MMMM ' - - 1 " ' ' I . wmmmmm w'pyww..,.,. .. w-w - 1 ---- OAVES 'IN ' NtW' ZCALANIX ;'' Vi - I '-- - -DECISIVE Baking Powder Tests The United. States Official Investigation of Baking Powders, made, by authority of .'Congress, in the Department of Agriculture, Washing ton, D. C, furnishes the highest authoritative informa tion as to which powder is thq best. The Official Report Shows the ROYAL to be a Cream of tartar baking pow- r -f, der, superior to all others in ' leavening power J&i. " The resaoa a dot; ean look to knowing la be-' Osuae he csu'l My anything to KpMkjlhe eflect. j i i m ' Courts, HdAassNWbfjUo SimTbroat. "Hrom'$ tSmtchiat rrocW' give immediate reuei. . . . , ... - MsrrtaRS will continue to be a fallur till onr young women leirn to support a man in the style he h always be accustomed to. LEND TOOK t OX4TITUTION A HAM D. Constitutions are much alike, and far nine-tenths of us the same causes produoe the same effects. Vertigo, dininess or pain of any kind, excepting that of an injury, can come only when there is in our bodies some imparity of the blood which we have not sufficient vitality to throw off without help. Therefore the proper thing to do is to get immediately the necessary help. - Xo aid it so effective as Hbakdbktb riuia. When you feel these ills coming on take from three to ten of these pills, according to your weight, and be relieved at once. Never put off the feeling by thing you will soon be over iu Take the pills and do not rack the oonstitutiou. j , j $ , "Where are yoa going this summer?" has be come a very trite and woatiaome question. The hypophosphites of lime and soda combined with cod-liver oil in Scott's Emul- i sion improve the appetite, promote digestion, and in crease the weight. They are thought by some to be food ; but this is not proved. ' They are tonics ; this is admitted by all r " Cod-liver oil is mainly a food, but also a tonic, fi , " In Scott's Emulsion 1 the; cod-live oil "and hypophos- phites are SO combined as to r - U f,,11 nh Krtk get the full advantage of both. Let us send you a book on careful living ; free. Scott & Downs, Cbeausts, tyaSoata jta A' New Votk. . TOWER'S IMPROVED Slicker la the only : I" Afcaoliiterjr j Water Proof Coat ! w Guaranteed KTr-iT o Pee'. Break or Stick, la INVJ1 to Lak at the Seams. Itmn two wars yon saa tall the IfiiHt aHe:U FUb Brand wads iarkai4 a Bon WooW aa Collar. SyM avery wbara, or mm rrca for prtoa. A. J. TOWER, nanalr. Boa ton. MaM. Oar Malia Bm u Mrar un aay i aM mi omi mmamw m tmm mwkwm. August Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not "sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life andgaveme my health. Mrs. Sarah T Cox, Defiance, O. I CURE FITS ! WbNt I w otira I do oat mMfi marelr to stop tbrm for Umm and tiieo hmv tom return sayaun. I mmiu rftdieal our. I havA nuulo tr dieas of FIT8, KPI UCPHYorFALLINO BlCKNHhS.ltfa4ofic.tudy. 1 warrant mr mndy to rare tb wont eaaea. Bcmm otbni have faild ia no raaaon for not now ncminac a oora. Bend at onoa lor a treatia and a Free Bottled mj inlaiuble remedy. 0 iva Hrrm and Poet Offie. U. O. KOOT. JO. C 189 Pearl HteaN.T I INDIAN DEPREDATION I PENSION I PATENTS RHP r F MOftttSff A D Tp8f At GtrAI WIS Tha"KltaMlNa.K" HUKa,AIJ ofCILAlUM . . -non OjaacTlow oiw, ' ' ;an Francisco Examiner. If yoa hav a olalfh of any aoierlptloa arhataoever afaloat toe Umtad Hlate Ooveinoaant aa4 i wiab It apaadUj' adjadteated, addraaa , JOUV "WKUDKKBVKlt Manacer, lis T suaat. If . W. . Waahlnartnn, I. C OOOOOOOOOO Tiifi'sTinv Pills1 OTha dyapepMe. debilitated, wheth- A ar from exn.ua of work of inlnd or v Obody or eapoanni In malarlavLr;loniwav will flnd Tutt's Pilla (he moat avnlalsf raatoraUra aver offered the invalid. e t e q ocso ooo- t W3 nmt Ait ILsTfsit tT"',' J I j Bast (.ouHh byrup. TaMasUood. Dsst 1 , ,51 lo Hmo. Bold hr lnmrtfiia t I Flower Tha Preach Detective, ' Every good detective has to some ejr- tent his own way of working, which ia i varied, of conrse. according to .the cir- cunista'nces. We may say, however, that as rule the Parisian ageut has a freer hand and works in a somewhat bolder, more self reliant manner than hid Eng lish colleague. This follows, f.om his isolation; ho is less helped by "informa tion received" and too badly paid to bay it, so he is forced to acquire it by his wn -exertions. . A favorite method is to assume the disguise of a workiiigtnaa or hawker, and here it may be said that the use of an elaborate makeup exists now only in books. Every zealous hand has his own w..rlimi1B. .n(i the simpler the bet- ' ' ffnntnal am ter. The most effectual disguises are those which best assimilate the wearer to common life. The Parisian haa two in particular the blouse and the work man's apron. ? f i i M: : "Shadowing" is always done by two men, one some little way behind the other. Each carries a change of dress to wit, a blouse wound sash wise around the waist and a casquette carried inside the shirt. The moment the first man fancies himself perceived he gives place to the second, and dropping behind slips the blouse over his jacket and ex changes his felt hat for the casquette. Thus metamorphosed he resumes his place. London Saturday Review. The Mud of Egypt. Egypt, says Herodotus, is a gift of the Nile. A truer or uiore pregnant word was never spoken. Of coarse it is just equally true, in a way, that Bengal is a eift of the Ganges, and that Louisiana and Arkansas are a gift of the Missis sippi, but with this difference, that in the case of the Nile the dependence is far more obvious, far freer from disturb- tag or distracting details, rorthatrea- d the NiIe to M mxtch i more familiar to most English speaking j folk than the American rivers, 1 choose I Egypt as my type of a regular mndlaud. I But in order to understand it fully yon , mustn't stop all yonr time in Cairo and ( the Delta; yoa mustn't view it only from ' the terrace of Shepheard's bote! or the j rocky platform of the Oreat Pyramid at . Grizeh; you must push np country early to Luxor and the First Cataract It is np country that Egypt unrolls itself vis j ibly before your eyes in the very process of making. It is there that the full im ! portance of good, rich, black mud hist ' forces itself upon you by undername evl- dence, Com hi II M agazine. Wheat Does Not Crow Wild. The existence of names for wheat Is the most ancient languages confirms the evidence of its great antiquity and of its cultivation in the more temperate parts of Europe, Asia and Africa. From the evidence adduced by botanists of high standing, it seems highly improbable that wheat has never been found grow ing persistently in a wild state, although it has often been asserted by poets, trav elers and historians. In the Udyssey, for example, we are told that wheat formerly grew in Sicily without the aid of man. Diodorns re peals the tradition that Osiris found wheat and barley growing promiscu ously in Palestine, but neither this nor other reputed discoveries of wheat growing wild, seem at all credible, see ing that it does not appear to be endow ed with the power of persistency, ex cept under continued culture. 4t. Ixmis Republic. " Dickens aa an Art Critic The son of a neighbor of Dickens, then a very young artist indeed, quite a boy had painted his first picture, the sub ject being an aged knight in full armor, apparently, having recently returned from the wars, and overcome with fa tigue. Finding himself unable to reach his ancestral castle, be sinks exhausted on a fallen tree in a sort of orchard, am' some cottage children bring him some fruit to recruij his exhausted strength. Dickens took great interest in the young artist who, by the way, is now very eminent and greatly admired his pic ture, especially the Bgure of the- old knight; but, "My dear fellow," he aaid, "those apples won't be of any use that old gentleman requires burned brandy to bring him round!" Temple Bar. Theology a frrogreanWe Science. Theology is always as much a pro gressive science as geology. If 1,000 of the wisest, pnrest, most intellectual, most healthy scholars in Christendom today were to formulate a creed out of the New Testament scriptures, as they are known today, that theology state ment could not remain the same to the data of A. D. 2WU2. The power, the thought, the study of a thousand yearn would throw it into new forms of ex pression, while the substance would re main the saute. Deacon. , Electricity haa been used in Sweden aa n unhatiriirA fnr l'rifimiri in hlnxt tag. A strong current is turned into tue nut auu mm) iuwuw ncm vuuwr1 it to crack. Sappey, the learned physiologist, nays that the human stomach con tains 5.000,000 glands which are cot) stan try secreting gastric juice. Thfl hiteHt calculation of the eailh' distantte from the sun. bawd Uki:' the transit of Venus in 1 882, put It i at 92,043,074 mUes. I Soma Ttry tntenatlna; Facts Oontalnad ia aa Official Report, . ' A recent report of tlta aurvfyor gen eral of New Zealand contains sin ao oount of m visit to the Waitomo avea, In the King Country, In the North Island, a summary of which i Riven in The London Time. The Waitomo river, a tributary of the Waipa, which a&sses through these caverns, Ilea about t'ighty-flve miles south of Auckland, in it straight line. The caves are about ten nitioa from Otorohanga railway sta tion. The country around Is undulat kig. A quarter of a mile before the raves are reached the Waitomo, about twenty feet in width, is seen emerging from the side of a lull under which It haa flowed through limestone caverns of various aixea for about twenty chains. A light canoe can be taken along the river through the caves to within a short distance of the egress, where fur ther progress la barred by t he roof coin ing down to the water. At the en trance to the cavern the stream is eight feet deep. The natives have never had the courage to enter. . ; l ; ' , The entrance to the cave Is 30 feet wide and 20 feet high, and ia In the face of a cliff. It ia beautifully arched with numeroua moss and lichen cov ered stalactites. The visitor ia taken in a canoe ninety feet from the eu trances and landed' on a silt covered bench. By the aid of candles, for nil ia now dark, he finds himself among ponderous stalactites, three feet to six feet thick, reaching from the roof, twenty feet above, to within a foot of the ground. Everywhere and over the extensive and intricate cavern are seen stalactites and stalagmites of Immense size in vast numbers, with marvelous beauty of form and color. At one place the dark vault is studded with thousands of glowworms, giving it the appearance of a starlit sky. Passing down the left bank of the stream for HO feet, over a large deposit left by floods, the stream is crossed by means of a foot bridge. From the entrance to the bridge the cavern averages SO feet In breadth and from 20 to 30 feet in height After crossing the bridge a sharp turn to the right is made up a steep incline for a distance of seventy feet to the foot of the ladder, which leads to a narrow passage 4 feet wide and 15 feet high, which is the entrance to the Grand cavern. Here ia the bottom of the "well" a narrow shaft running to another series of caves above. The well is fonr feet across and perfectly regular, as if made by human hands, and its sides are beautifully marked with horizontal streaks formed of laminated limestone. In the grand cavern is an immense mound of materials, evidently fallen from the roof. Beyond the roof rises and forms two domes, one 30 feet high. Forty feet np ia the entrance to another cavern. Beyond the dome there is a sudden foil, the roof lower ing so much that the visitor has to stoop. The length of the grand cavern, at the end of which the stream is again met with,' ia 250 feet. It varies in width from 15 to 40 feet, and from 20 to 50 feet in height Up to this point the color is a dull brown and light yellow, but in the upper galleries. thirty feet above, there are alabaster and Parian marblelike scenes of un surpassed . loveliness. , Twenty feet above the grand gallery la the organ gallery, so called ' from' " the ap pearance of the great stalagraitie mass, 150 feet from its entrance, rising tier upon tier, like the front of an organ with marble pipes. From the grand gallery the main gallery above Is reached by a twenty-five foot ladder, and 60 feet along it is the "well." Here It ia 12 feet In diameter, with smooth sides of hard limestone, and the sound of moving water Is beard below. This is 45 feet above where it was first seea Fifty feet from the upper wall is a fairy grotto, and through an arch way 30 feet In length is the banquet chamber. At the end of this chamber is the white terrace, a stalagmitic mass, rising in a aeries of terraces. From this the npper entrance to the caves ia reached, high in a wooded cliff 60 feet above and directly over the lower en trance. The report describes other galleries and caves in the same place. but these are the principal ones. A Diet of Lena Meat and Water. Life and health can be sustained in definitely on a diet of lean meat and water, according to Professor J. V. Good, of the Manitoba Medical college. The servants of the Hudson's Bay com pany In the Athabasca district and in the Mackenzie river region depend en tirely on the natural food supply of the country, some living on meat alone and some solely on fish. Great bodily and mental vigor has been retained on such a diet for periods of twenty or thirty years, with singular freedom from con stipation and indisposition of every kind. Scurvy has appeared only where salt meat haa been provided for winter Aa Ambition OratlSed. , When Joseph ; Darby, the English jumper, set out to learn jumping be aaid that if he could beat any man in England he would willingly lay down and die. The day came when he was champion, yet because a man hit him with a brick he raised a row and re fused to die and had his assailant sent to prison. Detroit Free Press. Slightly Sarcattie. Professor (who haa sent the servant girl after a light, and who Was alow in bringing It) Katie, light travels at the rate of 100,000 miles a second. Where did you go to get that light? Ex change, ) ICxtrauiltlaa of Animals. No animal baa more than five toes, digits or claws to each foot or limb. The boras Is one toed, the ox two toed, the rhinoceros ia three toed, the hippo potamus ia four toed and the elephant and hundreds of other animals are five toed. 8t Louia Republic. Hit Baaiarkable StanV y Tus nrincioal of a graded school sur prised his hearers recently by the follow ing anggestive sentence, uttered in all aeriousness: "1 am teaching at 8, and have a corpse of eight tsacheTS." Wide A waks. CUCKOO FOLK LORE. Cnrlons ideas, Beliefs and Facts About the Strang Hlrd. He must be a well read man who can exhaust tlw aubjoct of cuckoo folk lore, No bird Is so much noticed by rustica and round no other bird have bo many curious fanclea crystallized. Like the goose, several familiar plants arc named from it and when it has once arrived it must eat three meals of cherries, ac cording to the folk lore, before It ceases its song, while ; : , .; Th Brat cock o' hay i ' - Frights tha cuckoo away. And thou (after St Johns day) lie turns Into a hawk.. Almost every game keeper at the present day shoot cuckoos in consequence of this btlif, although he could not well spare them, Inasmuch as the cuckoo "suoka little birds' eggs to make her voice clear." In Yorkshire this bird influences agri culture: , r , When cuckoo calls on th baret horn Nell your cow anil buy your earn. Woo Iwtide you If you do not turn the money in your pocket on first hear ing the bird! If you have plenty of coins at that time endless good fortune will follow you througliottt the year, and any wish within reasonable limits will then be granted. Here, Is another farmers' proverb, the biterpretatlon of which ia self evident: Cuckoo oats and woodcock bay Jlake a farmer run away. Not onlv docs the cuckoo prognosti cate length nf life, but what is still more Interesting it is able to tell maid ens how many years they will remain unmarried. A pretty Bohemian super stition accounts for the fact of the cuckoo building no nest, but laying her own egg hi that of a linnet or hedge sparrow. On the feast of the Annun ciation, it seems, old custom preserilied that birds should leave off building their nests; the cuckoo was an excep tion, and worked aa usual, it was therefore cursed and deprived of a hus band. Some may be glad to know Unit they can insure themselves against lum bago the rest of the year by rolling over and over in the grass the first time the cuckoo is heard. ' Its note Is pro verbially monotonous, and the Scotch have a saying, "le're like the cuckoo, ye hue but one song." Its depositing its egg hi a strange nest and leaving it there to be hatched is the origin of Shakespeare's rather forced jokes on its name "A word of fear, unpleasant to a husband s ear." ' ' In the ancient system of medicine the cuckoo was a bird of much value. The body of a cuckoo, for instance, next the body In a hareskin caused sleep. ' These are samples of the genitu for the marvelous which so dominated men's minds in the Middle ages, and which still remains In out of the way districts. - The strange habits of the cuckoo tended to the formation Of these mvtlis, and nothing could be too wild or extravagant to father on so curious a bird. And yet the facts of the cuckoo's life and economy are so curious that no in ventive powers are required to heighten the bird's attractiveness. It is suj posed that the males considerably out number the females, and flint the lat ter do not sing. The cuckoo Is a para sitical bird, leaving Its eggs to be hatched and its young to be reared by foster parents. Two birds, belonging respectively to North and South Amer ica, somewhat akin to our starling (Molothrus pecons and H. niger) pos sess analogous habits, and with the cuckoos are the only birds which fasten, as it were, on another bird, upon whose food they live and whose death would Involve theirs during the period of In fancy. 1 ! Another fact lias been discovered hi regard to this. It is found that the fe male cuckoo lays her egg, not in the nest which she selects, but on the ground sometimes close, at other times some little distance from the nest and then transports it in her bill to the nest where she desires to leave it Professor Newton remarks that cuckoos have occasionally been shot while thus carrying their eggs, and thinks, with much show of reason, that this custom has probably given rise to the belief that they suck the eggs of other birds; to which we would add the corroborative fact that they are continually mobbed by other birds as if they were mischievous robbers., "The egg, as most school boys know, is very variable in color. -When it is hatched the young cuckoo speedily thrusts out Its foster, parents' eggs, and even any young ones, shoul dering them, as It were, on its bock, as Jenner (who actually saw the process) describes it, and then throwing them out of the nest with a jerk. Most resi dents In the country must have noticed the ungainly looking young cuckoo after it has flown from the nest, resting on the lawn or on a tree in a helpless, begging attitude, noisily calling for food, which is always faithfully sup plied by Its foster mother, even when herself bnt a little water wagtail. This contrast between the pair in size and Independence Is ludicrous and striking. After some time the young cuckoo fol lows its kind to the south, the old ones always going first. Cor. St James Budget. Bather Embarrassing. "Know that young lady at the piano, Mr. Blunt r "Yes, I am slightly acquainted with her." ,: . .-. . . : I "Well, I wish I waa." "Whyr "I'd cultivate her until I knew her well enough to tell her she can't sing. Her voice reminds me of the cry of a fish hawker. Can't you introduce me i" "With pleasure. 1 am her father." A Word About Stag Dlalogoa. The art of writing good stage dialogue is still inchoate. It most be natural, and yet when it Is natural it is beneath tha dignity of the drama, and must be elevated again to the proper pitch. Man ifestly the stage is not to Maine for this, but the world of society, which Is too loquacious and frivolous, and lives with out regard to the compensations, keep ing and culminations of art Only the esoteric essence of our life is now tit for dramatic representation, and the dram atists who can see and adequately por tray that essence are shall we say be is? not numerous. Ltppincott s fliaga- IN FOOTHILL GROVES. Where Ira G, Hoitt Has Found Retirement. he mmm isterprise k u 101a Tha Well-Known Eduostor Gives att Interesting Aooonut of Himieir. Since ths expiration of his term of ntllce as Btate Superintendent of. Public Instruction, a little over a year ago. hut little has been heard of Ira O. Hoitt who filled that otilee for four years. An -.'fcmtij hut reporter who went in quest him yesterday found him at one of the most charming places of re tirement in California. Aligliting from the train at the pretty suburban village of 8an Mateo he was axn apeedliiK over the country road which nitwitted a tianorama of luxuri ous beauty. Two mllea from the town a narrow lane opened in the road. The lonf graoettii curvea oi una loweiy ana shaded lane were followed for nearly a milu westward toward the foothills, and at length the open gate ol a magnificent private estate was entered. AJterrounu Intf the ton of a little hill, picturesque country seat nestling in a sheltered place at the foot of graceful hills hurst on tho view. A well-kept orchard, aerea of Bowers and a neat garden spot were successively passed, and then cams a picturesque brnhre over the neck ol a little lake and under: an arch of massive live oaks. The long porch which ended the journey wua embowered in roses and palms ;' flowers and foliage of various kinds charmed the eye at every turn. This was the country home- o( ths late J. II. Kedington who for years lavished wealth on the house and grounds. It was secured last year by Mr. Hoitt who opened there Hoitt'aOak Urove Hcho:d tor boys. The house is elegantly furnished, has a library, billiard-room and every facility for the enjoyment of home comfort. Not a sound of exterior human life reaches tills romantic retreat sheltered by hills Slid by live-oak groves. Here the well known educator was found, enjoying his life and labor as master of a school in which hia own educational ideas could be wholly carried out. In response to a servant's summons, he came from the st'liool-uuildiiig where recitations were going on and cordially greeted the re porter. "Yes, we are rather in retirement now," he said, "but wesre enjoying the life. We have twenty-five boys now and there are four instructors besides mr wife and myself. ; I find that my health has been better here than for years past. although I have never had any' serious trouble since mysevereattack of sciatica aliout six years afro, My physician final'y gave me relief, .hut symptoms ol rheumatism continued, nfipenring especi ally in my right arm. Many people have been surprised that I did not go to my physician again, bnt I did not. Home friend suggested that I try Warner's Safe Cure,' nnd as it was very easy to do I did it. It gave me im mediate relief and since then I have nsed it st every recurrence of rhenmatic symptoms. I have not used anything else and it has never failed to give prompt reuei. I have a bottle on hand now, and only day before yesterday I bought a bottle for one of our hove who had pains in his back. If I felt at liberty lo do so I could mention the names of acquain tances who have tioed it with great sun-ess. OnA ia a man in business in Osklaud who tried Warner's rafe Cure for kidney trouble and was cured. As you ask liie the question directly I hsve no hesitation in saying that I regard it as a very valuable remedy, lor mv own exiH'riem-e has demonstrated that It is." the reporter tlmnked Mr, Hoitt for the information he had so candidly and courteously given, aim almost regret fullv withdrew from ' the beautiful groves where the eminent educator haa found an meal place lor a scatoi learn ing. .San Franeiffn Errning iW, Some noblemen are revar heard of at borne or abroad until tbey marry Anericau (lru. A GOOD l-I.ACK von BOYS. Jloitt's School, near Millbrae. Ban Mateo county, ( si., in charge of ez-ritate Huper- intendent Ira li. lloltt ana wile, Is un doubtedly one of the best schools for lioyi on the Pacific Coast. i ttfi Enauiellne stove Polish; no dust, no smelt. Ill A DAY. Lawkencx, K ArlS.,Aug. 988. George Patterson fell from a second-story window, strik ing a fence. I found him using 8T. JACOBS OIL. He used it freely all over his bruises. I saw him " next morning at work. All the spots rapidly disappeared, leaving neither pain, scsr nor swelling. t C, K. NEUMANN, M. P. "ALL RIGHT I ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT." T"tp.Ef.ir a vegetable compound, made entirely of roots and herbs I gathered - from the forests of Georgia, and has been used by millions of people with the best results. It CUBES All manner of Blood diseases, from ths pestiferous little boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such aa Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed fnsa. bwirr br&UPIC Co. Atlanta, (ia. . G0t.SULlPT.0I. Ibanapoativaramsdrfor tha abow itlissaii by Its sastboassndsofesM of tha wont kind and of long taodint-barabaaaearai, Indaadaostronalsvyfaltb la tu .Motor, tlui Iw.llandswOBOTTLasraiULniia VAI.UAHLB TBKATISManthlsdlMaMtoanVsBl. hear who will and aw (saw Kxptaatsad K O. addnas. A. Sloeam. H. UM I S3 Pearl OL H. T. N. P. N. TJ. Ho. Ui- t. V. V. No. 622 ACXOM xnK DEEP, TO THf WEST, - On laanibnsta.rara and Msgs eesohss, Hostel ter's Monaco, nlttara Is earring a the niust tin ittaut Itsm hi ths ntrl mwlles of ths i alius public It deprlrss vitiated. brsokWi 7- r ... Lu-...t ...(... anil aHMilPMlblM waior Ol ia naruui I1"''11 - - V flavor, oou'itemnis tha mrulnluiis ffflwls uwou Ot .tnm.f.h of had nr luillaaatlhls loud, fx iu dins onmns, haartbitrn and wind uvou tu stom al n. 11 IS a DUV ucitMisn asaui., mi-jiui.-.. .i.m. itMilifiA. tha.nk.fU. in axi't-Mlvs heat, rota and damn, relievos siuk bila lies, anil la ait iu oomnarahla otira for eotlvuueaaiul titltoiisiitiiiS. Ths Utluuaol travel olteu tails most dlnsmrous- ly upou Invalids ami eonvsi.euis.nvusaioiiaii)' to such sn extant as In Jiitdle life. I'l'muiia In Iwbls health,iimilinlveif bud rflVets fmra travel, will, If provided wllb tns tnttvis, bo Isr laas llktljr to have llivli tears ivalissd. A litadln aetrsas savs that "a kiss lo be artistic tnustbs Impersonal." - rii.ta to mora natarrb III this .retlnn nf the eoHiitiy than all other dUnuiea put talhr,aiul until ths last few years wss supposed to b In gu ruble For a sn-at ninny years iiwtnin pn bohiii od It a local dlaesse, anil prwi-rltwd lixal remedlM, and by ootwtsutly falling to rum with i.ml traMtuisnt immminiwit it Ineurable. Sci ence has proven eatarrh to b a iiiustlliilliiual disease, and therefore rri tit res eonatltutliinnl tUMtuu'iit. Ilsll's Catarrh Cure, nianulauluiwl by K J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is lbs only constitutional enreon the uiarkul. It is takin Internslly III doses front ten drops to a teaspoon tul. It se's dlrtwtly upon he blood suit mui'oiis surfseea of Ilia system. They oltitr IW for any ease II lalla to cure. Semi lor circulars ami Us- tluiouisis; Addnas r. . chuwri i;u . i oieuo, u. Sold hy drufwUts; TOO. Tav OaftttSA for breakfast "coavniufT issi ,JT7(d wrong way, with Catarrh, to stop it without curing it The : poisonous, irrita ting snuffs, strong canstio solutions, "creams," balms and tbo liko may, perhaps, palliate for a tinio. But ther may" drive tho disease to tbo lungs. ; The wrong way is full of danger. . ' ' The right way is provod one. It's with Dr. Sago's Catarrh Rem edy. ItV)Ctiros, perfectly and per manently," by- - lu mild, soothing, cleansing arid healing properties, the worst cases of Chronic Catarrh. It has proved itself right, thou sands or times, when everything else lias failed. , And this makes its proprietors willing to prove that it's tho right thing for yotf, no matter how tad ydur case or of how long standing. If they can't enre your Catarrh, they'll pay you t-500 in cash. They mean it. They're certain of their medi cine. Ef-V S CATAPBH L 1 Allays Palna laMasnmallask Haala the Boras. Restoras tha Sansaa nt Yaata and small. TRY THE 0USE. A parin-lr is arnilinl li" each nwurll snl l sgraa ahl. Prl-. So c- ma al ilrunslala' or by mall. fcl.V BUOTIIKHn,M warrea hi rial, Naw Vorkl J rieV AssaTsr and Analytical Cbenilst, . I. M5a, H WsahlngViUSt.lmsinMtr. Old Oold sad Stlear Bought; and tow oM Oote aad SUvar by niall lolhaaMaod raliahts kinaa of A Tt'tt-t. 11 Tblrd aM Saa granolasoi I will aaad a. Mom wtmll tha aaali. aoomlios kD an,; If Urn asaoiun a sot aaHsfaalntt wtll ratara anld. J. MoCRAKEN as CO DIAUBd IU Saohs Nartwr Lkas, ParHsad Csaiawl, Sa Saa Oass and Utah risstar. Mslr, Firs SdsS aad Fir Clay. LAND PLAIHR. , a Mortis From attwat, dor. P, rOBTLAKO, OH. ANY WEAK MAN Wbo la nSarlas, atuW la bU wind or body, frutn Uta liturioua or weakMilug affwtan hlsows Isoarsnt folllea, alaiss i and aiciana oan ba nolokl. and jwrms Bantlysund. fraslaea led) DR. COLE 4 CO. t I'ortland.Or. TbaasoH Doalors baas had SO ycaaa Ihm.Lhu.1. Midn.lfl. hlniwl SIhk. ' tmiasmtSklalHaeawa. Wrilaloday. Rallsbts Rsstsdlss seat artvatslt la say sddrsss. Fig i laadl Ig m Is thaaanoniangas aoaaiural diaiihargas aaf ling raauMiy lor an iaj taung wiabasss aawulai towossea, . . . . I rsaay . J pswserinarssrarawiaa ! Tl.ui4talSl"H'Vv la raoommsadtag It St VsssaHHLSl -I'M, k, I prsaoritrtaBraaisw a sata sr larwgsM S a. a a iy"i ay., i a-auvas s.a). METALLIC SKYLIGHTS Iron Cornices, CORRUGATED IR051 ROGFIHG, J. C. BAYER, Portland, Of. Pianos and Organs. WINTER HARPER, 71 Morriaan atraet. Portland, Or Ho aes, I - It. InrftLii,.... - Simonds Crescent lxt f f cvrm InV I lOltAY.l f ittaaraal.S LJ TLmmJk Vor Ladlas and ants. la stylas Jall l J T rnsumatlo Cushion and BolldTlrss. IJllal l7m i Diamond Ftams, Stssl Drop Forging,, Slaal T sJSB s' I i (a1 x!avS Tgbtng.AdlustablsisllBssiingttasIl running asrta, 1 a r.VS-..' ifm'ry,''" 'no'wotaf cadala. Ibuapanalon Siddls, Vaar A TiiiIV 'TsalffliMr Send S esntt la alainpa for oar iln-naa;e IllaatratpJcsts-l rA C j Sk;.l.l:ltlfa. riiat. ' Isgas af flsas, II I Haa, Bevolvers, Sporting Uooda, et. il JOH H Pa LOVILL ARM 8 CO.,fVlfrS., iWstliingtow 8t.,B08TON, MASS- Art. All Kinds of MILL SAWS. Also Saw Rspalrlnst, IMOMD9 saw oi 79 UNLOAD Do you feel Dons your don't feel like work. The XfATS .1 V... . ..ll . I. il. W mil. luuuieiuuui miiu, aw Three doses of ioor6 1 Revealed Remedy you Joel like a new person. For sale Both tha method and results when syrup of Figs it taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the tasta, and ictt ttently yet promptly on tha Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses tha sys tem eflectually, dispels colds, head tchea and favors and cure hubitnnl lonatipation permanently. For sale ia 60o and tl bottles by all druggists. CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO, tH MkKOItCO. OH. WJWIIU, r. May tOMK. H.t. WILLIAM C. BECK ARMS CO Waui.sHAi.1 aho 11 at 1 1, lmLKas IN Cuna, Rifle and Revolvers, fl.hliig Tackle, Sporting Uooda, FIREWORKS, Athletic, THratrleal and Oyainaalnm floods, Uwn Tennis omnia, Punt Hails CriHtuet, Teuts, Mags, Duullug, tlalloona, Lanterns. N. I. Car. Thirl ans Yamhill Its., PORTLAND, OR. Wa are Minhtug asle of ladles' Klur Kid Shoes, patent Up, Miuare t e, to . si ;. Plain loc, I' S. i r 0 via. l U f. r a a il ha. Sand for lull nhoe llt, null k.tuHioltha' f'n.li aioro, Sltt-SIH t rout St., San Iruurlaro. Season for Trout Opens April 1st. If Vuv Are In Need or Trout rtlas, flat Mis Mast. .tn1tml qnt-l'tr, 4 lo hoftki. ptr .'.. . , Onrsmii Trout Vv. 4 In a litMik-. iwr iUw 4W rt ivtrvrrwr-ii v iiir rutw, iw- i-mmi, r mm. i w A ny of s.Imivi qUiUittw atuii by mnll on rHilit uf prkv. Ainu rtil Hue of HUUH, HKKLM.I.lNKrS lc.aU Hudson's Cun Store, 1 FIRST ST., PORTLAND, OR. SS Sand for Illustrated catalogue. Wanted, BICYCLE CLUBS n every town In Orcson II ..( I II ..III. liw wlor particulars. FNKU T. MtRRILL, 1ST Washington St., lorlland. Or. DROP IT If In snr bnalnnsi not payln yl drop II ana bur sn mi- Iimvcd I'sialuma mubalor. MORE MOKET ran ho mads III r la in Clil' kaus lb an In siiy other buslucM for the eapllal luvast nl. A oiautlltilly II Inalralrd Calsloana of incubators. Ilmud- vrsand all kinds of 4'lilrkoDrisinrarHlt .Aat-iits tor Maan'a Bona Cnttsr, Jisoss sllv Ciovsr.Cutur, and vetythlng ro quired by pouiWf ralaurs. PETILUI1 IICUB1T0I - Pitaigni, Ctl. YOUNO MINI Tha Spaelflo A No. I. a without fall, sll naaaa of Chasn uid allows, no matter of buw long standing. Pravants strtoliirs, II beliii an hi- St-rnal ri-mauy. ureawiirneTryMHa waw baa lulled. Hold by all nniKirM. atanutaotumai 1 i.tajiiieuhett Medfcta va., aao joac, uu. MORPHINE HABIT I Hooks fraa. SURE CURE trtBnllaatoaatsn.aa SURE. vpuJUQT TRY California Jjiauend PR.ET0BT-SI CATARRH 1CTh0lcrc; It Is Croat Cure. Ha uta so bad whars tlfs salaia bnt may ha litlpaS by thla great ears, SOela bydrumttataormsll. 4. . miX CO , fnit., 1CJ 9tH9wt:k f I , If. T Cir ' FtlAZER AXLE BcstinthaWorld Gat thi CenuiBB sGHEASE Sold Evsrywh&rtl ICTOR ahlnped Anywhere on Trial. ffetnloguaFrra, oao. aaxaL a om., s ay at, quikox. iu.,ds.i. l'UiSIJii.aiai.aai ,7 Ground Cross Cuts, Front street, Portland, or. bad? back a headache? ache? You can't eat and I in trouble is your liver is tor- SB BTX . .f!...M ... J l. sgw uei rm 01 it wiiriom uciity. will do it and make LIVER by all druggists. Patent Tip 4 K v-7 m.-'fliNNar liiiajasnssasaiiw " r