uestions for OtKBBD If yen were offered sure aid in time of trouble would you put it aside and accept something' of doubtful efficiency ? If yon saw before you a strong and safe "bridge leading to your goal, would you ignore it to try some insecure and tottering structure ? The answer to these questions is plain. You would, of course, choose without hesitation what all evidence showed to be the safe thing, and you would risk nothing in useless experi ments. Why, then, do some women risk one of their most precious possessions their health in trying medicines of unknown value, which may even prove hurtful to them.? Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Com pound has stood the test of years. It has the largest sale of any remedy for female ills in the world, and nothing could have given it this sale except its own merit. Do not try any experiments, but buy what is known to be reliable. Mrs. Finkham's Compound can do all that is claimed for it, and all statements in regard to it can be easily verified. Write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for a little book she has just published containing letters from the mayor of Lynn, the postmaster and others. Mrs. Finkham's advice is offered free of charge to ail women who write to her for aid. This invitation is con stantly renewed. A million women have been cured of serious female illsby Mrs. Finkham's advice and medicine. . m . j j M VI three Letters rrom ine i Woman, Showing How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege tabla Compound Cured Falling of the Wombs " Dear Mrs. Piskham I see your advertisement in the papers in regard to treating woman's diseases, and would be grateful to you for your ad vice in my case. I am suffering from falling of womb, have pains in my sides and legs, in fact I ache all over. I am getting so weak I cannot stand on my feet much. I have the head ache sometimes, and a choking, tight feeling in my breast and throat. Have a baby seven months old. I hope to hear from you soon, as I am in so much distress." Mrs. J. E. Comptojt, Eggbornsville, Va., May 16, 1898. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham I followed your advice and I am now on the sec ond bottle of your Vegetable Com pound and I think it is going to cure me. If it does I will ever praise it, for I am, and have been, a great suf ferer ; but now I live in hopes of getting well." Mrs. J. R. Compton, Eggbornsville, Va., July 12, 1898. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham Again I write to you. When I first wrote to vou for advice in regard to my troubles I thought I could never get well again. After receiving your letter I followed your advice exactly, ancL thanks to you, I am cured of that dreadful disease. 1 cannot find words to ex press the good your medicine will do. It is really more than was recom mended to me." Mrs. J. R. Comptok, Eggbornsville, Va., April 12, 1899. Two Women Cured of Ir regularity, Falling of the Uterus and Ovarian Trouble. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I have female weakness. Menstruation ir regular, and I suffer bearing-down pains in left side and hip. My doctor said I had womb trouble and enlarge ment of the ovaries. 1 have doctored two months, but see no improvement." Miss Mart E. Reed, Swan Creek, 111. 9 " Dear Mrs. Pinkham Your good advice has been worth more than all I ever received from a doctor. Words cannot express- my gratitude to you for Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Com pound. After twelve years' suffering I am stout and healthy." Miss Mary E. Reed, Swan Creek, 111., April 28, 1899. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I suffer female troubles. My doctor wishes my ovaries taken out, but I shall never consent. Menstruation is irreg ular and my head has a tired feeling. Hospital treatment does me no good. I have five children and am forty-four years old. Please advise what medi cine to take." Mrs. E. ELSondebs, 437 N. 40th St., Philadelphia, Pa., Septem- Der 27, 16U8. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham I followed the advice you gave me and your medi cine has cured me. I felt better when I had taken the Vegetable Compound but a week." Mrs. E. H. Sonders, Philadelphia, Pa., February 6, 1899. Another Case of Nervous Prostration and Inflam mation of tthe Bladder Cured by Lydia . Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I have used your Vegetable Compound for female weakness and it has done wonders for me. I also had nervous prostration was not able to look after my house work. After taking one bottle I began to improve, and am now better in every way and feel like a different person." Mrs. Della Keiskb, Marionville, Pa., February 32, 1899. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I cannot praise your Vegetable Compound enough for the good it has done me. I suffered from inflammation of the bladder. I tried doctors, but obtained no relief. At last I decided to write to you, and now, thanks to your reme dies, I am entirely cured." Mrs. K. S. Gradt, 131 Union St., High Bridge, New York City, April 11, 1899. DROPSY 10 DAYS' TfiEATMEKT FREE. Haves cade Dropry and its com plications a specially fox twenty suciess. Have cured many thous and cases. :. ti. ik a. saBfitrB suns, Box Hi " Atlanta, ita. CUTLER'S OARBGL&TE of IODINE A guaranteed Cure for Catarrh and Consumption. $1.00. D Lock Box 145. W. H. SMITH & CO., Buffalo, M.Y, Prop's. JOHN POOLE, Portland, Orkuon. can give you the best bargains in general machinery, engines, boilers, tanks, pumps, plows, belts and windmills. The new steel I X L windmill, sold by him, is un equalled. " S miivs WHERf. ALL ELSE FAILS. I Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I In time. Sola dt arugcisn. WILL BE BLOWN UP. DESTRUCTION OF ARCH ROCK, SAN FRANCISCO BAY. Grim, Gray and Pictnresque Pinuacle a Terror to the Mariner-Has Been a Menace to Navieation Kver Since the Days of '49. Shag rock No. 1 and Shag rock No. 2 in San Francisco having been disposed of, contractors are now busily engaged in work preliminary to the demolition of the still more tumous Arch rock in the same maritime thoroughfare. The forty-niner cannot recall the day when this picturesque menace to navigation was not anathematized by the sailor man. Many a time its destruction has been suggested, and its demolition would have been accomplished long ago but for the sentimental oppo sition of a few veteran Californians who hated to see their odd-looking old friend disappear forever. Residents of Sausalito have always been particularly- averse to its destruction, their cry always being that it was one of the sights of the bay. Eventually contin ued agitation by pilots and others in terested in shipping bore fruit, and now Arch rock must follow in the way of the two others. In early days of California's history It was a favorite amusement for young men to wait for an unusually low tide and then pull a boat through the arch. So far as is known the first time this feat was accomplished was In 1857, when Captain Frank Murphy, one of the best known pilots of his day, rowed a small boat through. For a few years the daring trip was occasionally made or attempted, but eventually a couple of young fellows, in trying to do the trick, were dashed against the arch by the heavy swell. The boat was smash ed and the young men lost their lives. Since that time rowboats have given Arch rock a wide berth. Frank Boyd, a noted pilot of the Cali fornia coast, voiced the opinion of all men in his profession when he called Arch rock a dangerous spot, and said It should have been blown up long ago. "When they come to survey that spot," he said, "they will find every inch of ground In the vicinity of Arch rock covered with anchors and chains. Coasters and deep-water ships by the ARCH ROCK, SAN hundred have come within an ace of going on the rock and had to slip their anchors In order to get clear. The first vessel that I remember being wrecked on Arch rock," continued Cap tain Boyd, "was the pilot-boat Sea Witch. That was in 1855. All the pilots had "boarded off and the schoon er was coming in in charge of the boat keeper. There, was a dense fog and the boatkeeper mistook Arch rock for a sloop under sail and getting his course accordingly made the mistake of his life. All hands were saved, but the Sea Witch was a total loss. "The next wreck was that of the clipper ship Flying Dragon In the win ter of 1801-62. She made ,the fastest run on record from Newcastle, N. S. W., thirty-five days, and anchored off Meiggs wharf. Captain Watson, the well-known marine surveyor, was in command of the vessel, but the pilot was still in charge when the accident happened. A sudden change of wind and a fierce squall drove the Flying Dragon down on the rock and she be came a total loss. "The next vessel lost on the rock was the bark Autocrat In 1809. She was loaded with coal and drifted down to her doom in a dense fog. Since that time numberless vessels have made the acquaintance of Arch rock and always to their disadvantage. The old ferry boat Clinton went on one of its ledges In a fog and the steamer Oregon, now running between the sound and Nome, lost her bilges on It. The old bark Columbia stuck on it for a day and a night, and, last of all, the bark Cey lon drifted down on It a few months ago and was saved by the quarantine steamer Sternberg. As It was the Cey lon lost all her sheathing. It would take a page to give the number of ves sels that have just escaped going on Arch rock by slipping their cables, and when the contractors come to boring I'll guarantee they will find more chain and anchors than rock." FOUGHT A FIERCE GRIZZLY. Pints Indian Kille 1 the Huge Brute with Only a Knife. The California-grizzly bear has been one of the most powerful and uncon querable beasts ever known to the Western pioneer. A meeting with him has usually brought death to the hardy adventurer who dared enter the en counter, or even stand In his way when bruin came crashing through the un derbrush. Other bears are met with confidence and dispatched with a steady aim, but when a grizzly comes thunder ing down the bowlders, tearing off trees In his superbly undeviating course, shaking the mountain side with his half ton of savage bulk, the nery.es of man have to be strong indeed to withstand the spectacle. There is death In the red jaws, ripping and tearing In the powerful claws, strength to dash a man's bead from his body at a blow from one of the huge forelegs. Coming head-on, he is like all savage creation turned loose. He is usually more than mortal can face; only the preternatur-ally-brave and reckless court death and defy the fates by daring to stand and tight when he comes. Yet a few days ago a Piute Indian, armed with only a knife, met and overcome one of these monsters. The Indian was living at last accounts, but the bear was dead. Mustang is the Indian's name. He and another Piute were out in a tre mendously wild region of the Hetch Hetchy valley and when descending j the bed of a gorge they almost ran into the jaws of the largest grizzly they had ever seen. Mustang and his companion fired their rifles at the brute, but the two shots produced no more effect in arresting the bear's charge than would the throwing of a pebble against the wind stop a cyclone. Mustang was a step in advance of his companion and bruin reached nim first, knocking his gun one way and him the other. The companion climbed a tree. Mustang plunged his knife to the handle into the shaggy monster, slashed it again and again across his rough-hide, ripped and cut until blood poured from a dozen gashes in the herculean carcass; then he fell under a crushing blow from one of the spiked paws and lay quivering on the rocks with the bear tearing strips of hide from his back and chew ing his arms and shoulders to a pulp. Meantime Mustang's friend was vain ly trying to get his rifle into working order. It had been Injured when he climbed the tree. From morning till night this condition lasted. The bear soon left the mangled remains of Mus tang and lumbered in red vengeance over to the tree where perched the other Indian. After trying in vain to climb he limped back to Mustang, but befcre he could tear the man to pieces the Indian, who was by no means dead yet, drove the knife into his enemy's vitals. The bear staggered off a few yards and then, overcome by the fear of death which comes instinctively to all animals, staggered down the gorge, but fell for good in a few minutes. As sistance soon reached Mustang, who was cared for by cunning medicine men of his own race. Does Not Come with Age. A medical man has discovered that neither in youth nor old age is a man likely to make the biggest fool of him self. Extreme youth usually Is consid ered not to have arrived at the dignity of years of discretion, yet a homely proverb would have us believe that "there is no fool like an old fool." This medical observer has broached the theory that there is an "aberration period of middle life," between the ages of 57 and 62. "If," he says, "a FRANCISCO BAY. careful examination be made of the preventable disasters of the last twenty years and of the ages of those who were held responsible by the verdict of mankind for such lamentable issues there will be found a strange coinci dence In the rage of their ages." Here Is an interesting and practically inexhaustible field for Investigation. Politicians who are "ag'ln' the govern ment" may trace the blunders of an administration to the sinister influence of some boss who was passing through the fatal period at the time, and "re grettable incidents" of all kinds, in war or peace, may be traced to their true origin. In time, no doubt, we shall appreciate, the necessity of requir ing all public men, on entering the fatal period, to take a five years' holiday and to resume work only when they have passed the age of aberration. New York Press. Dissipated Hailstorms. "An effort is being made In France to dissipate hailstorms by firing cannon at the clouds," writes Consul Covert to the State Department from Lyons. "Fifty two cannon, manned by one hundred and four cannoneers and their chiefs, have been distributed over an area of twenty-five acres of rich vineland. A high point in the vineland to be covered by the experiments were selected as the central post of observation and a sig nal code adopted under which, when a shot is heard from the central post all the cannon are fired, at twice a minute and more slowly after the first ten shots. 1 translate the report of the first tiring at the storm cloud this season: The farmers of Denice were aroused at one-thirty o'clock on the night of June 5 and 6. The storm was very severe. The artilleries, from forty to fifty strong, fired their guns and stopped the thunder and lightning. In the neigh boring communes the people saw col umns of flame rise three hundred feet above the cannon when the shots were fired." Beyond Him. Matthew Arnold, next to Whistler, was perhaps the- most colossal egotist of his time. After his return to London from his first lecturing tour in America, he vis ited old Mrs. Proctor, widow of the poet "Barry Cornwall," and mother of Adelaide Proctor. Mrs. Proctor, who was then 80 years old, in giving Mr. Arnold a cup of tea, asked him. "And what did they say about you in America?" "Well," said the literary autocrat, "they said I was" conceited, and they said my clothes did not fit me." "Well, now," said the old lady, " think they were mistaken as to the clothes." New World. Papa Was Wearing the Laundry. The little girl was inclined to answei the door bell about as soon as it sound ed, and sometimes she gave answers to whoever might be there that were curious. One day the man who collects the packages of laundry was at the door and asked if the laundry was ready. "No," sr" replied; "papa has got It on." Those who subscribe now for the 1901 volume of T Youth's Companion Sending 91.75, a year's sub scription price, with this slip or the name of this publica tion, will receive, Free, from the time of subscription. January 1, 1901, In JL J eluding the Holiday issues, and The Companion's "Puritan Girl" IZfXJMk Calendar, litho graphed in twelve colors, by Illustrated Announcement and Sample Copies FREE on Request, m m a m m When tlie Sun Goes Down In Turkey. In Turkey the disappearance of the sun at night is accounted for by the periodical retirement of that pious luminary for prayers and religious re flection. DON'T GET FOOTSORE. GET FOOT EASE. A powder. At t li is season your feet feel swollen, nervous and uncomfortable. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. It rests aiuUcomforts ; makes walking easy. Cures swollen and sweating fegt, blisters and callous spots'. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and is a certain cure for 'hi! Ma ins. Sweating, Damp or Frosted Feet. We have over 30, 000 leMimonials. Don't get footsore gel Foot-Ease. Try it today. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial package Frke. Address, Allen S. Olm sted, Le Itoy, N. Y. The Chicago & Alton will exclude news agents from trains. The Heat Prescript ion for Malaria Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form No Cure. No i'ay. Price 50c. Boil eggs for 15 minutes if required hard. Piso's Cure cannot be too highlv spoken of as a cough cure. J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave. N., Minneapolis, Miuu., Jan. u, 1000. - , All jars containing stores should be covered. v ' Carter's Tut is just as -cheap as poor iidF and is the best ink made. Always Qse Carter's. Fish an 1 onions, or strongly flavored foods, must be kept separate. . Steps the Gough and Works Off the Gold. Laxative Bro mo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. After slicing onions put the knife at once into cold water, it removes the smell better than hot. Mothers will find Sirs. Winslow's Sooth Tig Syrup the best remedy to use for their Uiildren during the teething period. When using frozen meat the great point is to slowly and thoroughly thaw it before cooking. Order of Colored Nuns. In New Orleans is an order of col ored nnns, founded many years ago. It was instituted for the special pur pose of giving education and moral training to young colored girls and to care for orphans and aged, infirm per eons of their race. ' In its orphan asy lum are children of all ages up to 14 years. The convent is a stately build ing more than a century old, in the old French- quarter of New Orleans, and once was an opera house and ball room. The distance from New York to San Francisco by water, around Cape Horn is 15,660 miles. By the Isthmian canal the distance between the same points would be 4,907 miles a saving of 10,753 miles. AVgetable Preparattonfor As similating the Food andBegula ling the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion.Cheerful ness and Res t. Con tains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NotUahcotic. Ttozfie of oWUrSAMUELPtTCHEfl PumfJtM Seal Jbc ScnM JUkMUSJtt- Ilftfcjji'wt nmrer. A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature oF NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. " mu.ii-.nT TM all the remain ins 1900 issues The Youth's Companion, Boston, Mass. VJ Oataide and Inside. It is not easy for a man nowadays in good society to break with impunity the common canons of morality. And yet are we not sensible that it is a good deal easier to be good outside than inside. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man ufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teasDoonf ul. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Ad dress, F. J. CH ENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Thin'y shelled eggs are less liable to crack when boiled, if put on in cold water and slowly brought to a boil. YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE TAKING When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the formula is plainly printed on every bottle showipg that it is simply Iron and Quinine in a taste less form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. Use boiling" water when it first boils or the gases escape and the water be comes flat. ' . TO CUBE A COID IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's sig nature is on each box. 25c. Butter, unless clarified, should not be nsed for greasing tins, etc., as it easily burns, . C. Atkins & Co., saw manufac turers, Indianapolis, Ind., received a gold medal at the Paris exposition in the department of machinery, which included all kinds of saws operated by machinery, the other group containing their hardware exhibit of hand saws, cross cut saws, wood saws, etc. This latest success, following the victory of the Atkins saws in the recent interna tional sawine contest in Australia, will do much to establish the reputation of the brand in the markets of the world. All Australian race courses are oval, and from 1 to )-z miles each in cir cumference. But few dairymen who have large herds are as careful in milking as they shouldbe. Not one in a hundred ever washes the udders and teats of the cows before milking, followed by care fnl washing of the hands. Any dairy- i man who will practice such methods and who will invite his customers to witness his mode of management, will receive the highest prices for his milk, instead of selling to dealers. It may take a year or more to establish a repu- j tation for such milk, but the fact will become known and the future of the dairyman will be large profits and more customers than he can supply. GASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TMK CIMTAUH CM FA MY. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Facsimile Wrapper Below. Very small and as easy to take as i FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BIUOUSHESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKI. FOR THE COMPLEXION 2S ctrfe I Purely Vegetable., CURE SICK HEADACHE. The Valley of Humiliation. Here a man shall be free from tbo noise and from the burryings of this life; all states are full of noise and confusion, only the valley of humilia tion is that empty and solitary placo. Here a man shall not be let and hin dered in his contemplation, as in other places he is apt to be. This is a valley that nobody walks in bnt those that love a pilgrim life. John Bun van. Beds Are Scarce in Russia. Beds are quite an innovation in Rus sia, and many well-to-do houses are still unpiovided with them. Peasants sleep on the tops of their ovens; middle-class people and servants roll them selves up in sheepskins and lio down near stoves; soldiers rest upon wooden cots without bedding, and it is only within the last few years that students in schools have been allowed beds. Hclcrlnn Hare a Pest. The Belgian hare as a fad is a thing of the past. The craze is over and now the dangers lurking in it are beginning to suggest themselves seriously to the public mind. It is realized that an animal possessed of snch wonderful fe cundity is liable to become a destruct ive pest if it escapes .from captivity. Repressive legislation is, therefore, deemed necessary. The board of sup ervisors of San Diego county has taken the initiative by passing an ordinance prohibiting the liberation of a Belgian hare or perimtting one that may have escaped to remain at large or uncon fincd. Good cider differs greatly from that made of inferior apples. Instead of nsing half-rotten apples select those that are perfect and fully ripe. When the cider is running from the press strain it thoroughly. Use lard barrels, first cleaning the lard from the barral, but should a little adhere to the sides it will be an advantage. Keep the barrel in a cool placo and allow so air to enter other than that which forces in during the drawing at the spigot or fancet. A Berlin physician has written an article on the dangers resulting from what are considered insignificant wounds. For instance, of 13 injuries to the thumb, permanent disabili y followed in 60 per cent. Foods vary so greatly as to render it difficult for a farmer to select with a knowledge of the kinds which should be used. Only certain proportions of all foods are digestible bnt the indi- gestible portions are valuable in the . l I . io . i uiaauio ueup. uihu m .pi- yvr tun 13 worth the price, even-if applied to the crops direct, but when used as food it assists to balance the ration by supply ing mineral matter, thus promoting growth of the animal while adding greatly to the value of the manure. Avoid banging oven doors while bak ing, as it is the cause of many cakes and pastry being heavy. CARTERS 1 The Famous German Wood Preserver) ..AVENARIUS CARBOUNEUM.. ....Permanently Destroys.... ..CHICKEN LICE AND VERMIN.. fjtf One application is all that is requited It lasts for years. If your dealer cannot supply you, write for circulars and information to the following: distributing agents; Perfection Pile Preserving- Co., Seattle, Wash.; Fisher, Thorsen & Co., Portland, Oregon Whittier, Coturn & Co., San Francisco, CaL DOU YOU WANT YOUR SON EDUCATED FOR A BUSINESS LIFE? 7 OWiM kz& ciicty YAMHILL AMD ELKTIMTH STKBETS, PORTLAND, OKKGON. WriteTls. Send for our "iv Illustrated Catalogue. FINE OLD ...WHISKY... Gin, Brandy, Rum U full quarts. $9.00. Per gallon, 12.50. XXX PORT AND SHEKKY. 1.50. ALL GOOD GOODS Orders for $23.00 and upward delivered free to nearest Railroad or Steamer Landing. Blank Cases and Kegs. LOUIS CAHEN & SON Established 30 Years. BAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA. If a mm Wants to be cured the KEFLEX TREATMENT can cure him. No man can be cured of anything against his own will. Send for printed matter that tells all about it. THE KEFLEX INSTITUTE, 314 Sixth Street, PORTLAND, OR. N. P. N. U. No. 441900. w REN writing tft advertisers pleas Omnipotence may build a thousand worlds and fill them with bounties; omnipotence may powder mountains into dust, and burn, the sea, and con sume the sky, bnt omnipotence cannot do an unloving thing townrd a believer. Oh! rest quite sure, CI tian, a hard thing, an unloving thing from God to- i ward one of His own people is qaite impossible. He is as kind to you when He casts you into prison as when He takes you into a palace; He is as good when He sends famine into your house as when He fills your barns with plen ty. The only question is: Art thon His chid? If so, He hath rebuked thee in affection, and t iere is love in His chastisement. Christian Work. Decrease of Drtiukennes. In an address before the railroad branch of the Y. M. C. A. of New York City, Cbauucey M. Depew made a statement as to the decrease of drunkenness among railroad men that is worth repeating, coming from so high an authority. Twenty veras ago, he said, when there were about 15,000 men in the New York Central servioe, the average proportion of men dis charged for drunkenness within a cer tain period was at least 20 per cent. Now, with 30,000 men employed by tha company, not one per cent is dropped from the service for that cause. A Post of l)mg .r. The colonel of a regiment occupies the post of danger. According to the record more colonels have been killed in action, in proportion to their num ber, than officers of any other grade. A general can keep under cover, more or less, but tho colonel's position it with bis regiment, and when it ad van ccs he is expected to load. Still Moro Counterfeit injr. I The Secret Service has unearthed anolhet I band of counterfeiters and secured a quan tity of bogus bills, which are cleverly exe cuted. Things of great value are aiwayi selected for imitation, notably Hostetter'k Stomach liitters, which has many imita tors but no equals tor disorders like indi gestion, dyspepsia and constipation. Tut the sugar used for sweetening fruit tarts in the middle of the fruit, not on the top, or it will sodden the pastry This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative BromoQuinine Tablets the romody that cares a cold in one aay It is noticed that pigs fatten very quickly on sweet potaotes, due to the large amount of sugar in the food, and sweet potato growers utilize the small potatoes for that purpose. The beet also contains a large proportion oi sugar, and should be grown for swine, as they are telishcd at all seasons, both cooked and raw. If raw yolks of eggs aie left over from a dish, beat them np with a tea spoonful of water to each yolk and they will not dry np. a G&tarrh The cau?e exists in the Llcotl, in what causes inflammation of the mucous membrane. It is tnerefore impossible to cure the disease by local applications. It is posit:vely dangerous to neg- Uect it, because it always affects ti'e stomach ;m deranges the gen eral health, and is likely to develop into consumption. Many have been radically and perma nently' cured by Hood's tvirsaparilia. it cleanses the blood ami lias a peculiar al terative and tonic effect. It. Long, Cali fornia . I unction. Iowa, writes: 'I had ca tarrh three years, lost my appetite and could not sleep. My head pained me and I felt bad nil over. I took Hood's r-aina- pari I la am! now sleep well, and catarrh." have have a good appetite no symptoms of HoOSi'S SstPSSW&t'iiia 1 Promises to cure and keep- the promise. It is better not to put off '-eittment buy Hood's to-day. , SURE CURE FOR PILES ITCHING Piles produce moisture nd cause Itchlnff. This form, as well as Blind. 71 teed If iff or Protruding Plies are curedby Dr.Bosanko's Pile Remedy Btops ltchlnt; and bleeding. Absorbs minors. SOc a Jar atdrufrgfsts or sent ity vail. Treatise tree. WrlU ine about your case. 2U. UOtiAXKO. Pb lada 7a HELP WANTKI). WANTED Men and wonunt of cno4 ' eharmct.r to repreiiotit e.tMUllfttifri !kup. ' on .alary; ilei.riil opportunity. Ad dress P. O. Itox 537, Put timid. Union, NOTHING BETTER MADE Tom can't make a mistake it yon get s . .Mitchell.. Hitehell, Iteoiis & Staves Co. PORTLAND, ORECON. mention tma paper.