing and envying me. I naturally found it much pleasanter to spend my vaca tions in the soothing atmosphere bf be in** like myself, after a brief visit to my mother. •'During these occasions I saw Mar garet only on^re or twice, and alwsvs carried away the disturbing impression that she w%«- in no war impressed either by my superior manners or talent*. This was slightly annoying, a* »he was far and away prettier than any girl of my acquaintance, evt or west. To be sur*-, I had made her blush—such an **xqtiisiie red—but it was with vexation Upon my first departure we ha/) written one another quite regularly, hut about the middle of my first year 1 receive#! a let i i r*T from her. In which sba professed humbly to believe that her western ways were bill a burden to such an exalted being as 1 had lecvme—and wrote no more. Her letters were so fresh aud in dividual that 1 nussed them, but 1 was fatuous enough to accept her silence as a simple hearted tribute to my worth. 1 •ay. Sawyer, when a man is a fool bow many different ways he finds to show it!" "Or when he is in love!" added Saw yer ruefully. •That stage was to come soon enough. Aloug the last months of the year 1 hail caught 'winged words' here and there regarding some not impos sible she, spending a year in Boston, who had become a creator of contention between various givers of college 'spread a' You were in 'SO and of course not interested. Would this she accept one or all of the invitations show ered upon her? Would she like \ an Rensselaer s rooms best, filled os they were with old colonial furniture and silver, or would she prefer to linger at Taxrey's, in a purely Bohemian atmos phere, with boxing gloves anJ burring*? "The affair promised to be interesting, and 1 was bent upon being a witness possibly my self not wholly unnoticed. It was therefore with a very bad grace that 1 read in a letter from my mother that Margaret Burton w as in Bobtoii. and asking me to see that she was suit ably initiated into the preciousueas of things Harvardian. And Vet 1 was piqued enough w hen in answer to my formal uote—1 had dispensed with the needful call—1 received a cloaely worded httie note saying that she had already accepted for 'spreads' at Weeds and Hal worthy 1 had of course supposed that she knew nobody, and had teen by no means averse to act the modern mentor to a fair Teleinacha. Of course you've gues:*d the end. Ev eU an expert detective would have a clew by this. "Bull was as unsuspicious as only i foregone conclusion can make one, and when 1 sauntered into White's rooms at Ha! worthy and saw Margaret snr rounded by 'the superlative*, as vve call them, smiling, gracious, witty and wholly at ease. 1 was dumfounded overcome, ecrase Whether it was that my nativity »p.*ke for me. or as l think now, from pure womanly kindness. Mar garet neither scorned me. as 1 des*-r\ed, nor froze me. as she well knew how She gave me her hand in its long yellow glove, made a place beside her. aud the*, seemed to quite forget me. "I've made a lengthy preamble, but the denouement is at han L Suffice it that tne next year 1 was her aiavun shadow 1 climbed awkwardly down out of the rarefi#-d air of my superiority content to be in the same w.»rld with her. She perhaps suspected tne truth of one of m> owu epigram*—that it i* only an u ire |mted love that maz*-s a man good an* keepa him humble. She was sweet an 1 frank and c&arimng. but she uoaI blushes to hide fr *m me. There wer no quarrels to make up. au-J while 1 go os many smiles as the rest — and the r est were many and ardent—1 was never veti a confidence nor mode trembling \V1 r;-ss of a tear. usually on a xter train, a.-* 1 was always forbidden if 1 stated my intentions N v the cnsLs. modestly dra rnatic! M trj aret had gone to Narra gansett fo r a week. .\ft*-r two day* 1 found the • wn tusnp[».rtably hut. an 1 getting off late arrived at the h««t#* atsiut 11 o'clock. Tr.ere was dancing in the ballroom, and as 1 r»-gister**d at the desk through th#- wide door* 1 could **-e the lights and the moving figures As i hesitated there, making up niy mind, as there was no chance of a •lance with her, to grumble eruwsly off to bed and a lover's dreams, a child, aimoet a baby, dashed suddenly out of ti.e side corridor and ran. screaming shrilly, through the doom and down the aisle made by the dancers, w ho were begin mng the lancers, "Behind tfie child came an enormous mastiff, his eyes blazing, a length of red tongue showing between his dripping jaws 1 do not know to this day h>/w I got there, but au instant later I stood m the middle of tne ballroom holding tne child high in the air Then the child began to pound my head and face kicking violently. The dog stood by my side wagging hi* tail. A roar fr au the men and a hearties* giggle from tr.e women began to enlighten me. When the child's mother took him from me and began resentfully to smooth down his tumbled laces 1 quite understood. "The dog was the pet and victim of this enfant terrible, and 1 the hero of a —comedy. Cruelly mortified and deep ly disgusted. 1 turned to go. Somebody stepped out of the group nearest me 1* was Margaret. She h* Id out her hand to me, and in her eye* l read something sweeter than pity. I bought the dog who was of course Amado." At the sound of his name the mastiff opened one eye sleepily and lieat with hi* great tail on the floor. — Dorothea Lummis in Chicago Inter fJcean. for Vi#-lug wiing To. Who haim't h**rd the non* • rjfi»'>— If it', you it must lie h-'in* you .1 not 'lar>- to trust yonrwlf in eonrert hall*. No one th>T'- will ton. h yon, nt.-nl you or do anythin* to shook yon. All the trouble tliat rnay . ..me to yon will do I-ud entirely on yourself. "G's.rttie" is the mm* the cafe rhan tant than tense sing* to the l.a»s viol player in the orihestra. He. nnnappv man. is the pretend.-l obje. t of her af fection. She aildr.sw.si him in *u< h burn ini; terms of endearment that the andi en.e howl with delight, while the p., r player hi rish.si with embarraiwm.'nt Every one w. s the [»/int. but the poor tsiss viol man .*an t help wishing it was true. Still, he take* the r'/se given him by the prima donna from .me of her hon 'ioete with evident content. W ho r an blame him? He gets two dollar* extra a mght beside*.—New York Herald. I Thp »> (llih an*I French Onstlma. With us iitaniiK fTation* i* a Berionn, dr^airr u> thu Frenchman it i* ariiptj#- j lrtwmre au»l a h«Jiflay funr ti Ti . ♦ "n though it }j*f at th* gTav***i«]p or rn th*? thr<«4 »,f a revolution. Fin# Language. wh#th#r in a sj*^» h or \**, k. h*- w**lr;//tn* < a a* an a-Bthf'tic luxury an#l •motional stimulant, the fin**n<** Tiring i.l course propf/rtioned U> hi* #legr#*e of f ultivatif/n. ff#r a/ a#lemiciann have D#?ti found to own that *orne jihraw s. highly #ff#*#tive in their day, are only vulgar fuMian. He view* the eloriutvire of the mark ha we do that of the *tag#* — a* a iirofeMHional art, wh#T*-of he i* a kharji an#l eiithuriaatic critic. Truth, c*rld veracity, naked fact, jir<t*aic ri*aM#ni ar#> not what he *e#*k*. Tint iriHpinng tlieme* clothe*] in grand wfjr»l*. l>mdon Aca#letny. Ia $ 15,000 PICK IP. A WELL KNOWN DALTONIAN MAKES A BIG HAUL uin Ihf HumiIutm N*Um**I Draw tag «r. W. H. I'rudm U*l«*»» Huy * a Ticket Y or HU H If* •**! M*kc# * SD.UUO Drawing il }-!u • *>UId unpietetiU* n- *i«o trick t-i— ,"l Ihl M.lr M*U ul U.1-OM. ... . JSjWg * Lvle, uournno* ' hrir .*fh« e rru dkn.'of tb«- tin*. U* f»m«ik*b r uiaii H* »• prrh.t* Hit* wl.i, miih *rmj •u.l br«oJ, «li«l >--u wi.li « 1 -uif lI «•«• • itiKwi kf.n tu- ugn u» rr*U our • *.«*: *» Ifte repulalivm Ur ine the Uwl fln*rtcl.er in balrou • t«l tia*. tor • number of >r»r». A l*lei _______________ Jt ir.r Kll bulb w bit*b oilier* he i*-*w hoi<l* be.-t lu bub (iittiu lii all • bo kno• hi*jj brru bealeu for au office withiu on b*»- gid of D*!i-------- - j-ouffrretl upoii him. br * a* f *r ^uli< Mt::V ■ fli*u eho b.«* U«U i--** •«"»— I f*l tn life, tf mi • - 1 • ■ ■ recital prise of b M ' NbUoUbI l all Iff} l Ia> li«*li* -L. I : lot Cf% I *"UM j hate .u'oruitM i'if town of b'.s 1 1 *. k | before ulibl, but i;ot mj »sih W H »'r*.-N .ic of lh* r«*h!cr of * * X b"V • i«iw » lb a l be is |i Ut 11- h#r U> > . * !aoXi!h*< • the fNtperv ; i lb bu: tailcl *»< * 1 • ■tie |>r«*»f tbd :i «'• * 1 J '•'^r* e ' / i.O* llUMlMI . y a. ii V- tbJ fLrer ' s v i ■ < • set* I«, :<* ■ • * * Colo* l*rrr*|»liuii tu **«*tfr |I«< ct. t„e t. r-» pau-w--.^ tbe p« L-eni. 'll >: '.uiur V, A % -n tier Jr,jree lnan do n. lurti rooea Ibis It .1 Mlf eiideut b, tne fa. 't . rewetiIf«i b> l»r V\ e f»ier i-ji bef ore l - Frank, u ulr. 1 'r ..ade* pb..a, hit tlalrtueoi covering ibe frt.iita «jf *»'U-e Z* f \ 1 ; . *' lit a.!!•>(!a lud.on <_ n 11 iren. IUU of mete (jeiua Ketrareflet of tL;t naroa ter show iba: in atr>cfi oof « While f«y% from out I'ar'.t f th* l':..led >ta£r* al ie*»t ft. r of the outidier w -uld have proved LSJI-.I blind Vn...i.g *1; rnete lu l.au f^jt b- l a •mg.e ate f U.e S;udw*a l.t: ,»rfw! N' \ rn |-*i:.# bkuk rn» M.m r.s ! IT '..'I I • ll |A.V/.VO that ther.. , tr.ilsa .f.a.1 if y ■ thin It ah •« that , ...r u,.| o in.(- ..-r:.red ai^I y-sar ■ . feraj /.,i. a. that - u '' ■-r ?■•'. -at fail. U, \ r t- r. y t, «.ri«h you A;^l , «t a* .. \* y rj fled. ft* R. V P.«», * /-.nr rnur •M t. i b ' *.-4*1 -.th •Ungrr-Mi* il.ca llk» iv t* -I , Y -u sh*t)li| Ujtiil wif ap with r*r Ptow, »#* i'l# n VrwlKWl I •. v »TT .' ' ^ ' 1'ir.f r «n*l *nrii'h th* bl#-ri, rmw #tpty -.rgan mt*. r-*f 4 r%l *#v P OP* nrvi tti.iil u y hrmlfhv »h<-Wan* n~—wry f^l. , ,... r j w-fc*t. natd - — - — •- fami.y ind fl»v| nothin# 25., ..... r "> 'ten feat tg pn#'m ni*. *n 1 |ij nir t, . . Jane, t.ut t. T c . u. r teer.vrr—l, »nrf * re.w i„ r „j {2. S SKIN rgBES Constipation INOltMTIOH Dl22i*tll '-•'UPTIONS ON TM t SK IN l a fall e* ane SKRV K TONIC , T tn * 11 r- .*40, awl ll.fi)per (a. ka*a. .Slmpira fr-e * 0 ■O^L'CMSlSae UCII »«■ UEBIC 4 CO m - T- ; ~ - -v W rui.Li, CLEAN HOUSE W MPOLIO MALARIA I " TbfPP «1 #*rp« omI* T»v it "HE THAT U/n Due r- a o ■ ■ .4 succEiJm , v» ® ea sily, works SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH • ■' — ^ LZI7.JJ, .....' ums-siicK, w°o*y. ■yvt*uI P ' . t M.kd I TMK gilt or UAtONt. Th« nuon why Auxoe«*» Poaoct Pl^ T>» »r. popular i» lhal Ih.y maj b* rwlKal on Vo cure; I 1 »iu»t>ari.»<:iatiea,iulTu«w»or«wi*ch !iig ol lh« ruua;i«. 'i. I'bnt Iruublr* *ucb a. plaun.y. paao monia. corwumpliun _ ;i. ilJ.pwp.«L bilUHi»uwM, kiduey txiuipiaiul. TU. .uaxm t»o««»»r, aill drpwu4 upuu hwu.ib.um .•( If. t'UwiT UWKI Tb. uupulariiy uf ALi. — a • Puaui. ba. !«n k> ,(iw.t U..I muluiujrt uf >".<•» tlom Ii.-W .pruu* up o» w»wrj liau.t Ibw only >ur» cure ia to ^wi U»« ^.uume All the J gee Ba A tion. » Po* u t Pill* lrnprvo I ' j | > ; , liMLttcr* are ir* .rUe»: Uee g'i -f»* luatLiu fruii** a* Xuak, *a*wali Tlf timXMta for breaxfaal ONE EXJOY8 1* th the melh.id »nJ r«u!u nheu >>rup of l i^» H taken; it U|>!raaanl and rrfmluiij- to the taste, and acta gen.ly jet promptly on the Kidney*. I.ircr and lloWvU, clean*--* the *ye t.m effectually, » eol.l*. heal a hea and fever* and curve habitual ■ iiati|*tioti. Sirup of 1 i^i ia the ..v remedy o ( iu kmd ever pr>> d jc.si, pleasii g t> the L*»U' and ac •ptable to the *t.>mach, pr«.>mj>t in its action aud truly bvuehcial lu il* :i-ct*, prepared only from the u>«t b ahhy an 1 agreeable <ubalance*, its many excellent .piabl.e* commend it to all atvl hare made it the must [sjpular remedy known. Syrup of h ig* t, for sale in 60t and fl b. ttie* by all leading drug ,->u. Any relvalde druggUt who t-.ay not hare it on hand will pr>e cure it promptly f r any one who * he* to try il l>a Hot accept any * .iet.tUle CALIFORNIA FI6 STROP CO. 3 l» ••(K JL'J CU. LJLLSVtIlI AI It f riMf*. tf. Holes n > ;r I, ■ * ., • th,- M >m«t >f ' ■ . G-rina. Tti« i . an n •,■<! out A . .. lay Scott's IHMfr Emulsion i- .ver on, Thu rlu> Cre.itn * ■irul IiyiK.pl _ •o ts imriH'dljt.dy u;.,n th t.iinga ir. I Iiuku now t.xsuo lhi-re. . in., ll. ■ world over, erolurs-j it. Don't be deceiiU lj SikiliWu! »«•* fl*B* •-* t-MBM |*4 < CATARRH *« -O'* El*'* Crwam Bali ^*2 DO YOU TRAVEL? i# so. you ati ll uno mt BIG FOUR ROUTE THE BEST LINE EAST VCSTIBULC TRAINS. ELICANT OlaINC CARS ------- _ QUICK TIMS. Big Four Route. i o ■tC9*a<ci o , KRUIT PRESCRVCO: LABOR SAVED I PRESERVES FRUIT WITHOUT HEAT. ___________ ''•"friH.tm.,,,........... ' *:-» »• ri« k r ' ► --fr ■* t.T f fr i h - '-h.wr.. z r !2„%z: n '* n '«' .....- | Antifermentine I". 1 ,/",........... SNELL. HEITSHu A WOODARD, Portland. Or. r- a o ■ ■ .4 ® ea Cures I Can't Sleep I have a tirwi, w.>m-o«l MIm w.. mean* that tb* Iiervuo* •v*-r« {* JW order. When thia complaint U " " ll .d'* N*r*apanlla U i.«ad«t lo and rttaiiw tne bl aal, and ihna i.^.r. --r turn* atreogtiL Taka it now, k rnamk** Hoods / He jure lo get tluud'aand only Hood a. Mood-axilla t uiv 111! ftf !! i,|| Iw&iir • 5. com DO VAN t uacea nemtuiBOkjr • H.*3.vrMECMf&jaMM* S'?!* S& 3 S^ ^ EXTRA r!N£.' M m •2.»L1>Bort5ai5« ^W-L'DWMtAS, BROCKTON, MAOft. tM awn aava maaar br mawHae tbs w. U Uaailaa U OO bbaa. a. t a., a taa as. is, *as a^ntaZaM**e 'sa ,/ M*ts« taa aaaa aa# *>aa m a t waa . 1*1 * N« saalaM *— —,7* • *u.r* a.f • '.*a as* a.arts* ,«*. g *o.„iaa a si e 1 . aa u.,.a|iiauaui.a<HU Team Warn. U |1 naa an < N*w«b 'HERCULES*;' ;r.. Engines siMPLiciry, i STRENGTH, ECONOMY SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. ? r ! Lt •» •• ; '' « *f>l ttfBlWf t» * f«».J •a K.^r(pir *f«r| r-,#pa«» t 4 '.,r if-V» Siaf t^tfrnmm • 4 aa fan tarn b«|»4 «« tL* r*#a# •m Umt h«t* ■«( W at h .«« a* ,. 4 -S • L t t hifBi.thiBl p*>• i -aRtla*rv«.J Eft* *'• " fUsKiNE - N*a> rarrraxp at PIUEII RET TYPE FOIURT, «W. rreal aad Alda. bta.. PORTLAND. ORKCOI tot tsUinytM -MWf • mm QOLDDTa'VESY . RkKI\r, mwpF.K. ff • 1 » ht iit«. »io*i a T- '** f**lnr»rs (n*rsnt#w. * ..... ....... | m " 5 " * r'■ i*a*h •" <lraan4 aq* rral*. •• »jre 5 wv»*sr^ , 4 s- \\ ' *1^ 1f r-d|r*rd#w>» tor n*1»»f ■ NW l/ * 1 wsw!ss. anr.v*K ,B,ia N r. N. ir. No. W 1 . F. N. U. So. T?