{ title: 'Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915, October 20, 1899, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-3.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 20 Oct. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
i ' it l a l i m t - Led - K la U len . :OttffW d Howard. ~ln \ tbo ' Tidies’ Horn# Journal, write* tU.it the first tamp meeting la America was bold o& Jbe banks of tUe Muddy river, In Ken- Mcby, in August, ITUS), and was coa> ducted by the McGee brothers, two elo quent evangelists, “It lasted for little more titan a week,” be states, \and the novelty of It and the success which at tended It were so marked that there rose an Immediate demand for a con tinuance of this form of worship. Ac cordingly the . meeting was speedily followed by a large number of camp meetings throughout the W est So great was the Interest they excited that in some Instances a single meeting was attended by 2,000 or 8,000 persons, re- suiting lu the complete desertiou of the neighboring towns and, settlements for the time being. This first camp meeting marked the beginning of a re vival of religion which assumed such proportions and wrought such wide spread good that it has passed Into his tory as the ‘Grent Revival.’ It was the reaction following the period of feoubt and unbelief, and swept through tie country In a glorious wave of trl- omph. The earlier camp meetings were not held under the auspices of any particular denomination. 1’eople of all churches aud all phases of belief attended them and took an Interest In their management. Baptist, Presby terian, Methodist and other ministers conducted the services. Deuoiulmt- tion&l differences were east aside. All churches were merged into one lu tbs tide of revlvaliBui. But after tbe Amt •ictteuient roused by tbe ‘Great Ko- v!v»!’ died away, tills particular form or worship became a Methodist Insti tution. Other denominations -gradu ally abandoned It aud left It w -the Uetbodlsts, who have malutalucd it to 'Necessity is the M o t h e r o f invention. t ’wes ih t necessity for a rtSebU blood purifier end ionic thet brought into txbt- ertet Hoof s SsrseperHU. M it a highly conctnirtied afreet prepend by a com* binetion. proportion end process peculiar to itself end gMng to B oots Senepe- rSU i tnequeUed curehvt power. * it this day, aud continue to find In It a source of good aud a no less worthy means of salvation than on the occa sion of its establishment 100 years kgo” t l v Hot W a ter Wells. Tfca welts In parts of Arizona liavs recently become producers of hot water, aud apprehension Is felt by mauy of the residents of the regions affected that they ure about to become participants In a grand volcanic drama, in some of the wells the temperature water of the well rose twenty degrees In a single night. It a few the phe- nomeuou disappeared sunn after tte appearance. In a majority of the cases, however, the wells fairly stonro from their newly acquired beat. TU» lirst known of this curious slate ot effalrs was a report that the wells ai Maricopa, on the Southern Pacific, rail road, thirty miles south of jPhoeulx, had suddenly become hot, says the Omaha Bee. It was four days thereafter that the phenomenon first v as noticed u dozeu miles west of that city. A test st one well Bliowed a temperature of nearly one hundred degrees. No difference Is noted In wells in the Immediate vicin ity of Phoenix. The line of subterranean heat nave follows tbe general dlredton of the Sierra IOstrella mountains, a volcanic tbaln lying Immediately south of the Uila Klver. Thence it appears to con tinue on lu the direction of the llarqin itala mountains, near which are a mini her of large and modern volcanic cones and hills of drifted volcanic ash. Fur- tie r to the east the lava flows are sc. geologically modern ns to have over whelmed In a number of places tils cliff dwellings of the ancients, \You are advertising q.nte early In the year,” said the summer-resort land lord’s friend. “Yes; I always fix up my announcements at this time of year. You see, I am a tliorouf/uly conscien tious man, and I wish to be aide to state that there are no mosquitoes.”— Washington Star. Miss Homewood-Charley Bmshton told me that I was looking iiretty tills morning. Miss Point Breeze—That Isn’t ■what he told me he saJd to you. “What did he say?” \lie said he told you that you were looking as piretty as ever.\— Dittnburg Chronicle. The Judge—I believe I shall leave it to you this tlrao. About how ninny days do you think I ought to give youl Perry Patettlc—Honest, your honor, I don’t Just know. Do you think it la goln’ to be an early spring or a lat« 'one?—Otadnnati Enquirer. Wayworn Waitson—Here Is one of these story writers who says In the pa- pens that genius Is notldug but hard work. Perry Patettlc—Nothin’ but bard •work? And to think that I used to have a great respect for them feilert who could write!---Cincinnati Enquirer. \I understand that you have been called to another charge,” said tbe In terviewer. \No said the minister, ■who had been struggling along at the tall end of the little church debt, ”b) the blessing of Providence this Is a cash situation that I take.\—indlanapolia Journal . \I would go with you to the end of tbe earth,” be asserted passionately. \Not with me you wouldn’t,” she re plied, coldly. “Why not?” he demand ed. “For two reasons,” she answered. “One Is that I’m not going away, and the other Is that there Isn’t any.\ —When one meets the prosaic new worn-- TO QO TO PARIS Meat Tear ea t a Honorary Con tale tioner to the Ex position. Ia selecting Mrs. Artie Goodwln-Oul- lop, of Vincennes, lnd.,,as one of the five honorary commlssifncrs to the Paris Exposition next ywu: Gov. Mount has made an excellent choice. Mrs. 3ullop l i a highly accomplished wonl- MBS. ARTIE GOUDWIN-CUI.LPP. au >iud possesses unusual executive ability. She Is a brilliant conversa tionalist and a splendid linguist, epeuk- lug French and English with equal fluency. In securing this appointment she had the endorsement of Federal judges and other men of national repu tation, besides the support of her hus band Hon. William Allen Cullop, one of the leading attorneys of Southern Indiana. . , CRUSADE AGAINST LYNCHINGS. Ne# M1 m Lillian Jew ett, of Boston, Harriet Beecher Htowe. Miss Lillian Clayton Jewett of Bos ton, who has taken up the crusade against the lynching of Southern ne groes and has won the love of the col ored race for her service, Is a very good looking woman. She promises to lie a very effective one as well. She Is 24 years old, a little taller tbau the average, and a great deal more pleas ing and Impressive as a public speak- ed. In her home city she Is referred to as a new Harriet Beecher Stowe. When she stood up in the muss meet ing of colored people at St. Gauls MISS JEWETT. Baptist Church and offered to bring from Charleston, 8. 0., the family of murdered I ’oBtinaster Baker she creat ed a sentiment which will not soon subside. She believed that tbe bring ing of Mrs. Baker and her orphaned rhlldreu would arouse the North to take suet) action as will compel a cessa tion of lyuchlngs in the South. It Is a part of Miss Jewett's plan to take the widow and orphans with her, to lave them In lecture rooms where ad dresses are made lu the crusade kgatnst Judge Lynch. “When Cod has some great work to perform,” said Rev. Mr. Ferris In Introducing her, “He has always touched the heart of a woman and the work has been done.” And Miss Jewett herself, la her ad dress, declared: \The black man la this country is flee, but he Is more destitute than he was thirty years ago. Fbe country freed him, but did nothing Ise for him.” an one has to be careful what he says. -T it-B it*, v f Mrs. Fadde, raith cnrlstj—How |* yoor grandfather thfMntwaing, Bridg et? “He «till ha* the rheumatics mighty bad, mum.” \You mean he thinks he baa the rehumatism. There is no such thing as rheumatism.” “Yes, mom.” A few days later: “And does your r Where Women Never Speak. The severity of the Bernardinos of Atglet, Sisters of St. Bernard, most re (enables that of the famous Trappis* monks. The nuns take a vow of per petual silence. The nunnery Is sit© kted In the southwest corner of Franct »n the borders of Spain, and under the Shadow of the Pyrenees. It was found ed by the Abbe Gestae. Every hour of the day Is carefully mapped out Each Jme the big clock of the monastery rhimes the hour, every nun falls on her knees and spends a few moments in prayer. Ont In the fields, It is mar vellous to see how well the oxen know finise chimes. Directly they hear them they stop Instinctively, starting on their way again the Instant tbe Sister* rise from their knees. The Bernar- dines have no fear of death. Indeed, on the contrary, they long for I t When the first Superior of their order lay dy ing, she had an Interview with one of tbe nuns, who implored her to Inter cede on her behalf In heaven that she. grandfather still persist In liis delusion i ^ ^ g l t die soon. The Superior that be baa the rheumatism?” “No, | md in an Inspired voice said mum; tbe poor man thinks now thot ht la dead. We burled 'im ylsterday.\ S c h i l l i n g s B e s t a m e y - b a c k t e * t a i that In a month her request should be granted. On the day of tbe burial, Just as the coffin was to he closed, the nun drew near the body, whispered In Its ear, and slipped a note Into the dead hand, imploring the Superior not ta forget her promise. Ju s t a month from that date the nun, too, passed away tad to the promise was fulfilled. Goal l a | « i t k A frica. ; Cod mining It making great strides pi So«& Africa. Last year the owtpdl to the m tnaJauaad district * ' tn LOMOO tods. - ------ U in a M k a l loitrameat ot Marvel* t — r ' v r f w r t o n . - - — - ! At Greenwich observatory, England, * “time Is made.” The Observatory con sists of a handsome building of brick | and terra cotta, and baa been apeclaJy j designed to afford facilities for astron- j omlcol work, la the dome, on tbe upper door, Is mounted the fine equatorial presented to tbe observatory by Sir Henry Thompson, which has been In course of Installation since 1801, and ta now declared complete. Tbe instru ment Is the very latest development of GREENWICH OU8EBVATORY. astrouoBileul work, aud combines the accuracy of the most powerful tele scope with the advantages of photog raphy. When used for purposes of ob servation the Thompson equatorial has affixed to It a sensitive plate, ou w hich the image of the star being observed is projected; and by a delicate system of mechanism, controlled by a clock, the telescope, is caused to move across the plane of the sky at the same rate as the earth, thus Insuring a correct and sharp reproduction (if the star's out line. The whole of the apparatus Is now In perfect working order, Hiitl It Is used nightly for the extension of the map of the heavens, which lias during the past year been augmented by 1.027 successful observations. HEAD REST IN BARBER SHOP Contrivance that Secures a ( lean One fur Bach Clivtniuer, In those days of advanced sanitary science It Is not only necessary 1 lint the patrons of a barber shop should have Individual soap and brush and PAPER-COVKUkD I1EAI1-I1KST. elean towels, but It Is now\proposed to give each patron au Indivdual head rest as he reposes in tlie chair, Tills no tion has been patented In this country by Herman E. Wlndrath, of Alx la- Chnisdle, Germany. By this invention the euRhlon of the head rest Is displayed hy one consisting of sheets of paper or parchment super imposed one over the other, and as each patron leaves the chair the top sheet Is torn away and a fresh one presented for the next comer. A lady writer says a kiss on the for#- head denotes reverence for the intel lect. Perhaps It does, but the averags girl doesn’t care for that style of Intel lectual reverence. The portrait arttst’a work Is #saely Creeping Numbness is a. Danger Signal Mr. 0. H. Bnydi ettlsen of Lawreno I u s now seven’ s well knows «*ld: TMTt Of About tfire* yean sgo I experienced • eoldnSM or numbness in the (bet, then creeping op my legs, until it reached my body. I grew verjr tbin ta fleah, appetite poor and I relish my food. At last! became on. loot able to move about. I consulted several distinguished physic: one telling me 1 bad loco ataxia, another that 1 bed erOhp log paraiysla I took their medlcuM bat coo tinned to grow wore*. Nkimoet s g tr ago a friend advisedme to try . Williams’ Pick Pills ffvPalePeo- pin Before 1 had finished my first box I loand they were benefiting me. I need twelve boxes in all, and was perfectly cored. Although it Is (tx moetin since I used my last pill of tbs Jeer* baa been oo neanene e ___ fiSnasa”—AVew Aawrraas Journal. f f f Pimples, eruptions, blotches, scales, ulcers, sores, eczema and chronic swellings are caused by bad bjoe& CASCARETS are wonder-workers in the cure of any disease caused by bad or impure Wood* They eliminate ! all poisons, build up and enrich the blood, enabling it to make new, healthy tissue. Pure bkxxi means perfect health, and if you will use Cascarets they will give you good health and a pure, clean skin, free from pimples and blotches. To try Cascarets is to like them, for never before has there been produced as perfect and so harmless a blood purifier, liver and stomach regulator as CASCARETS Candy Cathartic I Don’t be imposed upon with “something just as good” as CASCARETS—y<m can’t find ttl H & f —*v, X- MMIU. “CAECA MMTR de all iliiM d tor «*#■» sad sm s indy wesdtrful mediela*. I havsentawishsd nr s medietas pleasant te taka, and at laat bate found It la CASCA. RBTS. Since taking them my blood has been purified end my complexloa ho Improved wonderfully, and t (eelmueb batter Is every Mas. SAU4S C. Sauuua. Luttmlt, Teat. A Biblical Bsplaaatloa. Mw P ar *' «.t «mnM iinrlatm4aai<l ANNUAL 8 ALES* 6 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 BOXC 8 * 7725 IS THE TABLET Vv°RK WHILE YOU S l t f P fOc* 25c. 50c. DRUGGISTS CASCARETS are sbeolutely ht ran tee, t purity vegetable eompouad. Re mercurial « other mlaital ptU-peleea It Catearett. Oaaearata pmmptly, alaotivaly aad pervaeaaatty cure every diiordor of the Btomaoh, Liver end InteetluM. They act only cure cosetipatlea, bat oonreet aay aad every tom el Irregularity of tba to well, lacludlagdiarthaaaadSyaeataqr. Pleaiaut, palatable, potent. Taate good, do good. Hirer tlcken, weakea or gripe. Be aura yoa get the genuine l Beware of imltatlMi aad aubatitutea I Bay a box of CASCAEBTd to day, aud if not ploaacd in trery reapoot, get your monoy back I Writ, ua lor booklet aad free lamplt I Addreaa STIRLIHQ/BBMIDT COMPART, C11CA80 ot HEW TOEJt. 0 fefE£ One of the braie Jackies who “was with Dewey” at the battle of Manila l!a.y tells this new aiienlote of the great admiral. The teller Is lliury Deghman, a sailor of the cruiser B ob ton, and his story !» tills: ’’The most affecting incident which occurred, and Which uit of the sailors will remember through I heir lives, was the action of a Iiowdcr boy. These hoys art ns aids to captains and lieutenants in carry ing messages and doing errands. When the order was given lo strip for net ton, one of the hoys tore his coat off bur- rlcdly, and It fell from his hands and went over the rad. down Into the bay, A few iuonicuts before lie had been gazing ou ids mother's photograph, and Just before he took ids rout off he had kissed the picture and put it lu Ills in side pocket. When the cent fell over board lie turned to the captain aud asked permission to jump overboard and get It. Njjturully the request was refused. The soy then climbed down the ladder. He swam around to the place where the coat lmd dropped, and succeeded In getting It. I believe it WHS still floRtinfl when he got there. IVhen lie came back lu was ordered In fhalos for disobedience. After llie tmt- /le he was tried by a court martial for Disobedience and found guilty, t’om- tnoilore Dewey became Interested tn (lie case, for lie could not understand nhy the boy hud risked his life and Disobeyed orders for u coat. The lad |iad never told w hat his motives were, (tut when the t'ominodore talked to him in a kindly way, and asked him why |>e had done such strange tldngs for an p!d coat, he broke Info tears and told the Commodore that his mother's pic ture was In the coat. Commodore Dewey’s eyes tilled with, tours ns he listened to the story. Then lie picked the boy up In his arms and embraced him. He ordered the little fellow to he instantly released and pardoned. ’Boys who love th dr mothers enough lo risk their lives for their pictures can not lie kept in irons on this fleet,’ he laid.” The American soldiers In the Philip pines are sometimes obliged to rend let- :ers from home under difficulties. “Tbe boys were nil anxious to read their let ters,’’ writes one of them, ’ but Hie jnestion was bow to obtain a light. Dur squad thought they hud solved the Difficulty with some gum oil In n dish »nd a rag; but no sovher had we a goof light burning than the bullets bcgai llnglng around ns nt a great rate. The light wa* put out. I had plenty of matches, however, and I adopted an other scheme. I covered my head with l poncho and scratched matches till the letter was read, although I almost suf focated in doing so.” I f t l i Kqutpm«ftt, Th* 0. K. A N. and Oregon Short Lins have added s buffet, smoking sad library car to tliair Korlland-Ohloag* tli rough tiain, and a dining car Mrs lot has beau Inauguarsted. Th* train is equipped with the latest chair ca day couches and luxurious fiiel-ol end ordinary ileepeii. Ditto! oenn lien nrada st Granger with Uulot olfio, tnd at Ogdea with Rio Grt Use, from all potute in Oregen, Wj Ington and Iduhe to all ftaitsia el For information, ratal, ate., Mil s i any O. li. A N. agent, #r tddreee W, II. Ilurlburt, General PeilMger Ageat, Foillsud. E. ,1. Doncon lias abandoned the idea of building a grain warehouse at Fletcher's siding on llie't). K, & N. be tween Oakasdale and Seltlse, Wash., as it was announced he would do. Instead of building a warehouse on tire 0. U. & N. for Ills own use, Hie Northern Pa cific has built one on it a line and do nated the tiHe of It lo Mr. Donecn and net here $600 to $800 a car. “ F lag No. M ” In the mcellug room of Division No. 4li of I ht- llrolhi'l'huud of Locomotive Engineers ut Albany, N. Y., la a simp'e yel lunching ami appropriate meuicuio of as brave au cnglucdrivcr as ever put band to throttle. This engineer, Ed wa hi'K ennnr, rail engine 288 on the western division of the New York neu tral llallroad. The Geulury Magsziue tells I he story of his heroism. Gnu April night, as Keunar's tralu was speeding toward Ilatavla, the locomotive headlight suddenly flushed upon a muss of moving earth and rock ou (lie track. The train was rushing toward a landslide, of which there had not la-cu the slightest warning. The whistle shrieked ' Down brakes!\ but It was too Isle. No. 2!I8 plunged Into the heaping dchrlAjLU^-e-mvuafuH later lay wrecked oj^lfefoot of the emfcr^k- nient. n Plnnpd/flown hy tons of, steel, and writhyfg in the agony of death, wna Kennar. Suddenly he seemed to pull together what of life there wna left In hlin. Slightly raising Ids head, he shrleked-lt seemed almost In auger— at those vvho had gathered about to help him if they could: \Elag No. fd” Will) those words on Ids I’ps he died. “No. 5” was a west-bound train which usually ruet Kennar's near this point. The warning which he, forget ting his own agony, had given with hts dying breath, recalled No. B'a peril to the train-bands, and hurrying back to the track they were In time to flag It. Death M ask o f IngersolL “Don’t shoot until you can see the krhlte* of their eyes.\ was an order flTra iff pBaSY God, O’Ttorke at the summit of Little Round Top. “Don't Ihoot until yon can see the lights on their cigarettes,\ was the order given by a Twentieth Kansas captain one night near Manila, according^ Albert Dry, a Fort Scott boy with that regi ment Taken from the Jnst after death. plas’er cast mada The King of Greece rarely dons a uni form, but when he does he shows a marked preference for light colors. rtT# RnwnrnUv Cam*. KafitsamervamiKWi rill * ---------- ------ - - - - ■*— first asy'o ass of fix. KUoc’s Orcai Serve Kastorm. seofl t e F K « jrt.O O Soldo did trm t t t r . Da- E H. XLIXE, LML, Wf O-fCS street, rftilodelphta, t o Both In One. A writer in the Ladles' Home Journal credits—or charges— Wlillam M. Evarts with • sharp saying about the ladies. At a reception in Washington Mr. Evarts was drawn Into a discussion between two ladies, “Mr. Evorts.\ *aid one, “do yon not think I am right in saying that a wom an is always the best Judge of another woman's character?” “Madam,\ replied Mr. Evarts, “she The number of fallhtres from ail causes tn antomatle M o tt signals as compared with th« total number of movements of each signal does not ex ceed more than one la MJW4. is not only the beet Judge, but also the best execatkmer.” BUY THE CtENUINE SYRUP IF H 6 S’ i Modest Appeal. Tbe attention of Engilsb-speaktof visitors to the Milan Cathedral is read ily attracted by the following node* which appear* ever an alms-box: Appels to Charitable*. The Brother*, u - a t s t a , o t Merejr *** deader arm# CALIFORNIA « 8 S m * » CO. for tbsHoapttaL They harbor s i kinds ot f i n i s, and h e r * a* * ,v M 4 Every woman has'an Idea that she “holds her age well.\ It Is true that Eve had the devil to Contend with, hut Adam had Eve. A man always feels queer when a woman tells him she Is crying “because site Is glad.” Maybe the reason most women talk so much aud so fust Is because If they didn't they might have to think. When a lftitpmiml woman loses ■ pound and a quarter she tries to act like she whs going into a decline. A woman will coufldeVa lot more slamt her husband to a friend than she will confide to her husband about her self. When a girl first gets engaged to a man she wonders how she was ever able to live so long without express, tiig herself. There was never but one really brave man. He told a woman he didn't think her baby was unusually bright for Its age. A man can take crooked fact* and tell them sUwIght; hut there never was a woman w ho could take straight facts and tell them anything Imt crooked.. Among tlie women a newcomer Is never considered neighborly until alo has sent the hired girl to borrow at least two nutmegs and three cups of sugar. Tbe average woman who begin* mar ried life thinks she lives on love; but It Isn't long before she gets down to three meals a day, and she doesn't even try to stay her appetite on the other. Tbe average girl lias the Idea that the main duty tn nisrrled life is to or tier tilings for dinner and to make a fancy smoking Jacket for tier husband to wear when he comes home from business. S1I4KB INTO YOtia SHOSJS. Alien a F o o t-E o n , t powder for th* feet. It cures painful, swollen, • martins, nervous feet, sod Instantly takes th* sting out ot corns snd bunions. It’s th* gnat- eat comfort discovery of th* sgf. AUsn’s foot-kune makes tight or new shoes feel eusy. It !• a certain cur* for Ingrow ing Nalls, sweating, callous Snd hot, tired, sehlrig feet. Wa have over >0,000 tastimoa- Isis. Try It today. Bold by nil druggists and shoe atorea. By mall for So In stamps. Trial packaga FR E E . Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. T. The Portland flouring mills are har ing erected for their use tn Dayton a large grain warehouse. The new build ing is 50x260 feet In dimensions and will be ready to handle quite a share of the preBent wheat crop. Pewesi a i t lees. Weeks* rniirr.ANii w ik r * iron w o r k *; w ir b ami Iron fencing; ofri.B railing, # 10 . M4 Aldar. Negotiations between Augustus St. Haudena, the distinguished American. Bculpturer, and the ministry of public instruction in Parts, have resulted In an agreement which will place several of the works of the former In the muse um of the Euxembourg, DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED. By local application*, aa they cannot ranch tha JiHcased ponton of the ear. There la only one a i y to cure deefneee, and that Is by eonetl- tutional remedies. LNHkfneM la caused tyr aa tn* Mamed condition ot the raucous llnlnc of the KuBtachtan Tube. When jhle tube fete In* Mamed you have o rumbltnf sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It i* entirely closed deain«M le the result, and unites the Inflammation oan he taken out and this tube restored to tte nor* mai condition, hearlny will be destroyed for* ever; nine oaeee out of ten are caused by catarrh, whioh 1* nothing but an Inflamed ggn- dlthm of the muenu* surfaces. Yve Win give One Hundred Hotiara tor any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that oan* not he cured by Hall'i Catarrh Cum. Bend far circulars, free. F. J, CHENFT A CO„ Toledo, OblOh Bold by drusalme, 16c. Hall s Family Mils are the beet The Washington State Board of Au dit and Control have let the contract to BalKuif. Guthrie t Go., for furnish ing 1,0UU bales of Calcutta jute for the sack factory at the penitentiary st Wal la Walla. Delivery is to be made in Decemlier. The price is $3.92C, per bale for red brands, and $3.6?Mt for Mark brands. A bale contains about HJO pounds. ’ > WHY PUT IT OFF? When a person Is completely mm dew*, pain* S the back, headaches, tired, utterly worm out! filing, why put off taking something to Mop e raysges ol disease? floore’s Revealed Remedy Will ai(k« yon well, quickly—it ni(kM yowlMt like * |iew perxm. it ■ ploannt te tsk*. $1.0* Parent*! PrMe. “Your baby seems to have good use •f his arms snd legs.” “I Should say so. Jeffries won’t hold , fisrho**1* Onigjl,n. on to that pugilistic championship mors than twenty years and all month#” In the Fntnre. Gendarme (to the victim who has jaot been n i l over by an antomobli# car riage)—None of your Impudence. Bho# me yonr license to walk!—Le Blr*. IF! PENSION TIA1M4NTH Ff»R write to NATHAN •HfCKFORD.Washington. D. C-. th<*y will revive quick replies. H. 6th N. H. vols. staff if )th corps. Prosecuting claim# since 137*). A Thonghrrnl L i t t l e G irl. All Boston children are thonghtfnl. It was a dear, tliougliiful iltlJLe Boston girl w ho, when told by ber mother Of the death of a grmdniother .--lie great ly loved, sat silent a while, and then, looking up, said; “Mamma, what time did grandma die?\ “At 4 o’clock iu tbe afternoon,\- was the answer. Again the little girl lapsed Into monrnfnl siieoce, niwfl, as though a ray of sunshine had broken through the gloomy cloud, sb- devontly ex claimed: “Then I’m so Thankful ah# had dinner first.’”—Buffalo Gomtner- rial Trade o f tbe f*bllippta««. The latest figures obtainable show that the Fhtliiqfine Islands import $9- 174.093 worth of goods and export #HL- ItKLSlB worth, leaving tn round num ber*, t balance' In their favor of $ » ,- 600,000. These figures are for MOT, tnd k is stated that tbe average value of toe trade ot toeee Islands to t a r In excess of the snms gtrea. |*» been moebdtotarbed fey the iiRnr- YOUNG MEN I ... _ ________ MastHthkh O k m » fc Mat OFLY mt&etwt vfeidi wig «ur» « u k M M ~ *0 CASE b a n ft I n m r gf mwttar How wrtawa or of bowloagsb 9n m ib wn wltt ogkm m row. It to i •rotwaii MrteSwrWa tad swa h* tokos 1 ■toaat aad MSMtoMtMMhotoanA P mb tyMfwSS^HWiitoto, or bb M ji ptotofr w m id, a y g # g T Mt KASmit BOOK. lief for i «\• j ? F r t i c f c F m l i P M i i #! SltETHItBFl