OCR Text |
Show I I I WORST NORTHWEST. NOTES Void. About four years ago I was afflicted with black splotches all over my face and a few covering my body, quarter-niaater'- s which produced a severe Itching Irritation, and which caused me a great deal of annoyance and suffering, to such an extent that I was forced to call In two of the leading physicians of my town. After a thorough examl nation of the dreaded complaint they announced It to be skin eczema in Its worst form. They treated me for the same for the length of one year, but the treatment did me no good. Finally my husband purchased a set of the Cuticura Remedies, and after using the contents of the first bottle of Cuticura Resolvent In connection with the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, I the breaking out entirely stopped continued the use of the Cuticura Remedies for six months, and after that every splotch was entirely gone and the affected parts were left as clear as ever. The Cuticura Remedies hot only cured me of that dreadful disease, eczema, but other complicated troubles as well. Lizzie E. Sledge, 540 Jones Ave., Selma, Ala., d juries. Demands for more cars, consequently additional motive power, caused by the enormously Increased traffic and the opening of new lines, has necessitated the purchase on the part of the Harriman system of $1,422,000 worth of equipment for the Oregon Railroad 4fc Navigation am Southern Pacific to discovered at Wleder-echwiala Carinthla, Austria, a little to the north ot the district of Carni-ola- , where similar deposits extend from Idria to Neumarkt. The deposit is thought to be extensive. have been Important to Mothers. to AJwaya Bought. Practiced What He Preached. Rev. Denis P. OFlynn, of New York city, used to say that priests ought to die poor and he practiced what he preached Aside from a valuable library given to the Paullst fathers he has left no discoverable estate no money In bank, no money In the rectory. He died as poor as the proverbial church mouse, says his assistant. Father Corrigan. "Wlfat little insurf ance he carried will barely cover the funeral expenses. He never saved a penny for himself. After keeping the honse on hla meager salary ho gave away all ho had. COSTLY CLOTHES FOR WOMEN. Enormoue Sums of Monoy Can Spent for Finery. Bo much aa f SO a yard .ta .often paid for gold and silver tissue cloth of gold, as It Is called, though It is not cloth of really, said a dressmaker, gold at all. For cloth of gold, the real thing, it made of pure gold, drawn Into fine wire, and then woven by hand. Such cloth was often used during the middle agee. It la now used ealy la Sumatra It cost is quite $200 a yard. "That seem high, doesn't It? It la nothing, though, beside the cost of lace. A court train of moire antique, decorated with gold thread and pearls, was made in Paris for an American tody last year at a cost of $7,500. To the empress of Russia not long ago the nobles of the province of Kherson presented an ermine mantle worth $50,000. "There are lace handkerchiefs worth Even the thread of which lace $5,000. Is made comes ridiculously high. The fine hand-madthread used in the best Brussels lace Is spun from flax and fetches. grown at Rebecq-Rognon- , In good seasons, as much as $2,500 a pound. Philadelphia Bulletin. A It- is given out from what la con- sidered a reliable source that the Sierra Pacific railway will connect at n point not far from SprlngvlUe with Senator Clark's Nevada railroad line, thus giving him an outlet to the Pacific coast and giving the Sierra Paclfie an opening into Nevada and the Goldfield district the Gunnison tunnel Over In Colorado, was completed by the first of September, according to the report ot the engineer. The totnl length from the east portal, In Gunnison canyon, to heading No. L August 31, was 4,416 feet The total length from the west portal. In Cncompahgre valley, was one-hal- 10,89$ f feet Mining men In the Medicine Bow forest reserve, near Laramie, Wyo., are uniting in a protest to the forest service of the Interior department against an advertised sale of all the living and dead lodge pole spruce and pine timber In the reserve, about 165,000,-00board feet, asserting that it deprives them of timbers for mining pur0 poses. The Secretary of the Interior has awarded a contract to Jesse W. Crosby, Jr., of Wyoming for completion of the construction of a portion of the work In connection with the Corbett tunnel, Shoshone Irrigation project, e THE WAY OUT. Chaige of Food Brought Success and Happiness. An ambitious but delicate girl, after falling to go through school on account of nervousness and hysteria, found In Grape-Nut-s the only thing that seemed to build her up and furnish her the peace of health. "From Infancy," she says, I have not been strong. Being ambitious to learn at any cost I finally got to the High School, but soon had to abandon my studjeon account of nervous prostration and hysteria. My food did not agree with me, 1 I could grew thin and despondent not enjoy the simplest social affair for I suffered constantly from nervousness In spite of all sorts of medicines. This wretched condition continued until I was twenty-five- , when I became Interested In the letters of those who had cases like mine and who were being cured by eating Grape-Nut- Wyoming. Morlyama and H. Mlya, Japanese, in Portwho have been room-mate- s a in Involved dispute, land, became the cause of which is unknown. During the quarrel Mlya shot Morlyama to death but before doing so was stabbed fatally by Morlyama. Nicholas Oik, a resident of Malheur Oncounty, Oregon, since 18 6, died In 69 of aged 16th dropsy, the on tario wa enhe For years many years. gaged in farming and stock raising and recently retired. He was highly respected In that section. - Miss Elizabeth Hunt, daughter of I had little faith, but procured a Statea United of the Hunt Judge W. H. court of Montana and former governor box and a after the first dish I experienced satisfied feeling of Porto Rico, was married at Helena, that 1 had peculiar never gained from any a to Thompson, George on the 18th, food. I slept and rested better New York stock broker. The affair that night and In a few days began was large and fashionable. to grow stronger. 1 had a new The Oregon Bar association has feeling of peace and In a few weeks, to my restfuless. proceedings disbarment instituted H. great Joy, the headaches and nervousagainst former JudgelateA. United Tanner, States ness left me and life became bright law partner of the Senator Mitchell, on the ground that and hopeful. I resumed my studies he perjured himself before the federal and later taught ten months with ease court in giving testimony in of course using Grape-Nut- s every ells behalf. Is now four years since 1 beIt day. I am the misRobert Plttock, a resident of San gan to use Grape-Nutfifteen years, tress of a .happy home and the- old Diego, Cal., for the past LonIn died on the 20th. He was born weakness has never returned." Name don 77 years ago andwas one of the Battle Creek, where he ar- given by. Postum Co., a reason. Read the pioneers of Portland, Or., Mich. Theres was engaged he rived in 1853. There little book, "The Road to Wellvllle, In the wholesale grocery trade for In pkgs. , years. v thirty a s. 1 . V J32X Thirsty Britishers. In a little the Mohan. i I paint Painters rarely adulterate white lead themselves and they very seldom use ready prepared paints the most frequent causes of paint trouble. But they do often buy adulterated white lead because the property owner Insists on a low price and the painter has to economize somewhere. The suggestion is therefore a good one that the property owner investigate the subject a little, find out the name of some reliable brand of white lead, and see that the keg Is marked with that brand. The linseed oil Is more difficult to be sure of, as It Is usually jsold in balk when the quantity Is small; but reliable makers of linseed oil can be learned on inquiry, and. If your dealer is reliable, you will get what you want. Pure white lead and linseed oil are so necessary to good paint that the little trouble necessary to get them well repays the house owner in dollars and cents saved. Chill" or Chile There have been many arguments during the last few weeks as tr whether the name of the earthquake-smittecountry Bhould be spelled Chill or Chile . Chile Is the Spanish and Chilean form. The name Is com monly explained as an old Peruvian word for snow, the allusion being tc the Andes; but Chili has also been. Identified as a native South American! word, chirl, meaning cold which would make It really the chilly" coun try. Aa to the meaning ,of "Ondes," there In plenty of choice. "The word has been variously Interpreted as sfg nifytng the haunt of the tapir, the region of copper, the home of the Anti tribe and the site of the "Ondenes. Spanish gardens on (he mountain ter races. a straight, powtrful nose; a large mouth, which --must once have been hard and cruel now softened by adversity. Though the day is warm, he weart an overcoat, and he walk heavily on a massive ebony stick. Pall Mall Gazette. t - GAME THAT I BOBBIE That things that are not so 111 with you and me as they might have been la half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest In tombs George Eliot Inter- - A yoong fellow had called upon a girl with whose charms ho was somewhat smitten, and was waiting In the parlor when her small brother come From eft her a In, weeping bitteilv tense of politic precaution or natural kindness of hearty the young man had been kind to the little fellow on several occasions, and now took him on his lap and asked the cause of the trouble. SiMister is mean to me, the little fellow sobbed. Oh, I guess she didnt Intend to be; maybe you worried her when she was busy the youth said consolingly. What was atie doing? Shs was playin, an wouldn't let me play, too," Bobby eald. what? The piano? I Phylng gueesihe thought you j JWrj- CAester Currjr - JKrs. Chas. j--j A nervous, Irritable mother, often on Mrs. Cheater Curry, Leader of the the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care Ladles Symphony Orchestra. 42 Sarafor children ; it ruins a child's disposi- toga Street, East Boa ton, Mas, tion and reacts upon herself. The writes : trouble between children and their Dear Mrs. Pink ham: 1 For eight years sh troubled with mothers too often Is due to the fact trame nervoosnara and hysteria, brought ea that the mother has some female weakIrregularities. 1 coo id aoltbsr enjoy Ufa ness, and she Is entirely unfit to- - bear by nor sleep nigbta; I waa vary Irritable, narvoua the strain upon her nerves that govern- and despondent. Lydia K. Pinkbamh Vegetable Compound ing children involves; it is impossible waa recommended and proved to be the only for her to do anything calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand remedy that helped mu. I have daily Imin health until 1 am now strong and upon the nerves, consequently nine-tent- proved and all nervousness baa disappeared." of the nervous prostration, ner- well, Mrs. Charles F. Brown, the blues," sleepvous despondency, of the Mothers Club, 21 Cedar lessness, and nervous irritability of Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., write : women arise from some derangement Dear Mrs Plnkbam of the female organism. I dragged through nine years of miserDo you experience fits of depression able existence, worn out with pain and we--v with restlessness, alternating with oust own, until it seemed aa though I should extreme irritability? Are your spirits fly. 1 then noticed a statement of a woman as I was, and the wonderful results easily affected, so that one minute you troubled she derived from Lydia E. Plnkhame Vege-tabl-e laugh, and the next minute you feel Compound. 1 deckled to by it. 1 did so, like crying? and at the end of three months I waa a differDo you feel something like a ball ris- ent woman. My nervoumes was all gone, I ing in your throat and threatening to waa no longer irritable, and my husband fell choke you ; all the senses perverted, in love with me all over again. Women should remember that Lydia morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the abdominal region,n and E. Iinkhama Vegetable Compound la the medicine that holds the record for between the shoulders; bearing-dowof actual cure of pains; nervous dyspepsia and? almost the greatest number no female ills, and take substitute. continually cross and snappy Free Advice to Women. If so, your nerves are in a shattered of Mrs. Plnkham, daughter-in-lacondition, and you are threatened with nervous prostration. , Lydia E. Plnkham, Lynn, Mans., invites Proof is monumental that nothing in all sick women to write to her for the world is better for nervous prostra- advice. Mrs. Hnkham's vast experience tion than Lydia E. I'inkhama Vege- with female troubles enables her to adtable Compound; thousands and thou- vise you wisely, and she will charge sands gf women can testify to this fact, you nothing for her advice. Ask Brs. Pifikkams Advice A Woman Best Understands s Woman's Ca. Vice-Preside- nt didnt know how. tin? yes, I know how better'n b She waa Bobby asserted. Indian, an" "wasnt putting half 'nwgh paint on her face. WMP d5 .'misnwFi - - pSs-B- JEALOUS OF BOBBIE'S WIFE. York Woman's Excuse for Fit f Extravagance. New Yomen dearly love an excuse for little extravagances, says the New York Globe. Of course, the masculine readers of this column are not expected to Indorse this, for, according to tbs masculine thought, women need SNOW UNIMMI Is a Quick and Permanent Cure for Rheumatism, Cuts, Sprains, Wounds, Neuralgia, Headache, Old Sores, Corns, Bunions, Galls, Bruises Contracted Muscles, Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Frost Bite, Chilblains, Ringbone, PoUevil, Bums, Scalds, and ALLTHE ILLS THAT FLESH IS HEIR TO. excuse for their extravagances they just have them without rhyme or no reason. woman has a charming extra Indulgence In blue-eyeson Bobble and Bobble' future wife. In trust for Bobble la a handsome estate which give her great concern because she feels that the must save and economize for Bobbie, for Bobble's college education, hla European trip, and, "oh, dear!" she always adds, Bobblei wife." Wearying ot a continued spell of economy. In a moment of reckless extravagance she'll buy a lot of dear, delightful things, have hlJlngers manicured, her hair shampooed and take fascinating trips here and there. And then when her conscienco will prick she'll say, Why not? Bobbie wife will, and he wont care how much It costs." And Bobble's wife won't, either. Shell spend Joyously and gloriously. An n excuse for any her d Three Sizes, 25c, 50c fluid $1. You Cannot . Sold by bQ Druggists W. L. DOUGLAS 3.50 &3.00 Shoes c3) SOT IN TMK WORLD GUI Dnty earmotb eqmflftdalinypr q Ull $4 all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such aa TV tip Shot QmUrtt W. L. LoagbuP Jolw Mng Hoqm to ti moot ewaiptote In this cooetry Mtndar Catalog nasal catarrh, uterlnecatarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But ou surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtlne Toilet Antiseptic li v s' which destroys the disease germs, checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE ! M. Lecaillou, by exbuzzing comes perimenting with 'a violin, some flies, A piano, violoncello and a cornet, found that only those musical sounds which resembled the buzzing of the flies attracted the spiders. The cornet, tor Instance, Invariably frightened 11 and so did the piano. KNEW. Youngsters Revelations War citing to Caller. Why Music Attracts Spider. It has often been said that spiders are fond of music, but a French lnves-tlgator, M. Lecalllou, now asserts that this ia not true. He says that their, There is no satisfaction musical sense must be attributed than being diy merely to greed or to hunger. When comfortable a fly is caught In a spiders web It Jowtathe buzzes, and the spider Immediately makes for the place from which the hardest storm -- j I The Gazette and Courier quotes certain old patrons to the effect that accumulations of paint are unnecessary. These lay the blame partly on the painter who fails to brush his paint in well, partly on the custom of painting In damp weather or not allowing sufficient time for drying between coats, and partly to the use of adulterated paints instead of linseed oil and pbre white lead. The paper says: "Many of the old householders say that if care Is taken at all these potnts it is absolutely unnecessary to have paint burned off. They advise that people who have houses painted should buy their own materials, and to have them put on by the day, so as to be sure to get good lead and oil. Of course the burning off of paint greatly Increases the cost of the job. The trouble householders everywhere have with paint Is pretty well summed up by our contemporary, and thfe causes are about the same everywhere. By far the most frequent cause ot the necessity for the dangerous practice of burning old paint is the use of poor materiel The oil should be pure linseed and the white lead should be real white lead. The latter Is more often tampered with, than the oil Earthy substances, end pulverized rock and quartz, are frequently used as cheapened, to the great detriment of the u-visit- X , old-time- Cat For Over SO Yean. Ths Kind Ton Bara Both Husband and Children How Thousands of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration and Made Strong and Well. Nearly Tun u tons of cork sro needed for the ber and aCtated wa tern consumed annually In Britain. paint Bean the Signature af MaKe Unhappy Homes Their Condition Irritates Mrs. Winslow's Nooltil&i hyrnp. rB Li in 111 In. itducfl USi, flba j gohrn B t otlic kMit iin, tuiVo WUiU CttiH fWp over again there comes to be an accumulation of paint in bunches. If new paint is put on top of these accumulations It is almost sure to blister. To burn It off is the quickest and cheapest and perhaps the surest method of getting rid of this old Uvamloo carefully every bottle of C ASTORIA, a efe tad tor remedy for infanta and children, and tee that it Tiled, Neivous Mothei A nun can make mistakes far more easily than he can make good Arabl Paths Old and Friendless. tmuse up a by sircct of d.m quart r, old, filend less, broken M'S the man who might have ruled ' It If JOU ish Jil people In Cairo to- day: "Whi m ialu Pasha1" 15 111 tell you he Is dead, while tbe other five n, ' know In fact, after the bomba-- c m nt of Alexandria he was est n le for life iu Cp) Ion, but v as al'i Mune four years ago to return t,, w nath e city It vaa on a week's hard fer-reting that discovered through a native journ.ilisi the whereabouts of the treat man Even now, In lus seventieth year, he la a big n m In his prime he must have been imm use. White hair and beard; a broad, thoughtful forehead, surmounted In the Turkish tarboosh; result kindly eyes, dulled a little by age, It la undoubtedly true that when but lighting up wonderfully when he a house has been painted over and talks about things which interest him; Oct. 28, 1905. New Mercury Deposit. A new mercury deposit is said It seema that considerable danger to property exists In the practice of burning off old paint before The question has long been a fng subject of debate in the technical journals, and now houaeholders and the newspapers have begun to discuss It Those of us who, with trembling, have watched the painters blow a fiery blast from their lamps against our houses, and hate looked sadly at the size nf our painting bill because of the time wasted on this preliminary wqrk, are Interested In the investigation by the Greenfield (Mass.) Gazette and Courier, which gives considerable space to the reasons for the practice, questions its necessity and suggests wajs to prevent the risk of burning down one's heuse in order to get the old paint off. It says: There Is a good deal of discussion among householders as to the. desirability, In painting houses, of burning off the old paint, a practice that has grown very common of late in Greenfield and elsewhere. Insurance men are strongly oppused to this jndlhod. It makes void Insurance policies for fires caused in this manner. Several houses In Greenfield have gotten afire as the result of this method, and in some places houses have burned aa n i8 nfi mini for fiu h package of if uuaatia-- f FVI'H.Kt'S D A- )our druggist. PUNAM actor) t- - , - conscience Burning Off Paint Makes Insurance j says that the voice ot but an In voice. Some om DANGEROUS PRACTICE. Rem-ediee- department, Manila, charged, according to dispatches, with misappropriating funds, was appointed from Wyoming He had seen previous service. D H. Johnson, a laborer at the roundhouse at Laramie, Wyo., had his left arm taken off, under the wheela of an engine. He was In the ash pit under the engine and laid his hand suost the rail. Governor Jesse K McDonald of Colorado, has called a dry farming congress, to be held In Denver November 22, 23 and 24 this year. Representation is Invited from all states west of the Missouri river RiUvllle, forty seven miles west of Spokane, Is said to be the largest initial wheat shipping point in the world. Last year the receipts there amounted to 1,500,000 bushels, and the year before to 2,000,000. The Prohibition State convention of Wyoming has nominated the following state ticket: Governor, George W. Blaine of Douglas; treasurer. Dr. C. J. Sawyer of Laramie; congressman, C. H. Nicodemus of Wheatland. While attempting to prevent a gun fight between two men at Twin Falls, Major Fred R. Reed was shot, bat only slightly Injured. He was wresting the revolver from the mans hand, when the weapon exploded. Thomas C. Johnson charged with Rilling Thomas B. Tuttle during a fight hotel In Portland, Jn the Ranier-Granwas found guilty of manslaughter. .Tuttle was the aggressor of the fight and was fatally slashed with a knife. Mrs. L. W. Cooper and Miss Nellie .Manning of Charlotte, N. C., were severely Injured in Denver in a collision between a street car and an automobile in which they were riding. Mrs. Coopers spine was Injured and her right arm dislocated and It is feared also she has sustained Internal in- . A OF ECZEMA. Black Spotehes All Over Face -- Af fected Parte Now Clear ae Eve . Cured by the Cuticura Cantaloupe have been the most profitable crop In the Yakima valle, of Washington, this year The first carload sent Into 'Chicago brought $10 a crate. Ira L. Freudenthal of the FORM ARE of ms SURg 'JS.. R- - CO. PAXTON Bomom. Mas. Take The Right Road -- r.- Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis . Omaha or Kansas City Chicago Great Western 5thing i 0" vtuov everywhere yrszx f a factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully YV.L. Douglas shoe are made, you would theu understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Whertvsr yom llvs, yoe raa obtata W. t Doorlas aHosa. Mia eame and frtc. la steeped en the bet tom. which hth protects yoa stalest ericas end Interior shoe. To Ire ne tmbtt i. tore. Ask yew dealer tor W. 4, Panties ahead Snd Insist npon having tham. ntttU ttrt; inrnt mill mot mtmf toaasp ftit ColorforI nioatratrd Writs Catalog nf Fell Styles. ItUUtiLAS, tispC U. Ursdusn, Mess, . JWWr, filial wMgggor, IH0ES FOB SVEXYBODY At All PKfcS Mm-- t Slum, SS to 1 1. SO. Jv--r Blum, 3 to Sl.Sfi. Womon'a StioM, M OO to SI.SO. ClUktran'a Slum, f U.BS to Sl.OO. Try W. L flnuglaa Wotnma, Miasm aa4 Chlldran's shorn (or sty to, tit aad 1 they .ami other mokoa. If I could take you Into my large FAT EXT ATTORXETS, Unequalled Equip-- 1 ment on All Trains f full Inform ml tom Wrtto STAIKVZATHEI 0 F. Cjnt'm A St Si.. St Lt it City. Draft T. A. to MarksT 2w Ooprnahts ned PATENTS "Trade l.aarla proas Wans, Hatsax Bicxroan. W. N. jaj. l T Bu Weshlmton, U, Salt Lake City, No. 39, ' 190. A .. i |