-1
You can Economize
By using Royal Baking Powder to the exclusion
of all other leavening agents. The official ana
lysts report it to be 27 greater in leavening
strength than the other powders. It has three
times the leavening strength of many of the
cheap alum powders.
It never fails to make good bread, biscuit and
cake, so that there is no flour, eggs or butter spoiled
and wasted in heavy, sour and uneatable food.
Do dealers attempt, because times are dull,
to work off old stock, or low gracb brands of
baking powder? Decline to buy them. During
these times all desire to be economical, and
Royal is the most
Economical Baking Powder.
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TT Clab of th Patmrm.
A pro wing opinion U that the coming
dab will b the mixed one. where men
and women will study together the ques
tion that present themselves and work
otit together the problems of the day.
And this, it is asserted, will not be a
consolidation of the distinctively wom
en's and men's clubs as they now exist,
bnt a merging of the beet elements of
each into fresh organizations.
' Following this mixed club sentiment
it is not surprising to find Mr. Stead in
London journal advocating "co-op-
arative homes for the unmarried." By -this
he means that the co-operative .
homes for spinsters and those for bache- I
Iors should combine their housekeeping
arrangements into a sort of idealized
boarding house, where Mrs. Grundy ;
-,i.t it .,.JL j, 1
lady housekeeper" and where companies
of detached or unattached men and
women could find congenial acquaint
ance. The limitations of the word con
genial Mr. Stead insists upon and ad
mits that this matter of selection is the
weak point in his scheme. The motion
in any form grows ont of a recognized
drifting apart of the sexes under the
changed condition of things. New York
Times.
Penalty of a Small Tic.
Little vices have their inconveniences.
asa Parisian burglar has just discovered
to his cost. It appears that the other
night a shop on one of the boulevards
was broken into, and a strong box was
found in the morning wrenched open
and with the contents missing. At first
it was thought that the burglar had left
no trace, but on a careful examination
of the floor a piece of chewed tobacco
was discovered. This caused suspicion
to rest on a former employee who was
given to using tobacco in that particular
way. Be was sought out, and eventually
such proofs of his guilt were forthcom
ing that he was conpeted. London
News. -'
Marrying AmoDg Relations.
In Persia it is an almost invariable cus
tom to choose a wife from smstig one's re
lations, such as cousins in a near or remote
degree, and only among acquaintances
when failure has occurred in following the
old habit. The Hebrews especially sanc
tioned a plurality of wives according to the
law of Moses, and that shows how thought
ful they were of the future of their race o
much so that sterility in a wife was consid
ered a sufficient reason for contracting an
other marriage. Pall Mall Budget.
Texas' Stat CapltoL
The state capitol of Texas is the larg
est state building in the United States
and the seventh in size among the build
ings of the world. It is a vast Greek
cross of red Texas granite, with a cen
tral rotunda covered by a dome 811 feet
fcigli. It was begun in 1881 and finished
in 1888, having cost about 13,500,000.
It wa paid for with 8,000,000 acres of
publio land deeded to the capitalists who
executed the work. Exchange.
Baking PoiVder
Purity and
Leavening Pouter
UNEQUALED.
CASH PRFES
To Introduce oar Powder, we have da.
tennloed to distribute aBjong the eoneam
re a number if Cahii PK1ZX& To
Uie person or club returning- ns the I argeat
nutnberofcertiucaceaonor before June L
WW, wewlilwv.acashprlEeofSlOO. and
tot he next larrest, numerous olberprbea
raoglng from 5 fcS7S IS CABH.
CLOSSET & DEVERS, PORTLAND, Or.
SOCIETY
BADGES.
A. FELDENHETM
BR, Leading Jew
eler ot the Pacific
Northwest, keepea
large stock of all
8BCKET SOCIETY
BAJXiKM on hand.
Best goods at low.
est figures. Badges
made to order.
HAVE
YOU
ITCHIW Q Fl LES known ty tnolsluM
Ilk pertpirsvtiqn, oau Wtn l ttcMac
whea warm. Tnim f o rm and BX.1N I).
RLKKDUf or XHOTKVDUXQ f UjU
YIELD ATOWCTO
rfT vn. BO-SAi-iurs rut hmiedt,
iff whib met dlclf on part mtteamd,
w strwtrwt tiimnvav avl Istwn IthirisT rfTwlTiis'
HLES
pe?rmn"it our. Frlce ooo. Druntlcta
r iavU. Dr. Bonit o, fhil jwUlfrhitw Pm.
"a
CMnapttTM ami people
who hare fuk lungs or Aatb
BABtaoaktiLBf PiBO'iCore for
CoDnnjptloOe It ha cm red
ttwiMito. it tuu not Injur
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U 1 tba bee. ooagh rni p.
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I Botantata Md Artists,
One day at the foot of a damp roclt I
saw a little lean man coming toward ma,
with a nose like an eagle's beak, nervous,
jerky movements and something quaint
and earnest in his countenance.
, Unfortunately I was looking at a plant
w;lh long, straight green stalk and
white, delicate corolla, which grew near
some hidden springs.
' He took me for a raw fellow botanist.
"Ah, hero yon are, gathering plants!
What! Cy the stalk, clumsy? What
' will it do in your herbarium without
tootsr
But. sir
Common plant, frequent in the en
virons of Paris, Parti assia palostris; stem
..: 1,. 1 j w.nn.lul Ttint.
' ' - JZ ..
nectaries are canons; good study; plant
well chosen. Courage! You'll get on.
"But I am no botanist."
"Very good: yon are modest. There
are rare plants here which you should
absolutely carry away. Ha! What is
that? The Aqnilegia pyrenaica!"
And my little man started off like an
ixard, clambered op a slope, carefully
dug the soil about the flower, took it np
without cutting a single root, and re
turned with sparkling eyes, triumphant
air, and holding it aloft like a banner.
"Plant peculiar to the Pyrenees. I
have long wanted it Come, my young
friend, a slight examination. Ton don't
know the species, bnt yon recognize the
family?
"Alas, I don't know a word of bot
any!" He looked at me stupefied.
"Then why do yon gather plants?"
"To see them, because they are pret
ty." He pot his flower into his case, adjust
ed his cap and went away without add
ing another word. "A Tour Through
the Pyrenees."
Facta In the Hons of Commons.
Several members of the house of com
mons have published volumes of poems
namely: William Abraham, member far
Glamorganshire (Rhondda division),
who is a Welsh bard, under the title of
"Mabon;" William Allen, the member
for Gateshead, who is an engineer and
poet, and whose works include "A Book
of Songs In English and Scottish;" Wil
liam Johnston of Hallykilbeg, member
of the southern division of Belfast, who
is poet laureate of the institution of
Orangemen in Ireland; Professor Jebbof
Cambridge university, who has pub
lished translations into Greek and Latin
verse, and T. D. Sullivan, member of
the western division of Donegal, who
has published a selection of songs. Sir
George Otto Trevelyan published in
1869 a volume of poems entitled "The
Ladies In Parliament," and other pieces,
and has also written many verses, dra
matic and satirical, of which another of
the best known is "The Dawk Bunga
low." '
Henry Smith Wright has published the
first four books of the "Iliad" of Homer
in English hexameter verse. The prime
minister (Mr. W. E. Gladstone), though
he has not published a volume of poems,
has written verses both in English and
Latin, while among his papers is said to
be a Greek tragedy, which may one day
be sent out in book form. Mr. J. W.
Crombie, member for Kincardineshire,
is the author of "Some Poets of the Peo
ple In Foreign Lands." Two members
of the house of lords have recently pub
lished volumes of poems namely, Lord
Houghton, "Stray Verses," and the bish
op of Lincoln, "A Ladder of Heaven."
London Tit-Bits.
A Relative of n Miser.
"I was unlucky enough in my infancy to
have had an uncle who was a miser, ard
what is still more exasperating, who hud
money," said Harold MacComber. "This
uncle died when I was 15 years old and
willed considerable of personal and realty
possessions to bis relatives. Being one of
not more than three nephews and two
nieces, he willed me his old homestead, an
uncouth looking affair, but one that was
fairly valuable for its location in G .
Now, then, the fact that my uncle was a
miser preyed upon my mind to such an ex
tent that I did not rest well. I had an
tching suspicion that my uncle bad stored
tip his money in some box and burled it, or
sewed it in some sack and used it for a pil
low, or did something else with it equally
incongruous. When I attained my major-
ity, I resolved that I would find that money
if it was In the old homestead, and I could
think of no place else so appropriate or so
liable to contain It. I spent any number of
days ransacking that old place, looking
high and low for the hidden wealth.
"I sounded the wall for hidden closets arid
tapped every inch of t'.v floor to obtain a
dull sound of extra resistance. I examined
the fireplace, tbe garret and the cellar, but
to no purpose. I did not find the supposi
titious wealth. I crawled under the house
later and examined the floor and ground
without results. Then I bethought myself
of the cistern, and I planned at once to have
it emptied. In this cistern there was s
double floor or base, and between the two
I found a hermetically sealed case which
contained some literary effusions and a
number of old family trinkets of gold, but
no money. The last discovery disgusted me,
and I concluded that my uncle was not a
miser after all, but only a much over esti
mated old crank. Since then I have slept
better." bt. Ixmis (j lobe-Democrat.
THE DEATH FENALTT.
60CIAU COMPACT THAT UNDERLIES
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
The Fundamental law or Man Which Com
pels the State to Take the Ufa of On
Who Hae by HU Own Hand Taken the
Life of Another The Bight to Take Lira.
There Is an Infinite amount of loose
thinking, speaking and writing about capi
tal crime and its punishment. We are
growing too much accustomed to hear mur
der trials discussed as if they were contests
sot ween prosecuting officers eager to en
force the vengennos of a cruel and blood
thirsty state and the legal champions of an
unfortunate prisoner seeking to escape the
penalties of an unrighteous law. That is a
false view of the matter utterly false.
Reference is in order to the Bra priuot
ples on which society rests. There are
some primary truths which it seems need
to be firmly reasserted.
There were natural laws long before any
human laws were enacted. They are ele
mental, and their justice is self evident.
Among these natural laws there is one that
stands surely first. It is expressed in the
homely proverb, "Self preservation is the
first law of nature." From this first law
of nature it followed that when men lived
without organised society and had no state,
no written law, no courts and no regular
machinery of justice, any man whose wife
or daughter or son or brother or kinsman
of any sort was killed or injured, or whoae
home was Invaded by any kind of violence,
bad the rinbt of retaliation in his own
hands. If any of his household were slain,
he had the rixht to kill the slayer.
This natural law rules everywhere today
outside the picket fence of organized civ
ilization. It would rule in the United
States again and instantly if it were dis
tinctly proclaimed that laws and courts
bad ceased to exist and that every man, wo
man and child in the community had as
much protection as and no more than they
could provide for themselves. All the au
thorities on law and justice that have ever
spoken or written from the time of Moses
down to the days of Recorder Smyth, hare
agreed upon this point, that the right of
defensive and protective retaliation for in
jury is a natural one conferred by the Cre
ator upon every man, and not to be taken
away from him unless an equivalent pro
tection be afforded by the state.
The state is the product of civilization,
but what Is the state? The state is simply
a social compact. It is a contract between
every individual member of it and the col
lective community. The individual agrees
to give up many of his individual rights.
Among them he agrees to give up the right
to kill at sight the man who assails bim or
any of his kindred and binds himself never
to kill, except when in his judgment his
own life will be lost if he does not. The
individual Agrees further not to kill at
sight the assassin or the violator of his
wife or daughter, but instead to leave the
man who has thus irreparably injured him
to the public justice of the state. But the
individual citizen is only one party to the
social contract. The state also agrees to do
certain things in return for the surrender
of individual rights.
The state binds itself to give to the In
dividual citizen, through its laws and its
courts, the same just satisfaction which be
would be clearly entitled to demand and
take if he lived in a desert where no human
tribunal existed. The state says to him:
"The right to kill the man who kills your
nearest and dearest ones is surrendered, but
it is not lost. If your home is invaded, your
hearthstone desecrated, your household
robbed of its inmates to fill premature and
bloody graves, the collective state will hold
bim who does these things to the same account-ability
to which you yourself could
and would hold him if you lived in a state
of nature, in the full enjoyment of your
natural rights."
The law which makes murder punishable
with death is the logical outcome of that
compact between the state and the Individ
nal citizen. It is idle to talk of the state as
having any malice to gratify or any ven
geance to appease against such a man as
Almy, the murderer of Christie Warden in
New Hampshire, or Harris in New York.
Society collectively can not and does not
seek the life of any man. But the state has
made a compact under which it is stipu-
lated that the natural right of private ven-
geance shall not be exercised, yet by that :
same compact it has guaranteed to protect
U crj uuusruum fiituiu iua uuiucis n win ail
such invasions and violations, and to do it j
by placing every man in the community
under a bond not to kill, with the penalty!
attached to the bond that if he will not let j
another live neither shall he live himself.
We may theorize, and speculate, and
split legal hairs, and raise moral quibbles
from now to the crack of doom, but we
never can get away from the basic laws of :
human nature. Men will never surrender '
their natural right to defend their lives, ;
their homes, their wives snd their children
against the assassin by killing him any
longer than the state fulfills its duty to
hold murderers to tbe same expiation
which, if there were no laws and no courts,
they would certainly be held by those
whom tbey wronged, and they never ought
to surrender it. James W. Clarke in Jew
York Recorder.
Curiosities About the Bhlnoceros.
The rhinoceros is a beastof legendary and
mythical associations as well as of stern
reality. In the mythology of all tbe old
world be figures very conspicuously, being
worshiped as a god by tbe early Javanese
tribes and lauded as the builder of the earth
and tbe heavens by several East African
peoples. The old Jewish Talmud declares
that bis skin is folded as a result of having
been exposed 40 days and 40 nights in tho
waters of tbe flood. The waters of the
great deluge were hot, according to Ta
bari, where we read: "After that Noah sent
forth the dove. The dove departed and
without tarrying put her feet in tbe water.
The waters of the flood were hot, and tbey
scalded and pickled tbe legs of the dove.
It was hot and briny, and feathers would
not grow on her legs any more, and tbe skin
scaled off. Now, doves which have red and
featherless legs are of the sort which Noah
sent forth."
This is only cited for authority to prove
why the skin of tbe rhinoceros lays in folds
and ridges. Certainly if the waters were
hot enough to "pickle and scald" a dove's
legs at tbe moment of contact, they would
make the skin of a rhinoceros too large for
him in the course of 40 dsysl
"But," you say, "why was be exposed in
tbe waters of the great deluge while all tbe
other beasts were safely housed in the ark t"
Simply because he was too large to lie put
aboard the great lifeship. The bulk of tbe
old rabbinic writers agree that the rhino
ceros floated along with the ark, but they
disagree as to bow tbe floating operation
was performed. St. Louis Republic.
An Kfklntn Trick.
The short, chunky, wooden looking
Eskimo men wheedle silver out of the
' populace by playing a game requir
. ing considerable skill. This consists
in lifting a donated nickel or dime out
'of the ground by the crack of a whip,
The whips these chaps use are like an
; ordinary bull goad, with a number of
leather lashes added to the total length
of 24 feet. They shoot these long lashes
along the ground like snakes straight at
a coin set edge up in the dirt, and as
each tip reaches the spot it curls with a
snap like a pistol shot snd likely as not
lifts the coin high in the air. It goes to
whosoever gets it in that way. Chicago
Cor. New York Sun.
I -
STOCK GAMBLING.
The "Bttlla," the "Bear," the Amateurs
and Hrokere and Their Methods.
I do not know how it is in London, Parts
and the other great cilice of fcurope, but
can hardly believe that the number of per
sons in any of them who speculate ' l stocks
bears so large a proportion to tue euttre
Dooulation aa it does here in rsew York.
Men, and women, too, of all trades and oc
cupations and of every degree of pecuniary
ability habitually engage Id operation on
our Stock Exchange and find in thera
.runsernent if not profit. Indeed, if the
lock brokers had fur customers only hv
veatore and professional speculators, half
sf them and probably more could not make
a living. The oommlaaions and interest
paid them by merchants, lawyers, doctors.
manufacturers and retired capitalists, not
to mention women, furnish the greater
part of their incomes, and the very magni
tude of this miscellaneous crowd, augen-
ed as it is by recruits from other cttlea of
the Colon, all of them being borrowers of
money, renders a breakdown in the market
exceedingly easy.
As is well known, the amateur ateek op
erator expects to make his gains by sorting
at a higher price than he buys at. This is
the natural method of conducting business
in other thiugs, and the application of it to
stock transactions follows as a matter of
course. The many legends) current of pco-
f lie who have acquired fortunes by purchas
ng apparently worthless stocks at nominal
prices and subsequently selling them at an
enormous advance also helps to confirm
amateurs in this view of the proper course
to be taken, and therefore most of them are
what are called "bulls." Professional stock
gamblers, on the contrary, are as often
"bears" as bulls that la, they sell at going
prices stocks which they do not bold in the
expectation of buying them back, cheaper.
As a rule, however, the "bulls ' among the
professionals also outnumber the "bears'
and are said in the long run to be more suc
cessful.
Amateur stock gamblers, besides being
for the most part bulls, have rarely enough
readycash of theirown to pay for what they
desire to buy, and hence what cash they
have thev put up as "margins ' and rely on
their brokers to furnish the rest. This the
brokers do by borrowing from banks, trust
eompaules and private lenders, and the ag-
grewnte of these borrowings runs up Into
the millions and tens of millions. hat
the result is when these loans are called in
we hare seen. The customer cannot pro
tect the broker, and so the broker to pro
tect bimself sells out the customer s stocks,
and when a hundred brokers are doing the
same thing at once the wonder is not that
prices go down, bnt thst they do not go
down more.
It is evident that the stock market, being
thus, as a rule, supported by purchasers
with borrowed money, is always liable to
collapse whenever borrowing becomes diffi
cult. It is a pyramid balanced on its apex,
ready to topple over with a slight push in
one direction or another. When this push
is strong, owing to the sudden attacks upon
a few vulnerable stocks and the contract
ing of loans resulting from the apprehen
sions of lenders, the overturn of the pyra
mid is inevitable, and the number of those
who are caught and crushed under it is very
large. Still this is a peril to which ths
victims voluntarily expose themselves, and
they have no right to try to east the
blame of their misfortune upon others. It
was old Andrew Jackson, I think, who of
tered the sage aphorism that men who trade
upon borrowed money ought to fall, or, as
a more modern authority once put it, ton
ny, don't buy what you can't pay for and
don't sell what you haven't got." Mat
thew Marshall in ew 1 ork Bun.
The Fall In the Price of Barns. ,
Cp to 1657 borax came to. us from the
Last Indies, Persia and Italy, was refined
in Venice and in England and imported at
a coat of tl a pound, often more, its high
price offering strong temptation to adul tw
in 1809 the price had fallen to 40 cents s
pound, and in 1879 to 11 cents, and from
that time borax has remained a cheap com
modity within the reach of all.
How has this been brought about? Out
of disaster and human suffering, so sharp
that the valley first found to be rich in this
deposit bears yet the name, "The Death
Valley," where the discoverers of the borax
deposits found in 1867 the remains of emi-
ii , u n f wbihmih 11 ,11 tWH VH tt nil t ll i fM,lr.
.ii i.: . ,u h.l.n ml th.,h an
Jean pafeed ,lnee hope left ' them, and
tbe uttle eompan, one by one lay down to
Gom Mom had been the obiect of the
party who sought to enter California by
way of Salt Lake, and who, baiting in the
Death Valley in Injo county, Cal., found a
heat so intense that, added to tbe lack of
water, it made further progress impossible.
only a few of tbe stronger ones escaping to
tell the tale.
Later experts, sent out to report if gold
were really to be found in the valley, came
npon the borax fields snd later the deposits
in Nevada. From the Pacific coast 4,000.000
pounds a year are supplied for borne con
sum ption, which has now reached tbe aston
ishing total of lO.OOO.OW pounds yearly,
with a constantly growing demand. nce
introduced into family use, whether in
kitchen, laundry or nursery, it becomes an
essential. Epicure.
Latest Marina Disaster.
He is a skipper of a coasting schooner,
but be had a week off, and as "dad was laid
np with rbeumatiz" he turned to and helped
out with the spang plowing. He found It
an altogether different job than plowing
tbe briny. His bitch was a yoke of oxen
with tbe old mare on ahead, and this was a
combination that he bad never handled be
fore. However, with a boy to drive, be
pitched in heroically. When tbe crash came.
It was a demoralizing one. One ox got bis leg
over tbe chain, whirled around and slipped
down a side hilL The other ox flopped over
its mate with a crash, and tbe mare was
pulled down on her haunches and sat like
Towser on a doorstep.
When the captain went to tbe rescue, he
was kicked about 10 feet by one of tbe
prostrate, struggling oxen. The psnic was
complete, and tbe skipper flew into tbe
house as rapidly as his wind would allow.
Here's bow he breathlessly sized np the
difficulty to dad: "Say, tbe larboard ox is
on the starboard side, the main brace Is
bottom side up, tbe rigging Is all by the
board, and the old mare's gone down stern
foremost. What in blankiiation are ye go
ing to do about it?" Lewis ton Journal.
Climate and Disease In Japan.
The European sojourning in Japan is par
ticularly affected through his nervous sys
tem and his respiratory organs, as a result
of tbe humidity and the abrupt changes of
temperature. In regard to tbe respiratory
apparatus it appears that the number of
movements is augmented, and the tension
of the aqueous vapor being very great that
of the oxygen is diminished with resulting
reduction in haematosis, thus opening the
door to all maladies through depression of
nutrition from rheumatism and diabetes
to gout and anaunia, which are everyday
diseases in Japan. Contrary, in fact, to tbe
general notion, central Japan possesses a
climate exceedingly favorable to tbe devel
opment of anaemia.
Further, the climate of Japan, through
its fervid heat, depresses tbenervoussystem
hence diminution of physical activity, en
feeblement of tbe cerebral faculties, follow
ed by apathy, somnolence and complete
prostration of the powers. In order to avoid
the pernicious influence of tbe climate It is
recommended that the foreigner spend the
summer at tbe north, say at Yeso or in tbe
north of Niphon, where the climate is dry
and invigorating. Otherwise the disad
vantages named will too certainly be ex
perienced. New York Tribune.
Queer Japan Beliefs,
The Japanese believe in mora mythical
croatures than any other people on ths
globe, civilised or savage. Among these
are mythical animals without any re
niarkablo peculiarities of conformation,
but gifted with supernatural attributes,
such as the tiger which is said to turn as
white as a polar boar oa tlst date of his one
thousandth birthday. They also bolievs
In a species of fox which if it lives to be SO
years old without having been chased by
a dog transforms itself Into a beautiful
woman. This same fox, if ha can nan
age to live for a century, gains additional
powers, such as becoming a wonderful
w ixard, etc When be lives to be 1,000
years old, he becomes a "celestial fox,"
with nine golden tails, and has the power
of going to heaven and returning when
ever he chooses.
These Japs also believe in a multitude
of animals distinguished by their mon
strous sixe or by the multiplication of
their members. Among thee are ser
pents 800 fuet long aud large enough to
swallow an elephant; boxs with eight
legs; monkeys with four ears and seven
tails; fishes with 10 heads attached to one
body, the flesh of this last monster being
a sure cure for boils, bites of poisonous
serpents, hydrophobia, etc Philadel
phia Press.
States Meant.
A monthly statement, Mo.; a weakly
statement, 111.; a personal statement.
Me.; a graphic statement, Del.; a writ
tun statement, IVun.; a decimal state
ment, Tenn.; an interesting statement
Miss.; a historical statement. Ark.; a
confident statement, Kan.; a rich state
ment. Ore.; a Inmp statement, Mass.; a
spirited statemeut, R- I.i a medical
statement, Md.; a French statewit.
Vs.; a French statement, Ala.; an em
phatic statement, O.i an emphatic state
ment, La.; a close statement, N. Y.; a
neutral statement, 1. T.s a neat state
ment, Wash.; a doubtful statement. Wy.
Truth.
A Pleasant Opinion.
Patient Do you think smoking hurt
ful, doctor?
Doctor Smarte Ueml Ah do you
smoke?
Patient Yes.
Doctor But not enough to hurt yon.
that's easy enongh to see.
Patient goes off happy and never be
grudges Die 1 he pays for this unbiased
verdict. Boeton Transcript
I'L'HLIC SPBAKINO.
This is one of the heaviest strains thst
comes upon any man or woman. A little
cold, a little hoarseness, and tbe work is
done. The best of sbility is rendered at-
solutely useless.
Mark Our Peirse. the eminent English
preacner, writes as loiiows:
uxoroRD riAt'i, itrsssLt. yrAK,i
Lohoo. December 10. lHHn. I
' I think it oulv right that I should tell
you of how much use I find Ai.uvhs's
Foanrs Plasters in my family and among
those to whom I have recommended them.
I tine them a very breastplate against colds
and coughs. Mask Orv
Hbakuritb's Pilus slwsys give satisfac
tion.
The bsllooiilitt Is one roan who has to be ap
ana doiuf II lie ex peels losccompiunanjiuiug.
I's Bnamellne Stove Polish ; no dust, no smell.
TsT QiSMKA fer breakfast.
To the Right Spot
kvery dose seemed k
go, when I bef so to take
Hood's Barsaparllla. I
had a bad cough fot
Dearly two years, eom
lng on after the grip. 1
tried physicians, went
twiee to the Hot Spring
of Arkansas, but all did
no good. I got a bottle
Dexter Curtis, of Hand's Sarura.
r 1 1 la snd it gave me re) lei st once. I took tlx
bottles snd am better every way." Psxtes
Ctsns, Had lean. Wis. Get Hood's, because
Hood'sCurcs
Hood's PIII cure sll Liver Ills. 25c.
M1SQUERADES, PARADES,
111 AH TltHTIIKlill
ICtlJ.
Everything In the shore line.
Coat time, Wigs,
Bir'i. Properties, (men snd Flay Books, etc..
furiibthe'l si grestly reduced rales and in snpe
rlor qHslltr by the oldest, Urg-1, bel renowned
and therefore only rtimbU Ttwatrieal Supply
IttHtte on the Fnnnc f-touf. torreswmdenee so
licited. (iotrxn-EiH tt Co.. 28. 2H snd M O'Fsrrell
treet, also sun Market street, Han Francisco. We
supply all Tirattrt on lac Voatt, to whom we re
spectfully refer.
'August
Flower
My wife suffered with indigestion
and dvsDeosia for vears. Life be
came a burden to her. Physicians
failed to give relief. After reading
one of your books, I purchased
bottle oi August I- lower. It worked
like a charm. My wife received im
mediate relief after taking tbe first
dose. She was completely cured
now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat
anything she desires without any
deleterious results as was formerly
the case. C. II. Dear, Prop'r Wash
ington House, Washington, Va. 9
DR. GUNtrs
ONION
SYRUP
1 FOB COUGHS.
COLDS
MD CROUP.
GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE.
InreltftttrafamUr of Bin Mldrn, my Mir m-
tut tor uo'iicns, uoias ama uroup wm onion ajrmp, u
U)ostMefrotir t--dxy m It was forty rmn wo.
?w m7 ran lci.lld ran Uka Ir. Onnn's Onion Syrup
wnian m aw r assay prapra ioa mor pisM 10 io
tuu, Sola everywhere. Inr bottl. 00 osmtA.
Te no uboutm tor Tboro't iMtluac M good.
The Best
Waterproof
Coat
In the
WORLD I
Tli flail llltANI) HI.ICKEK Hi wirranlMl nsue-
prnof, and will kwp you dry In the hardMtslurm, The
new POMMKLi S(.U KEtt la a perfect rldlnf ooat, and
cover Uie emir Ad(ll, BewareoflmltaUofiA. lMm'U
buy a coal ir the "
ilea ('eialifinie free.
run Brand" l nut on It. Illnnlrs-
A. 4. TOWEK, IfaMlOD, SMI,
r-v -1 m sr-r
N. P. N. U. No. 6118. F. N. U.No. 688
Of lhsaleaea to which II Is l;. 2? . J?"
best reaiUI., ll.letter'aHIme.'h 111 Iters, s lm
llv mwlU'hie, eoim.re heimlve Iti IU ti'iilw.
!,yv bViii llirn.1 !.li. i.llr ntwi.llui, a ths
a-iilne of a uiilwraul Htna.a fur Wl,
This elNtm.flNliy arrogated In the rolm ns f
the. I. llv ureas liv the .rirleUir ol nivdleliiM
far Inferior to II sa jwrllUn, uss 111 s ""'"
HiaiMn..dliile.l (l.e.ul.lte In """' '
.iH.ur.llir, and the r.t.s ol other rsnuslles
of superior iiusliiles hsv bee" hsmllj'siiped l'f
the pretensions ol their worthless pre eceaenra.
But the American people know, bwsiiae bet
have verified Ihe fm;t by lb most Iryiiis Units,
thai the Hitter iwaa.ra tbvlrlu ol s resl
sparine In ease of mlrll soil Href illsonler.
n.iisiiiwllon, nervous, rheumsilr. slomsrh siio
kidney trouble. What It doe II line, iboronsh
lv. sn.l niali.lr for this reason II is liulursad and
recommended by hosts ol reapeeuible aiedmal
OIVII.
I've been told Inst Jenkins tins been fnlllos;
me a eow.rd snd s thief." "Pooht I wouldu I
mind. You know he never (els anythlnf more
than hall Hit lit any lime."
HOW'S THIHt
W offer One Hundred Dnllsrs rewsrd for eny
raae ol cntnrrh thst esnnot be curwl by Hall s
Catarrh Cure. K. J. CHEM.Y l o.,
Toledo, O.
We, the tinderelmied, hsvs known K. J. t hs
noy tor the lt Mteen years, aud believe him
pvrfee ly honorable In all business iranaaellons
slid Financially Wa to carry out stiyolillitsilous
mads by tiieir Ann. VVKKT A THl-A X,
Wholesale lriniilsta, Toledo. O.
WAl.IH.Ntl, KINNAX MARVIN.
Hall's Catarrh Cure laken Internally, scilm
H liolesaua uniKSisis, loieoo, ...
4it.iiv ii is.. n IU tdiMsd ft nil tnurout ktirfuCMi
o,
thtf vum. 'li-llinuilitU Mtii (rt. t'r.c,7ft
ceiita pvr buttle, bulii by tvll dr.Mf!.U.
and " used-up " f eelinK Is
ths (Ira warning tliat
rour llvar Isnt dolus;
Its work. And, with a
fcarpld llvar. and ths
impure blood that (or
lows It, you're aa saurr
prey to au sona o au
tnents. Tk.a Is the Uma to
take IT. Ilerees Ooldeo
Medical Msoovsry. AS
aaaaaawttarlMJ Baaaf ATSV.
tfv tonic, to ranel disease sad build up ths
Deeuea nrn sua iuwiiiw,
tittal it. It rouses every orjran into health
ful action, puriHes and enriches ths blood,
braces np ths whole system, and lea Uses
health ami vhror. .
For every disease caused by a dwwosfws
liver or Impure blood, it is ths only fraoreu
Urci remedy. If it doesn't tenant or eura, la
very case, you hsvs your money back.
$500 Is offered, by the proprietors of
Dr. Sags 1 Catarrh Remedr, for an In
cursbls case of Catarrh. Their remedy
perfectly and permanently cures ths
worst cases.
SAota
hk.-taand
ttUUperltottav
Ouaoeotadosa.
Tuts Orjut Coot n Ciiaa promptly eures
wnerw ail otnees lau, vsugns, iroep. m"r.
Throat, Hoarseness, Whoopiof Cough and
Asthma. For Consumptlea It has no rival:
has cured thousand, snd will (xnu Tuo If?
taken to time. Bold oy prusgurts on a suar.
sntM. Pnr a lame Hack or Chxt. lias
BHiLOrt BELLADONNA FLAaTKKJOo.
CATARRH
ONs3iisa-l
REMEDY.
Have vuiiiaiarih r This remcdr h
tend to ours you. l'rioe, Wets. iujtorfreav,
Brooklyn Hotel
20S-212 Bail tt., In Frincltci.
This favorite hotel Is under th manasement
ot CHAKl.KH MONTUilMKKY. and is aa food If
not tne neat ratnuy ana Dullness Men a notai
in san rrencuoo.
Home Comforts! Cuisine Unexcelled
Clsst-clsas service snd Ihe highest standard of
reapeetauiiity guaranteed, our roam eniraoc ot
Sttrpaaard tvr ariraras ani eomnrl Board and
room per day, I.'JS, 11.60, 11.74 and tiuu; board
and room per week, 17 to tU; single room Me
hi si. rrea ooacn ui ana irom notei.
THIS IB THE TIM I TO
order your MUMMKK
Klil.I.rfW. Too waul
the ssst; Ihst's the only
kind we deal In. Then
end your order for the
rlKHT HUM.BKH and
INKS Ul PALMER
KEY TYPE rPET
i'OBTLASD, Oa.
MR? WINUfiW'S sootm.no
hiiiwi iiinwsvii w trnur
- FOR CHILDREN TEaTHIKO
Hercules Gas Engine
turgor va waaviana;
Ms' tor Powsr or Pumping Puipossa.
Tbe Cbsnpett Keltahls Oss Xaglas
oa Hie Mar set.
Out of (nome am
Plan.
Wm llasptleltr It Beat ths World.
a vita sisaii irom sv iseservoir,
Jt Carburetor to get on ofard.
Xo Batteries or Kleetrle Spark.
It rmaa with a Chaaper Grade of Ossollu tbaa aaj
etlMt Engine.
ssnra ton oataumob so
PALMER & REY, Manufacturer
Ml Issnm Strata
-AHU-KOKTLAND,
OKEOON.
.A
ATrsfsfsTZ3 1
h.. ST a SI 11 JB -T I
-sa a k s a s s aas.
IB
Mil
it is ignorance; that wastes
EFFORT." TRAINED SERVANTS USE
SAPOLIO
RHEUMATISM CURED BY THE USE OF
Moore's Revealed Remedy.
ArtTORtA. OstlOOM Jktnnfartf 1A I a.. .itk - ......
iirrlwii. .j . T nososna ws. relieved 'mm n old osaoo'
BHKrMATIHM sndmyyonnssstboTenredentlraieni inti itiu ,Ti I ,Y!r2?
MaTIHM when I
i th beat snow., I
OLD BY
aPRINTERSK"
-AND-.'
PUBLISHERS
WILL NU A FULL UN Of-
ii i
5
Presses,
Printing Material and Machinery
For sale st leweat prior snd bum sdrsnlsieoui
terms al
Palmer 6 Reylfpefoundf,
Cor. Front md Aider Streets,
PORTLAND, OR.
Writs lor prt as and tsrrus below baying else
where. DOCTOR
sis
THE GREAT CURE
-FOR-
INDIGESTION
AND
CONSTIPATION.
A-
Regulator of the Liverand Kidneys
-a u'Kciric rem-
Scrofula, Rheurattism,
Salt Eheum, Neunlrlt
lid ill Other Blood tad Skin Dlsrisei.
It Is s po-ltlve cm re lor sll those painful, dell
eal complaint and roiitjiUeaiett ironhle and
weakness common among our wives, mother
and ilens hU-ra.
The i-Rivl la Immediate and la.ll . Two or
three disM-a of lis. Pasi-ks's Hsssnr taken ilally
keeps the blood e ol, the Hver sud kuiueya at!l
Ive, and will entirely ersillcate from Ihe systa-m
sll trace ol Hrmfula, Hall kheum, or any other
form of blom! disease.
No metliciue ever Introduced In Oils country
has tnel Kith such fwolr sle, nor siren ut h
universal sllslarllou whenever Used aa thst ol
lis. l'Bil s Ksasuv.
This remedy has been nsnl In Ihe hcapitals
throushoul the old world lor Ihe past taeuly
rive ears as a specific for the atiove diseases,
snd ll ha snd will cure when all other eo-cellei
remedies fell.
Mend for pamphlet of testimonials from those
who hare been cured by Its use. lirnsslsie tell
ll si 11.09 per holtls. Try It sud he convinced.
For ssds by
MACK & CO.,
0 and II Front St., San Franolaoo.
Bladder, ITrtntry snd Liver Plaeaaca, Biopsy
(travel and Diabetes are cured by
HUNT'S REMEDY
THI BIST KIDNIY
AMD LIVER MEOIONI.
HUNT'S REMEDY
Cures Brleht's Disease, Retention or Non-retention
of Urine. Fains In lbs Back. Loins or
Side,
HUNT'S REMEDY
Cures Intemperance, Nervous tliaeaaes, (Icneial
Debility, Female Woakuess and Excesses,
HUNT'S REMEDY
Cures Rlllonaness, Heedsche, jaundice. Hour
Hlouech, I'yspepsfs, Couatlpsllou and I'lles.
HUNT'S REMEDY
:-ra T ONCfKon Ihe Hints, t a. t Ive
snd Hawel. re.torlne Ihetn Ioa healthy ac
tion. and 'l:ltSSi when all other ni,llrliiia
fall, tlundreda have been saved who have been
fives up to die by friends and physicians.
MOLD BY ALL UHl'UtaaT.
RLOOD POISON
A SPECIALTY. iT.r?'.
ftyphlll pnrmnMY enrrxf In IS to3ftiUr, Vrt
oaa tf tmHttKl m hunm for H inm urli matt tli
UitMBMurantArrsi with UiNsiiwiMrn'f(,rl(i
pti wm win woirivri lotiurv inrtn r n-iun'i rmwj
ml peirci(fnMbr comtsui. rllrHiil fm mHlli'tvl
bllli, Irfvt fU to euro. H0u ha.ro ta"i mr
rnrf. IcmIII ntih, nn'tnill. bivn ( rr arm
Sutns. Muronii'alflii'i'ln trKruih, Knrm 'llirii(t
'.Mplc.M'narrH'nlnr. bo(c . 4ron nuf
part of th butlr. llnlr or I obro rHln
it, ll U this HyrihllMla Jll04 I'OtMOM
that wo tunrmnUtu to cum. We iol.ft tho nuihi
tMiinl amm and ehatlt.ff tHm wrlt fr
m rut wttminoli'iir( TtitsUIrsnJifuiii) wr
tnfllss4 th ttklll of th MitCNili.ift hyil
elan. VO.000 r" I bhlntl our uniMindl
tlonttl iriiBrsvairs. AtoliiliBrMiniWMitit-rtletlot.
Wnllllun ArMiYM 4 MlK Mt:Msr:iiV .
FRAZER ML,
BisliithiWorldinnrAOr
Get thi GfinuiRBlhilKllF
SflldEMrywhertlMiiWlWI.
EBAMK WOOLSKT ,A(nt, Hnrtland. r
ilea f
omild ret did him no food y , ,rti"ri
X T. TTi
va BJ AV BS
X X X JU
si Tl it in rtMTT
RHUS Mllll,
KIDNEY,
TdPB DBUttttaXia.
I