BUDDHIST DOCTRINE.!
MEN OP OAKLAND.
What the Faculty of the
University of California
Has to Say.
Your committee have made a very careful examina
tion of the ROYAL BAKING POWDER and are
satisfied that it fulfills all the requirements which the
public can make of a baking powder. For purity and
care in preparation it equals any in the market, and
Our test shows that it has
greater leavening power
than any other of which
we have any knowledge.
TRKIH
STATEMENT ABOUT SOME OF
ITS MYSTERIOUS PHASES.
WORD ANN
a'ROAC'H.
ABOVI gsaV
Jivf. Chemistry Unhersitytf California and State Analyst.
JVi. Chemistry, College Pharmacy, tf iht Untvenity of California.
She You My that you hare never been In I
lore. How near have you com. to It? He I
vu married once.
THE VIRTUES OF APPLES.
Ko safer remedy omn be had for conghs
ana corns or any vrounie 01 tns u roal tna
th.
"Smm'$ Bronchial Troche
oeuU. Sold only in bom.
Price, 25
. The summer bids fair to run mostly to pM
uw auu inn. :
Us Enamellne Store Polish ; no dust, no smell.
Tit Giuni for breakfast
S3
BRIGHT MO PUftfc.
Jmpravi
Stickers have
fcesidethenihBnni
Tuouuk on every Coat
louacco is mans most uni
versal luxury ; the fragrant aroma
of MASTIFF PLUG CUT starts
people to pipe-smokins:, even
those who never, used
before.
J. B. Pace Tobacco Co., Richmond, Virginia.
Tower? f
ln?provej
5LICKER
L.. Absolutely W&teC
"''sSft
Soft Woolep "ty
WatCh OutI Collar.
Ssadfsr
A J. TOWER. MFR BOSTON. MASS Cstslops
Ask your doctor what hap
pens to cod-liver oil when it
gets inside of you.
He will say it is shaken
and broken up into tiny
drops, becomes an emulsion ;
there are other changes, but
this is the first.
He will tell you also that
; it is economy to take the oil
broken up, as it is in Scott's
Emulsion, rather than bur
den yourself with this work,
You skip the taste too. V
Let us send you an inter-
vesting book on careful liv
ing;, free. ,
Scorr Ic Bowns, Chemists, 1 South 5th Avenue,
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion ef cod-llver
; oil . .all druggists everywhere do. i.
. ,- - .. ..; J
GonsuLiPTiorj.
I hare a positive reroed for th. abov. disease; by its
can tlwossnds or oases of tb. wont kind sod of long
sUnliiighav. been eared. Indeed so strong is njfeita
in its einoacr, tost I w.ll .end two uorruta rasa, with
VAXlABLli TKEAT1SK m this disease to any enf.
rerer wno win send Bi. tbair JCxpreas sod r. O. addnes.
T. A. filoeana. BI. C 1 S3 fear 1 MUm M If.
Th.lr Medicinal Value and Some of
Troahle Which They Aid.
Chemically the apple is composed of
vegetable liber, albumen, sugar, gum,
chlorophyll, malic acid, gallic- acid,
lime and much water. Furthermore,
the German analysts say that the ap
ple contains a larger percentage of
phosphorus than any other fruit or
vegetable. This phosphorus is admi
rably adapted for renewiiiir the essen
tial nervous matter, lellaciu, of the
brain and spinal cord. It is. perhaps,
for the same reason, rudely under
stood, that old Scandinavian traditions
represent the apple as the food of the
gods, who, when they felt themselves
to be growing feeble and infirm, re
sorted to this food for renewing their
powers of mind and body. Alio, the
acids of the apple are of signal use for
men of sedentary habits, whose livers
are sluggish in action; these acids ser-
viujr to eliminate from the body nox
ious matters which, if retained, would
make the brain heavy and dull, or
brin sr about jaundice or skin eruptions
and other allied troubles.
Some such an experience must have
led to our custom of taking apple
sauce with roast pork, rich goose and
like dishes. The malic acid of ripe ap
ples, either raw or cooked, will neu
tralize any excess of chalky matter en
gendered by eating too much meat It
is also the fact that such fresh fruits
as the apple, the pear and the plum.
wnen taken ripe ana witnout sugar.
diminish acidity in the stomach rather
than provoke it. J. ueir vegetable salts
tobaCCO an juices are converted into alkaline
caroonaies, wuicn tenu 10 counteract
acidity.
A good, ripe, raw apple is one of the
easiest of vegetable substances for the
stomach to deal with, the whole pro
cess of its digestion being completed
in eighty-five minutes. Gefrard found
that the "pulps of roasted apples
mixed in a wine quart of faire water,
aud labored together until it comes to
be as apples auu ale which we call
lambs wool never faileth in certain
diseases of the raines, which myself
nam oiieii proveu, anu gainea inereDy
both crowns and credit" "The paring
of an apple, cut somewhat thick, and
the inside whereof is laid to hot burn
ing or running eyes at night when the
party goes to bed, and is tied, or bound
to the same, doth help the trouble very
speedily, and contrary to expectation
an excellent secret"
A poultice made of rotten apples is
of very common use in Lincolnshire
for the cure cf weak or rheumatic
eyes. .Likewise in the Hotel des Inva
hdes at Paris, an apple poultice is used
commonly for inflamed eyes, the ap
ple being roasted and its pulp applied
over the eyes without any intervening
substance. Long ago it was said ap
ples are easily and speedily digested.
and a modern maxim teaches that
"If you eat an apple going to bed. the
doctor then will beg his bread."
London Hospital. - ; i
99
"German
lyrup
My acquaintance with Boschee's
German Syrup was made about four
teen years ago. I contracted a cold
which resulted in a hoarseness arid
cough which disabled me from fill
ing my pulpit for a number of Sab
baths. Alter trying a physician,
without obtaining relief I saw the
advertisement of your remedy and
, obtained a bottle, I received quick
and permanent Help. X never hesi
tate to tell my experience. Rev. W.
IL Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J: O
K, P. K. U. No. 449-8. F. N, V. No. 623
What to Eat at Night.
The true course is to begin with iust
one or two mouhtfuls the last thing
before going to bed. And this should
be light food, easily digested. No cake
or pastry should be tolerated. One
tnmitlifiil tt rrlA wwiul Kfxf lamK
IIUIWVIU UI VI . UUJ. UJ.. , . V.
cold chicken and a little crust of bread
will do to begin with, or, what is bet
ter vet, a spoonful ortwo of condensed
milk (not the sweetened that comes in
cans) in three times as much warm wa
ter. Into this cut half a pared peach
and two or three little squares of bread,
the whole to be one-fourth or one-sixth
of what would be a light lunch.
Increase this very gradually, until
at the end of a month or six weeks the
patient may indulge in a bowl of milk,
two peaches, with a half hard roll or
a crust of home made bread. Wnen
peaches are gone take baked apples
with the milk till strawberries come.
and eat the latter till peaches return
again. This is the secret of health and
vitality. We often work until after
midnight but eating the comfortable
meal is the last thing we do every
nhrbt of the vear. This is not an un
tried experiment or one depending on
the testimony of a single witness.
American Analyst
Better Than Chemicals.
Cousin Lucy How funny, this tiling
of a freezing mixture that will turn
water Into ice in a few minutes, isn't it';
Cousin Tom Yes; but if I could
mix the "good evening" I got from my
fiancee and the "good night" I got from
her father the day I failed In business
I'd have a compound that would con
vert the Atlantic into a glacier In four
seconds. Pittsburg Bulletin.
A Fictitious Reputation for Healthiness.
London always figures in the weekly
reports of the registrar general as a
very healthy city. Dr. Williams
Freeman, however, seems to think
that London has obtained a fictitious
reputation for healthiness by reason of
the large proportion 37 per cent. of
the population which is country born.
aud by the constant removals to tho
country of persons whose health baa1
uruiteu uuwn unuur me stress ot met
ropolitan life. LontkraTit-Bit. i
The Teaching of Rehlrth Kaplalned The
Fundamental Rules Upon Whir the
Whole Religion uf lluililha Is Built.
Bow Rebirth Is Ohtalned.
A deep HuddhiHtlcul vein is now going
through the modern worn of western na
tions, having become especially forceful
and penetrating since the period when
Schopenhauer erected his philosophical
system, more or less, on the very old teach
liitfs of tiuddhn tiautnma.
There' is uo want of comprehensive acl
en title works In reference to liuddulsm.
ami poets also have beeu u liable to resist
the great attraction of the doctrines of this
Indian sage, aa is shown iu the works of
Klcliard Wagner, which are largely influ
enced by the ground thonirhta of uud
dhisuv The Sanisara and Nirvana have
become current expressions of many of our
modern ports, nut only In their descrip
tions of scenes relating to the world in
which we live, but also iu their pictures of
salvation from this worltl of error, guilt,
suffering, birth aud death. The doctrine
of Buddhism, of rebirth, that is, the con
tinued reincorporation of our real spiritual
being, forms the fundamental principle of
the great Asiatic religions.
The doctrine of the rebirth is alone suf
ficient to explain to the Buddhists the
mystery of existence; it explaius why the
righteous man is often so poor and de
spised, while the evildoer enjoys riches
ami honor; it replies to the despairing
question, addressed constantly, but vainly,
to heaven by millions of souls, "Why have
we to suffer and eudure so much V It ex
plains that indestructible as are the forces
of nature aud matter, so likewise is the
innermost being of man. Death is no anni
hilation, but only' the passing over from
i one feeble form into another, whosoever
takes pleasures In this world, there Is none
to gainsay him; neither a god uor a devil
can rob him of them, but he must abide by
the consequences.
rOCR CARDINAL TRUTHS.
Man's real fate depends solely on his in
ward being, on his own will, and ha has
the prospect of countless rebirths, in which
he will earn the fruits of both his good
and his evil deeds. But to him who Is
weary of this unceasingly renewed exist
ence, and will earnestly strive for freedom
and release, is opened a way of redemp
tion. The cause of suffering, death and
rebirth is the will to live, which fills us
all; the desire of individual existence in
this or in some other world.
The will to live in Buddhisticai sense is
not only the conscious will, but that un
conscious life force which dwells in all
creatures and organisms, in animals and
plants, as well as in man. Only by aban
doning this will, and by totally suppress
ing the desire for an individual existence
in this or in soma future world, can man
ever be freed and redeemed and reach
eternal peace.
The road to this release, to Nirvana, we
can find through the recognition of four
healing truths, rut, the truth of suffering,
the truth of the cause of suffering, the
truth of the cessation of suffering and the
truth of the way which will lead to cona
tion from suffering.
Buddha teaches that it is because of our
nonrecoKnition of these four cardinal
troths that we have to travel so long the
mournful and dreary road of rebirths. But
when the truths are once fully recognized
and acted upon the will to live disappears,
the longing which leads to renewed exist
ence ceases, and the Samsara is a thing of
the past. There are two roads of error.
brethren, which he who is striving for
freedom rrom earth-dominion may not
travel
The one, the longing to satisfy our pas
sions and sense desires of whatever kind,
is low, mean, dishonorable and destructive;
it is the road on which travel the children
of this world. The other, the asceticism
and self torture, is somber, painful and
utterly useless.
THK NIRVANA.
The middle road alone, which has been
found by the one who has attained perfec
tion, avoids these two error roads, opens
the eyes, imparts self knowledge and leads
to peace, to truth, to enlightenment to
.Nirvana.
The Nirvana, according to the explana
tion of the Buddhist scholar. Is a condition
of holy peace, accompanied by the inde
structible certainty of obtained freedom
and release. Nirvana means, literally, to
be extinguished. The will to ure, the
longing for earthly joys, here or somewhere
else. Is extinguished. The false idea that
material goods can have any value or be
lasting has evaporated, Gone is the name
of sensuality and selfishness.
Although it is possible to reach Nirvana
already in this life, an extremely small
number are able to accomplish it. Our
mental and moral condition, through the
effect of deeds in former births, Is gener
ally so deficient that many rebirths are
needed before we can arrive at this haven
of peace. But to obtain a rebirth under
favorable conditions is within the power of
every one who earnestly strives for it. It
solely depends on the wish to live which
dwells in all of us and forms the kernel of
our existence.
The nature of our rebirth depends en
tirely on our deeds, and is regulated by
merit and guilt as exhibited in our former
live. If our merit is greatest, we shall be
born again in a higher state or world and
under favorable conditions. If, however,
we hare subjected ourselves to heavy guilt
through evil deeds, a rebirth In a lower
place, and rich in sorrow and suffering, is
the necessary and inevitable result The
consequences depend on our Karma, the
moral law of the world, of which the phys
ical law, as seen by us, is only the sensual
and temporal appearance. Karma is that
which other religions designate as divine
purpose, providence or fate. Arena.
Aa Interview With Some Well Known
Cltls.ns Brings Ont Certain raeta
of the flreatrst Interest and
Importance,
The
Men Who Carry Money.
rich never carry much
money.
Th4ntervlew which follow are from
people well known in Oakland and the
reatier can iw ntujureu mat overy wuru
they say Is true. They are certainly
most remarkable assertions, ami coming
a they do just ut the present time, they
can be read with the greatest interest
and prollt by all.
' Qeorge 11. Fogg, the well known
notary public of 1471 Broadway in the
course of a conversation stated these
facts : "About live or six years ago I wai
suffering from a disease of the Kidneys
which troubled mo lor a year or so be
fore I discovered what the real cause of
my discomfort was. Upon the recom
mendation of a friend I begun taking
Warner's ufe Cure and took three or
four bottles. It helped mo immediately
I spoke of it to friemls of mine at the
time and many of thorn have used it
with benefit. Iitill recommend it at
every opportunity. Muce using tho
medicine I have had no return of the
trouble thought that was some threo or
four vears aao."
" "Can you givo me the name of any of
your friends who lutve been helped by
this remedy T
"Yes, if you will see Mr. Geo. 8.
Nnisnilth, the insurance man of 4M3
Ninth street he will tell you more about
it. lie took it because he saw my name
indorsing it."
Mr. Naismith is well known to the
business ami social circles of Oakland.
He greeted the reporter cordially and
said;
"Five years ago I was con(ined to my
bed and the doctors gave me up to die
but I am now up and able to attend to
my business. Warner's Bute Curo is a
great remedy and in my cuse uctod upon
my system at once and completely
restored me to health."
Mr. B. F. Armstrong senior partner
in the well known paint house of
Armstrong A Merchant, 40 Third "trect,
San Francmco and whoso Oakland home
is at 1620 Broadway, said;
"Warner's Safe Cure saved my life
and my wife's. I had kidney trouble
so bad thut I did'nt know a moment's
peace while my wife was a martyr to
those special troubles peculiar to women.
We were induced by our friends to try
the Safe Cure and it has completely
restored us to health. Now we always
keep it in the house and use it as a
family medicine and would not be with
out it for any consideration."
Mrs. Armstrong was also seen at her
Oakland home and fully bore out her
husband's statements as to her recovery
being remarkably strong and healthful
in appearance.
Ueorge W. Baker is a painter bv trade
and lives in a neat little cottage at Bar-
ryman btation just beyond Berkeley. In
answer to our reporter he said :
"Uve years ago 1 had dyspepsia so
bad that I did not know what it was to
enjoy a meal. I got in such a condition
that everything distressed me fearfully
and at times I would lie seized with
pains in my chest and abdomen so
severe thatl fell to the ground as though
my uacKOone were suddenly severed
with an axe. Well do I know what it is
to be stricken down in the street and
have to be carried home in agony. This
went on for over a year and all the
while I was trying to find some doctor
who could help me but without success.
1 spent hundreds ol dollars and was no
better than at nrst when one day I saw
an advertisement of Warners Safe
Cure. It was a big poster on a fence
and I tell yon sir, I thank God to-day
for the man that put it there. Almost
in despair I bought a bottle but by the
time that was gone I was eating heartily
oi anytning x uesirea. xne second
bottle cured me and I don't think
finished it either."
Frederick A. Wilder, the genial pro
prietor of the Windsor House was seen
at his hotel at the corner of Washington
and Ninth streets. Mr. Wilder has
spent considerable time in Arizona and
the southern country and spoke of his
experience ns follows :
"In 1883 1 was in Arizona on business
and while there I contracted a severe
cold which settled in my kidneys. The
bad water of that part of the country
aggravated my trouble till I had a well
developed Case of Bright's disease. I
tried different remedies with but slightly
beneficial results until last December.
At that time I was attacked with the
Grip which left me with my kidneys in
a very weak condition and also brought
on inflammation of the bladder. I be
gan using Warner's Safe Cure and am
now on the fourth bottle. It is a fine
thing and has done me a world of good.
The pain has disappeared from my
bladder and the weak feeling from
across my hips. I heartily indorse the
remedy and am still using it."
Albert Kowe ef the Pacific Borax
Works. Oakland, in a recent conversa
tion said: "I have had kidney trouble
with nervousness and loss of sleep for
years. Nothing seemed to help me in
the least till I tried Warner's Safe Cuie.
I have taken about a dozen and a half of
the remedy and now my nerves are
steady and I sleep like a top."
Judge E, O. Crosby, the well known
attorney of 1622 Park street. Alameda
said : . "Continual office work and
sedentary habits brought on me a severe
attack of kidney trouble with sleepless
ness and weakness across the small of
my back. I began taking Warner's
Safe Cure and found immediate im
provement. I took about fifty bottles
and at tne end ot that u me wasperiectiy
well."
The above statements are not from
obscure people living in the Eastern
'States, but from well known persons re
Klveine Lights In ll.rlln.
Iii Berlin Ihn wires hava boon oar
ried umlorimmnd from the start and
no (litllcultv litis boon experienced.
Instead of adding now ugliness to tlie
street, tho arc lights of lltirliu are
tlilim of brautv. an artistic embellish
meiittothocity. Untor don Linden
is nrobuhlv the most brilliantly and
beautifully illuminated street in tho
world. Along ench side and down the
con ter the nro lights are set even more
closely together than ordinary gas
lumps, and the eiiect at uigui is mm
of great strings of whito, gloaming
pearls. The poxls consist or groat iron
standards, with tasteful ornamenta
tion and curving over at the top. Here
the globe is suspended, inclosed in a
conrso net work, so thut in case it
breaks, the pieces of glass may not fall
on uuKsers. From rfio globe there
hangs a light chain, with a ring in the
end, and there are counterbalancing
weights insula tho post, so that the
lamp is quickly and eusily attended to
by pulling it down with a light stick,
with a hook in tho end ; a great im
provement, in the economy of tuns
und trouble, over our clumsy methods
of either climbing the post or lower
ing the light by an unwieldly and
ugly crane. Cor. Mexican Financier;
Dlnla That Appear to Reason,
Frank lluchluud gives several curi
ous instances of the siiecinl habits of
stiiiiu uinis in procuring inuir tuuu.
The blackbirds, thrushes, etc., carry
snuils considerable distances for the
purpose of breaking their shells
against some rock or stone. Thomas
Ldwui'd, tho Scottish nutiirnlist, do
scribes gulls and ravens flying to a
great height with crab or other shell
fish, ami letting them fall on stones
in order to smash the shells; aud, if
they do not break on the Unit attempt
he nays they pick them up again aim
carry them yet higher, repeating the
operation ngiiiu aud again till the
shell is broken. Knvcns often resort
to this contrivance. Durwin tells of a
bird having been repeatedly seen to
hop on u (Hippy stem, and shake the
head with his bill till many seeds were
scattered, when it sprung to the ground
anu uio up tne sccus. .noma.
Their Ruling Pi
Ilarlly, when a boy, wu.hed to write
book on tlio nature of man; Bacon,
a work on philosophy; nud Milton, an
epic poem. Kmeaton, the engineer, is
reputed to have manufactured a toy
windmill when only 6 years old.
London Telegraph.
There are millionaires who nerer carry tiding right here in Oakland where the
more than one dollar to five dollars babitu- truth of their assertions can lie easily
ally. They have a theory that they are Iverified. Such testimony ought to be
n. nu m..... I "U..1.1 ..nt .. -I. 1 I : f t II 1 rTT i
else anu are always airaiu oi oeing rouoeo.
It is one of the penalties of wealth. The
robber would be more apt to find money in
greater quantity on the body of one of their
clerks. The clerk has no bank account
and carries his little surplus In his trousers
pocket. The pocket check book is the
safeguard of the millionaire. New York
Herald.
A fVllr Street Fakir.
A street fakir in Boston deliberately
broke some glass bottles of perfume upon
the sidewalk, and the odor arising attracted
the passing crowds to his wares, which he
talked up earnestly and long with the re
sult of satisfactory sales. For ways that
are vain and tricks that are various the
Chinee does not greatly surpass the Ameri-1
cau sidewalk merchant. Pharmaceutical
Era.
Vest ol New York Btrrgtars.
The feat of the man who stole a hot
stove has been eclipsed by New York bur
glars, who stole a safe weighing 1,600
pounds from a barge that bad sunk tb
the bottom of the Hudson river. Chicago
Herald.
It is an Irishman who defines a rich
man as a man who bites off moro tban he
can chew, and a poor man ns a man who
chews more than be can bite off.
Norwegian' U ones
A traveler in Norway says that tho
horses in that country have a very
sensible way of taking their food,
which might be beneficially followed
here. A bucket of water is put down
beside their allowance of hay. It is
interesting to see with what relish
they take a sip of one and a mouth
ful of the other alternately, some
times only moistening their mouths
as a rational being would while eat
ing his dinner of such dry food. A
broken winded horse, it is said, is
scarcely ever seen in Norway, and
the question that arises is whether
the mode of feeding has not some
thing to do with the preservation of
the animal's respiratory organs.
Eider and Driver. .
To keep toots from rusting, take one
hnlf ounce camphor, dissolve one pound
melted lard; take off the scum and mix
in as much fine black lend (graphite) as
will give It an Iron color. Clean the
tools and smear with this mixture.
After twenty-four hours mb clean with
a soft linen cloth. The tools will keep
clean for months under ordinary eiroutn
stances.
ACROSS Till
DBstP, TO
WEST,
THC VAX
On steimboatij nan and itaga cosohM, Hostel
Ur's tflouiaoh Dltwii Is osrrlixl si the most im
portant Item In the materia iittxllca of the tray.
itllug nubllu. II deprives vitiated, Uranklsh
water id In hurtful properllci sua .wvrshl
Baver. ooumersotl ths pernicious efftmM tiimu
Ilia. loma.ih ill had or liidigwllule hsxt, reme
dies cramps, luw thiiru ami wind upuu tli.aliiuf
ach, It la s Hue dufniiM agslnai malarial illatir
dms, liullltlea th. etl'i-otl of ueeaalve best, etild
aud damp, ruli.vtn all k huailauhui, Slid I su In
comparable our. for oestirtHiMa slid biliousness.
ili lailgii. of Itav.l often tell, must dlsMlroui
ly upon iiirlldssndooiivsliietil.Kcloimlly
to such su exuuit as In Jooiwnllne Ills. IVrsous
iu fwb! health, aupieheu.lv. of bail .Ihwli Irom
travel, III, If provided with th. Hltlan, Ui far
leas likely to have Ihulr (ears rvaliivd,
A Bmall Mlte.-Thifi an A 1 dog of
yours," said a hyiMnd.r, 11 1 though! he was s
a , ' aaiu me owu.r.
Then Is mot oatnrrh in this section of th.
country than su oiiiarulwaaos put together, aim
until the laat lew ytmie waa .upKid to h. In
eumiil. Kor a great many year, ilootors pro
nounced It a local tllarsae, and prwwiltxvl local
tvnidka, and by eaualantly falling to cine wl h
local Iroatisvnl pmnoutievd It Incurable Sci
ence has proven valarrb to be a tHiualltultnual
niaeaw, sun invisiore RiuirM pmisii.tiimuai
treatment. Hall's i.'atarrh Cure, raauuiHCtured
bv V. J. Olienov is Co.. Toledo. Ohio, la III. only
nonstltuilnn.l our mi th. market It ia taken
Inttiriiauv In dote, from leu ilmiai to a Ivaap'Hm.
fal. It aeladlrmitlv iinoii III. blood and muooaa
suriscestti tn a) stem, 'iney omir iuu mr nnv
case It (alls to cure. Send lor rl-culars and toed
munlals. Address 1. 1, CllKNuY 00.,
Toleuo, u,
Bold by druggists; 7 Jo.
ft make, nn difference how mean a bov Is tn
hie moiner, she thinks uo girl la food enough
to to nia wue.
TUB Hrvr IN THK WORLD.
Senator Henry 0. Nelson of New York
writes;
" Un the 27th of February, 1883, I was
taken with a violent pain in the region of
the kidneys. I suffered su h agony that
could hardly stand no. As soon as Doeslbli
I applied two Am.cock's Porous I'lastsrs,
one over each kidney, and lay down. In
an hour, to my surprise and delight, the
min had vanished and I was well. I wore
lie plasters for a day or two as a nreeau-
iion, ami men removed mem, i nave neen
using Arums 'a 1'oaocs I'Larrgas in m
family for the last ten vears. and haves
ways found I hem the quickest and best ex
ternal remedy for colds, strains and rbeu-
matio aitrciions. rrom my experience
believe they are the best Blasters in the
world,"
A Neat Hnmmlng I'd. fu the Dr. Brlrrs case It
now loosa aa inougn iney out creed to diaagre.
Now is the time to treat catarrh of long
standing, r.iy s ureani tfalni reaches old
an J obstinate cases, where all other reme
dies lail. no not neglect procuring a bot
tle, as in it lies the relief vou seek.
Hev. H. II. Ka ra 1. 1). editor of the
Iowa Mrlhinlut. savs editorial! v: ' We have
tented the merits of Klv's ('ream Halm, and
neueve mat oy a inoroug.ii course or treat
ment it win cure almost every case of ca-
tarrn. .rummers as a cinas are aiuictea
witli head and throat troubles, anil catarih
seems more prevalent than ever. We can
not recommend r.iy s (J ream Halm too
uglily."
Apply Balm Into each nostril. It
mckiy absorbed, uives relief at once.
'rice, :) cents at druggists' or by mail.
Kt,T ItsOTIISHS,
SO Warren Street, New York.
A GOOD FLACK fOB BOTS.
ifoitt's School, near Millbrae, San Mateo
county, ual., In charge of ex-Mtatc Super
intendent Ira O. Hoitt and wife, is un
doubtedly one of the best schools for Boys
on tne l ttcinc ijoast.
The bicycle has been adopted in Persia.
Six of the machines are in use iu Teheran
two by nobles, the others by telegraph
toen.
They All Do It.
Tailor You had your suit cleaned
and pressed the other day. The bill
was $3.60, and I would like to col
lect it.
Stubber But I tiaven't paid for the
suit yet.
Tailor That's all right, but the
cleaning is done outside, and we have
to pay cash for it Clothier and Fur
MANY 8UOH.
A group of mechanics was seated
in the engine-room when one said :
"How was it Toraf" "I was
eaiiplit up. slapped 'gainst the
ceiling and whirled down to the
floor. I lay there like one dead,
and every mnscle was sprained I
was cured In one day," What
cured bunf
ST. JACOBS OIL !
with efjnal facility and certainty
has cured promptly and perma
nent! v worse cases. Here ia on.
after sulferiug half a lifetime.
14PuirinprBt,,Cleveiand,0.,Aii)r.ll,,.
In 1h.i1 sprained my arm clubbing
etiestnuia; could not lift my arm; s
ottNtAnt naiti until ISad. when tit. :
I Jacobs Olf cured me. f
MWO fclXKNBl'EKUEIl. I
a "ALL RIGHT I I
8T. JACOBS OIL DID IT."
They all Testily
T ths Efflcacy
ef the
Warut-Rtsowiwd
SKiffS
Spsclflc.
The old-Urn. simp).
remedy from the Qeunds
svramos and fields has
ffono forth to the antipodes,
' astonishing the skeptical and
confounding the theories of
1 those who depend solely on th.
physician's skill. There Is no blood
taint which It does not Immediately
eradicate. Poisons outwardly absorbed or tb.
result of vile diseases from within all yield to this
potent but simple remedy. It Is an unequaled
tonle, builds up tne old and feeble, cm-ee all disease!
arising from Impure blood or weakened vitality.
eWnd for a treatise. Kxarolao the proof.
Books oa " Blood and Bkln tMsaases " mailed fne,
JruggUt teU IU
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer , Atlanta, Oa.
a, I BaJI' i . n El
1 H 1 M
i i i i wu'm
Ml m I I area
II I Ii V M
at-! I Mi. M -U
Ward o f
disease by removing the cause of it.
It's with tho liver or the blood, nine
times out of ton. A sluggish liver
makes bad blood and bad blood
makes trouble. Dr. Pierce's Gold
en Medical Discovery makes pure
blood. It invigorates the liver and
kidneys, rouses every organ into
healthful action, and cleanses and
renews tho whole system. Through
the blood it evru. For Dyspepsia,
Indigestion, Diliousness, Scrofulous,
Skin and Scalp Diseases -even
Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in
its earlier stages, it's a certain
remedy.
Nntliina aIsa ta -tuafc a. trnnA w
Anything " just as good " eould be
sold just as this is. It's tho only
blood-purifior. that's guaranteed to
benefit or euro, in every case, or the
money is refunded.
The catarrh that isn't cured ooiti
$500. Not to you, but to the pro
prietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Rem
edy, They promise to pay you ths
money, if you have an incurable
case.
They don't believe that you hsvs
one.
SNJOYtl
Both the method and results when
iyrup of Figs 1 taken; It Is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, ami sets
?ontly yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Aver and Bowels, cleanses the y
tern effectually, dispels colds, hesij.
tclies aud fevers and euros habitual
constipation permanently. For ml
in SOoand II bottles by all druggists,
CALIFORNIA FIQ SYRVP CO.
BAH nAHOIM. U.
tauisviut, ut. new mn, r.
Season forTrcutOpens April lit.
If Ton Aral In Need of Trout Fllse, Set
lb Ileal.
fUftnttftttl v.fttttv, 4 to I hooka, jnr d ,,,.ffl a
Oritm, Trtiiil Ki'tHt, 4 to I tHHiku, w titm., u
Vim Uvnrtit Wim tVtt,j tnt lnMk, pwr li. I.im
Any of ft wv imtall.t twi t by iimtlmi rm'rijtt itf
prnw, AUm!.,. tlnur HOIM, HKIA, LIN KM,
etc., tU
Hudson's Gun Store.
1 flSSf si., poms HO, OR.
SS Send for tllualrated catalogue.
J mom Dynamite
UUUUUI1 i
: POWDER CO.,
IS CALIFORNIA ST., AN FRANCISCO.
If you want POWDKK for Mining,
Railroad Work, Slump Wasting- or Tree
Planting, send for Price List.
1W00HTAIH BUDS TEA
A blend from the formula ol an old English
Tea Morchant,
BsstTei in ths World for ths Price.
to cenla uerlt. st your dealer'! Of tmatualil
Inuu Ike sol. Importers,
CLOS8KT A DtVf R9, Portland. Or.
run. WIDE
hlra hed mu.iin.
Mi I I for tlieehiin or genera, hiiiill) uta,
U-tl I 10 liirhna llu; ! si ll It it ard
I "I I forli: imi would call It I U rent
-AV Statf .ihmIs sttvMrhcrc. we are aluav
lfgiTllMD:i
able tog IvestHitt value on Hi ai'ticd
and brown co lone. bend for full list and so.
V'U"' SMITHS' CASH STORE,
4IA..IN I-r.iul Hlreet. Nan t'nsnelaea.
Pianos and Organs.
WINTER HARPER,
71 Morrison Street, Portland. Or.
Bo go.
J II riClf Asssyw anil Analytical Chemist,
. II. rloft, t Washington m., Portland, Or,
INSTITUTE.
SELECT SCHOOL 03 GIRLS.
invuifi
This GREAT COUGH CURE, thii nieces.
lul CONSUMPTION CURK is sold by drag,
rists on a positive guarantee, a test that no otluti
Cure can stand successfully. If you have a
COUCi I. HOARSENESS or LA GRIPI'E, il
will cure you promptly. If your child has the
CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, it
illicitly and relict is Hire. If you fear CON-
lUAU'lii., don't wait until your case is hops.
ess, but take inn cure at once and receive tin
ned iaie help. Large bottles, 50c. and $1.00,
fravelert convenient pocket sice aC. Ask
our druggist for SIHIJH'S CURE. If root
uni;s ft sore or back lame, use bhuobs lot
s Plasters. Price, 35c.
I CURE FITS !
When I ear ears I aonMssaaaaserelviastrifithM.
for a tinM and then have them return again. I nn s
radlosi core. I hare nuh tits dlsesae of sTl'S. KF1
LWHVor rAU.INU SIOKSKMaalife-leBgatudr. I
warrant air remedr to ear. tb. worst eases Rh-imi
others hers fsiled Is so reason fur a, 4 now reoej.ing a
ears. Send at owes for a trwslla. and a ra. Bottlees1
mi infallible rmwdf- Olte kspreaa and Post Ofaea.
H. U. MOOT. M. I'.. INS rear! .. N. T.
INOrArOKPRC6ATldNl
PENSION I PATENTS""
Ok N o T H6Mf Strap"" postal
CLAIM S
! Nest aeatlon will hrgln August I, tTO'; t
trenth year; eighteen teachers. Kor Illustrated
catalogue ad fire s Ma v. K. H. t'liuai 11, A. M ,
friuc.ual, US) Valencia St., Dsn frain lac, Cat.
ANY WEAK MAN
WhoUfailMluf, eiticfr to hl tulml or
ImmIv. frustt tlasi iniutiuiiH of Wrt.hiilns
ffiu uf fat vtt IjMfrUrsv-t fIH, ftlni
I (Uil w fOMKm tan I quioaiy man prruieV
aUeumt, 1 "a fr '
DR.COLEftCO.,rt.;nd.o;:
Vheeenlil Ikieania tis.a bad 30 wara
Sestwrlenee It eurtng fVtvet. Hloud. Nsr-
Mn,u,JHhl.lUuuM Wftl fe.vil.W.
RsllaWs R.eMdits seal sWnitr te say stMress.
i r-m 1
UK M
mm axle
GREASE
BsstiatheWortdl
Est m CenniBs
Sold Everrwusra
msne
PRESS
ThaMSXAMIIf EB' BCBBAU of CLAIMS
-nnaaa van Biaacri.a or
San Franolsoo Isamlnar.
yon bar. a claim of any description whatarmer
against th. United H tales Uovernment and
wish It apaedlly adjudlossad, addnsas
OHM WEOUKKBCRM, Manager,
IU F street, K. W, Washlnltoai, D. O.
flhlnirt Anywhere on Trial, Cnll(ue Frew,
ad. btl a oa.,a Kg s. oicr.iLiJ.,n.s.A.
r Sunt InV I
ITOS DAYS.VI
a wsSfselMS sirt IS II
H g seats Swlawra
.riMUl
1 iTMttnaac
Sir 0 1nthmrknfmA4
trltng mnirvij' for ft II ttitl
unttftturftl dvaht.riri aaj
?rtvwdIsfft4Hiitf mt..
niftlormr fur ibt tfubftl
tfttlnf wamklAIMM pouJUI
to womfB,
Insaaw.ihaUaaiyfshllaara
tmriifS. n rpmmsoaioc UM
ftil lunrtrit
aWr4Sfr
al vuicm !..
Y .aaswl CVw.w . ror Ladies and Cants. Slg styles - Jki Z
aTA VflM" Pneumatlo Cushion and Solid Tlras, OiflZl
At rylfl' J&irfc Diamond Frm, btssl Draft Forging!, Steal T 09 88 Jj.
f I .vii'ri-i Tublog,AdjlMtsbl.BIIBasllngltoslfunningpsfts1,,' w r
Var KjzJ t yr lV A Including Pedals. Xulpentlon Saddle. L J
BtrtSSl maa ORAI)x. 'a very jpartonfsrt
sirfetoCatahwae rasa. lae f Uses, Bllles, Berolrcrs. fjporti., Moods, .ie. 1
A' Jll '!OV5h1' S Hy"'l'ngtM' 8"STON.IAS3. T
C. W. BOYNTON 8AW COMPANY, 40 FIRST 8TREET, PORTLAND, ORi
ew vsm sirv.
ear. nev.
Hall this d nMo-eiig. Prnner,
oiWJw I 1 I Vf "ddrtaw, l.60i sio eaiircn
niss,V. Ill I'aster Diamond Uumplou w on
t.JU 'IT I derKasnrhimilC'roaacutMaw,l.lXI
It foulest cutter In tho world.
DO YOU WANT A HOTEL WHEN VISITINO THE METROPOLIS? IF SO.
THE QUIIViBY HOUSE,
Isthenlyaipcrnsy hotel In the city with all modomlmproveiiieuta. tU)fv CM
jMPKTITION.
U IU I O Ml il 5 yu feel bad? Do yu have a headache?
W li nVsaVariLar DofiS vnnr Knnlr aV, V.. - s i
e -i mi i " auu nail ii i-uii i
don t feel like work. The l tTKl lm tronW i. iir I. tjsr.
YOU are full of bile. TUUM Ont ri,l cflt -nlhcnt rl1av.
pid.
fi .i t u - , .- r
a mt utvBcs oi Bvurn i Mmw Mmai will do It and make I Iff Ef D
you feel like a new person. For sale by all druffffjsts. LI V Etl
lWrfiSilti.a,,.
Simonds Crescent Ground Cross Cuts,
nu .r f u rb u itwriaa a HHiara b i sm
SIMONDS JtAuv nn A tfapairm.
", sv rrvni
Strsst, Portland, Or.