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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1895)
In Baking Powders "Royal" Leads. As the result of my tests, I find the ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER superior to all the others in every respect . It is entirely free from all adulteration and unwhole some impurity, and in baking it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than any other powder. J is therefore not only the purest, but also the strongest powder with which I am acquainted. WALTER S. HAINES, M. D., Prof, cf Chemistry , Rush MeJkat Ccllegt, Consulting; Chemist, Chicago Board of Health. All other baking powders are shown by analysis to contain alum, lime or ammonia. ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. CHARLOTTE TEMPLE'S GRAVE. Tho Mm Popular Spot In Trinity Ctanrcn . . yard. New York. A few days ago passersby in Broad way, looking through the high fenoe that surrounds Trinity churchyard, saw a slender black gowned girl kneeling by the grave of Charlotte Temple. Her bead was bowed in her hands, and she seemed utterly lost to her surroundings. After awhile she arose with a very pale face, walked swiftly through the gates and disappeared in the crowd. She was only one of many devotees at the shrine of the poor girl who died for love. No body ever visits Trinity churchyard without pausing for a few minutes be fore the big brown slab that bears only ' the name 'Charlotte Temple. " - "Ob, yes!" said the gray haired old man whose duty it is to see that the an cient tombs are kept in order. "It is the most popular grave in the yard. I have been here going on 17 years now, and there have been very few days in good weather when the grave has not had a visitor. Several times I have seen wom en come here and stand in the cold and sleet and snow looking at the tomb. Somehow they always look as if they were in trouble. "Seven or eight years ago I began to pot potted flowers, geraniums and the like on the grave, and I have kept it up every summer since. It is mainly to mark the grave, so that visitors can find it It is the only grave in the yard that has flowers on it Otherwise the people would bother me to death. When they ask me where the grave of Charlotte Temple is now, I simply tell them that it is over on the west side with some potted flowers on it That saves me a deal of trouble. - "Several of the gravestones are crum bling badly and will have to be repaired if the descendants of the dead want to perpetuate their memory. See; here is the oldest grave in the place. " Then the old man swept away a layer of dust from a crumbling gray stone and showed the date, 1681. "We have sev eral that date almost as far back, " said he, "but none of them is so popular as that of Charlotte Temple. Then the ancient attendant tucked his broom under his arm, picked np his wheelbarrow and trundled away among the graves. New York Herald. A Dog Palace. Baron Farnchetti, the father of the composer, has had a dog kennel erected in his palace at Venice, made through out of marble. The ceiling is decorated with a splendid mosaic, entitled "The Chase of Diana. " The eating and drink ing vessels of the dogs are said to be of embossed silver. Of course the kennel is lighted by electricity. Familien btatt 1 - Not Her WllL - Agnes What are yon writing, Min nie? Your will? r Minnie No. I'm writing my won't George proposed last night, and I told him I'd answer today. London Sketoh. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On this Coattaami, km nedr& HIGHEST AWARD8 " from ttkt gTMt . Industrial antf Fi EXPOSITIONS ;ln Europe and America. TTnlfka th Dutch ProecM.no A!k-lie-e or other Chemical! or Dra ara ud In anr of their DrtDaratton. ThHrdatirimia RKKAKPAHT COCOA fa abaoluUlr pura and aolubla, ajui cota Icm than ane cent a cvjt. SOLO BY OBOCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MA88. DIRECTIONS ino CUBA Apply a Balm well ur trill. After a moment drav itrong breath through thr not. I'm three timet a day after meals preferred, and before retirug. ; CATARRH EI-T'S CKKAM BALM Open and cleanses the Nasal Passage's Allays Pain and Inflamma tion, Heals the Bores, Protect the Membrane from coMii, Restore the fences ol Taste ai.d Smell. The Balm la quickly absorbed and gives relief at onoe. '.. . . a n,ri,'lfi In ennllod into each nostril, and li agreeable, trice, 60 cent at Drucglits' or bj mail. ELY BROTHERS, M Warren Street. New York. DR. LIEBIC & CO., Special Doctor: for Cbnlc Private and Wasting Ciseasa Or. JJebls's Invlgorator the gieatest remedy for Kuml'i&l Weakness, Uof Mam ood and Private lilseauea. Overcomes Prematureness ano prepares all IW marriage life's duties, pleasures and respon ibitiueei l trial k-iUle given or sent free to any rue describing smptonis; caU or address 400 Mearr Ht , niivate eamuee tut JUeon 8u, Ban Francisco. IE i ii it r m.u GALLANT CUSTER'S WIDOW. She Shared Eta Peril la Many of Hla In dian Campaigns. 1 Mrs. Ellstabeth & Coster, widow of gallant General George A. Custer, whose entire . command was annihilated by the Sioux at the memorable battle on the Lit tie Big Horn In 1876, began bet successful career as a writer for the sole purpose of giving the public an Insight into the true character of her husband. He bad become the Ideal hero and Indian fighter of the writers of sen sational , , flotlon, and Mrs. ' Custer desired to present a truer picture of him. As she know him he was a cul tured gentleman and a man of strong affections and domes tlo MBS. custkr. tastes. He was a fighter, too, but the gentler side of his na ture the public was unacquainted with. After eight yean of urging on the part of Interested friends Mrs. Custer wrote "Boots and Saddles," which was widely read and most favorably received by the general reader and tho critics. Her long experience amid the perils of frontier army life had given her plenty of material, and two other books have since come from her pen. Mrs. Custer was born in Monroe, Mich., and was the daughter of Judge Daniel S. Bacon. She met the dashing Custer in 1863, while be was waiting orders, and but for Judge Bacon s opposition marriage would have followed a very short courtship. About this time Custer, then only 23 years old, was promoted from captain to briga dier general, and when he returned to Monroe to urge his suit Judge Bacon con' sented to an engagement In February, 1801, the young couple were married. Their honeymoon lasted but a few days, for Custer was ordered on a cavalry raid. Mrs. Custer accompanied the Army of the Potomac, but saw little of her husband. She says that during her entire married life of 13 years there was hardly an hour that she was not in peril or racked with fears for her husband a safety. During Custer's career as an Indian fight er Mrs. Custer was often the only woman with his command. On the frontier in Dakota she was always In peril, and there was a tacit understanding between Custer and his officers that if at anytime the party were surprised by Indiana and cap ture seemed certain whoever had Mrs. Custer in charge was to shoot her instant ly to save her from torture at the hands of the merciless redskins. After the fatal battle that swept away Custer and bis 877 comrades Mrs. Custer took under ber special care the widows of the officers who fell fighting at her hus band's side. She affectionately calls them "my widows" and has assisted them In getting pensions and employment Mrs. Custer supplements her writing by giving lectures before clubs of women, schools and church societies. Telephone Between England and Holland. It is .proposed to establish a telephone line between England and Holland. The London chamber of commerce and the Netherlaud chamber of commerce are try ing to ascertain if the time Is yet ripe for the undertaking. The Costly Cuckoo. The eggs of the Bahama cuckoo are held at $100 per set by dealers in birds' eggs. BRANDING A CLAIM FALSE. World's Fair Officials Expose a Pre tender to an Award. A most discreditable resalt of the late Chicago World's Fair is the fraudulent advertising of awards never received by a Chicago baking powder firm. Officials of the Exposition are much Incensed, and have notined the onenuing parties that the misstatements must cease. They are defied, however, by the Chi cago concern, who continue to advertise the false statement that they received the highest award for strength, purity and excellence. Mr. Thatcher, Chief of Agricultural Awards, shows in his letter I that the awards granted were "for an ! exhibit of baiting powder," merelv, not ' Awa?rorBaLin7powders wHtea a UjZtJlwlTlu given to the Chicago company," as the company claims and advertises. ; Another I act in connection with the a baking powder business at the Chicago Fair has come to light. Tlie identical baking powder made by the Chicago! concern, and so brazenly advertised as ' having received the highest award for purity and excellence, it now appears was iouna Dy ine analysts wno maae the tests at the Fair to contain traces of smmon s idu iu unsiei. - The officials believe that though they may be powerless to .top the misleading publications of which they complain, 1 the quick wit of the people will rioubt- less detect the spurious claims and be able to apply the proper remedy. ' . . . . 4 - FOR THE FARMERS Useful Information Concern ing Farm Work. k BOOK ON INTENSIVE FARMING The Great Northern Railway Has the Work Under Preparation and is -' , slroua of Obtaining all Information i Possible. A communication has been received from St Paul from F. I. Whitney, gen eral passenger and ticket agent of the Great Northern railway, on the subject of small and diversified farming. The railway officials recognise the fact that there is far more business for a road from a region thickly populated and pro ducing many kinds of crops than from a thinly populated one devoted only to the production of staples. For this rea son they are anxious to see the Pacific Northwest Increase largely in popula tion by the cutting up of the large farms into small tracts and their cultivation in such a manner that each small area shall support a family. . This matter of immigration is an important one and atl'ecu the entire Northwest. The efforts of the railroads to induce the right kind of immigrants to come here, and to lay before them the tacts necessary to ac complish that end, should receive gen eral encouragement and aid. The in formation asked for in the letter should be suDDlied by the intelligent farmers. journalists and hopgrowers who have it at their command. Mr. Whitney's let ter is as lot lows : "We are desirous of securing a series of letters from practical men of your state devoted to the discussion ol inten sive farming. In our various publica tions, which we freely distribute about the bast, we have made the broad claim that ten acres properly cultivated to vegetables or fruits will make a good liv ing lor a latiiuy. I ins we nave done on account of the many instances of suc cess attending the tillage ot small areas, an acre, more or less, which have come to as from nearly everv part of the Pa cific Northwest. There is more waste land from an agricultural standpoint in your States than in the Mississippi Val ley. All the land capable of cultivation in your country should be in small hold ings and made to produce to the limit. Small farming means much. It means better roads, better schools, nearer neighbors and better markets. It means sociability, companionship and touch with the world ; but I need not enlarge upon the importance of increased popu lation and well-managed acres. "Your climate invites oat-door life; it invites people from more rigorous sec tions to, come and prolong their lives and usefulness. Your varied resources Invite capital, industry and develop ment. New men will uncover new ave nues to wealth and happiness. We be lieve in building for the future, in lay ing sure and firm foundations; but while doing it we should share some of its benefits. Let us ourselves partake of the fruits of the tree and garden and enjoy while we live some ol the Deauty and perfume of the flowers. "We therefore respectfully invite con tributions from farmers, fruit raisers and gardeners, showing what can be done on one acre and upwards, and how to do it. so that others may be instruct ed in the art of right living and labor. ten Acres though' gave an eastern writer material sufficient to prepare a very readable and nseful book. We be lieve volumes can be written upon yonr resources and possibilities. We do not want a book from any single person; matter to fill a newspaper column will be plenty from each one, and our hope is we may be favored with enough short articles to make a book. Address F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A., Great Northern Eailway, 6t. Paul, Minn." How to Measure an Aere. It is desirable in fact, indispensable for good work that a farmer should know how many acres are in his field. Otherwise he cannot apportion teed or manure for it, nor can he tell how much time it should take to plow, harrow or cultivate. A good cotton cord, the size of a plow line, should be kept for this purpose. To make one, buy sixty-seven feet of cotton rope an inch round, fasten a ring at each end and make these rings precisely sixty-six feet apart. This is four rods. Tie a piece of red rag in the center. One acre of ground will be a piece 4 of these cords long and 2 me, equal to 10 Dy to rcxis, making iu square rods to an acre. The advantage of the rings is that one person can meas ure alone Dy anving a stake in the ground to hold the rope while he stretehes it out. The rope should be soaked in tar and then dried. This will prevent shrinking. -.. X4kst year a ne.gnrjor oi tne writer nad heavy sod plowed by contract at $2.50 per acre. Three persons stepped it on. One said it was 4 acres, another said it was a little over 5, and the third said it was i acres. The contractor sent over and got this rope, and all five men measured it, and it was found to be just 3)4 acres. He had paid to have the grass cut olf it for three years f 1 per acre, or $5 each season, counting it to be five acres in extent, thus losing $4.60 through ignorance. Uet a measuring rod and when not in use put it away, so that the hands can not get at it or they will be very apt to cut a piece off it to tie up harness, thns making it worthless for measuring pur poses. POULTRY NOTE. , . There is more in the management than in anything else. Everything de pends on the poultryman. Cheap egg foods are mostly ground oyster shells, and the beneats are only imaginary, von t Duy tneio. Feed sulphur sparingly, as it will , cause rheumatism or leg weakness, Never give it in damp weather. Don't hr.k nr." a ettimr hen. Tt W time. Let her get rid of her fat. and she will lay more eggs in tbe end. WW hen, and hens for the market ehoufd f?ot be kept together. They do no require tne same khiu oi ioou. , Clover hay chopped fine and steeped lew inmates in Doiung water makes the best and cheapest green food in winter. For larme hod Ilea rnh a few droris of mixture of ten drops carbolic acid and a teacupful of lard on the heads and necks. 1 Give the bens leaves, cut straw or dry rogatory to a Chinese gentleman's dig dirt, and scatter the grain in it so as to nity. Florence O'DrisoolL M. P., lo unmnA T.nnm m srnrr. ins orinn .. . , m. j "T,"h i. .T-.a th l.vie ZZfchnl' txxn them 1 , 10 kP lo' natcning turn tnem three times a week and keep tbem in a 0001 place, where they will not freese. They will then keep a month. HE CAMS AND WENT. Uoe Guaat Panted Mine Eventful Days a Polio Commissioner of Ban Fraaelsoe. Moans A. Gunst, a well known cltUon of Snn Francisco who baa had a pictur esque and "sporty" career, was appointed police ootimilHslonor of that elty by Gov ernor M.trkhuro lust before he retired from office. The appointment evoked a storm of disapproval from what Is called the "law and order" elomont. They held mass meetings and rent the air with their pro tests aud flnnllj prevailed on Governor Budd to remove Junst. Uunst held th office Just nine .'-".vs. but they were mem orable days (or lilm, as none passed with out some hot ' roast" In a newspaper or at publlo meetings. And why do the truly good people ol San Francisco object to Muse Gunst His record as a gambler aud a backer and abettor of prlisoilghtcrs Is tho answer, lie was born In New York 41 years ago, MOSES A. OL'NST. but spent most of his early life In the south. He moved to San Franolsco In 1873. His futhor was established In the cloak business there at that ttnio and aid ed Mose, the oldest of his sons, In setting up a cigar stand In 1877. The boglnnlng was small, but Gunst was a keen business man, and from a little box of a place In front ot a saloon entrance his store baa grown to Its present proportions of one of the largest Importing bouses In the city. As he waxod In years and prosperity Gunst took to petting prizefighters and talking horse and other forms ot sport. Jaok Dempsoy was one of bis Intimate friends, aud he was soon on good terms with every pugilist of any note. This waa In the days when the California Atblotlo club was In Its glory and a fight could be brought off In San Franolsco In better style and with more certainty than In any city In the Union. Gunst makes one or two trips every year to Havana and the east, and his baggage always Included a bigger stock of fighting news than It did substantial articles oommonly Included In luggage. Liberal with his money, he found no trouble in galulng access to the sporting circles of New York, Chicago and Denver. He was present at the ringside In most of tho big battles In the east and gave the acquaintances he made there such wise lore of the ring that he acquired a name as an oracle (Queensberry rules) abroad before he was recognized at borne. Men with a fancy for backing fighters commenced to Intrust him with commis sions on California club battles, and then he was Intrusted with syndicate money at borne. Frequently he announced himself as having 15,000, $10,000 or $20,000 to bet on a fight or an election. Nothing was ever said about the money belonging to somebody else, and consequently Gunst acquired a national reputation as being the heaviest betting man In the west. One ot the best stories concerning Dim was printed in New York when he arrived there on the eve of a big fight. A crowd of men were assembled in a restaurant dlsousslng the coming event and speculat ing on Its outcome. A well known new York flaneur was dining with an English manager, and both were attracted by the stir that Gunst'a entrance created among the sports. One of tbem called the waiter and asked the cause of the flurry. "Mose Gunst has came," replied the waiter, as if that were all sufficient. The Englishman offended the Qaneur and sailed for home after asking the latter to cable him anything of Interest that might happen while be waa on the water. Arriving at London, he found the flaneur's revenge in the following cablegram, col lect: 'Mose Gunst has went." THE JUDGE'S MENTAL SPREE. Lurid Indian and Detective Hovels as a Means of Mild Dissipation. The sale of 0 cent novels, descrip tive of the improbable adventures of In dian fighters or the superhuman sagac ity and adventure of impossible detect ives, is by no means confined to the small boys of New York. A reporter loitering in a Park row book exchange was surprised to observe one of the most eminent jurists of the day overhauling a pile of this trash. He had laid aside "Broken Plume's Last Shot, ' "Old Cap Collier Among the White Caps, " "The Boy Magician In Madagascar," "The Young Nihilist" and "Frank and the Azteo Treasure. " "What are you going to do with that stuff, judge?" the reporter asked. "Going to read it alL It is my way of going on a spree. When I get actual ly worn out and run down over the study of abstruse legal problems and reach that stage when I carry my professional labor into my dreams, I just knock off for a day or two, lay in a lot of this kind of rubbish, run down to my Long Island home and just lie back and revel in the absurdities of this class of liter ature. It requires no mental effort what ever to peruse them, and the amusement afforded is unbounded. I get dear away from the world of deeds, mortgages, bonds, partitions, trusts and other vexa tions and simply allow my mind to go off on a little spree. No bad effects fol low this mild form of dissipation. In fact, I am really rested by it Try it yourself some time. " New York World. Chinees Pawnbroker. Among the Canton houses there are occasional exceptions to the general one iwnu or iuw uuiuhuuhuui. diuuo ui MM e omit iiae square towers xonr or uve sun-iee mgu, w.vu uu vawiue windows save at a considerable distance above the ground and no outside pro- lections by which thieves might climb lop. These establishments -are called Pawnshops, but they appeared to me m amble . our bank, where we " "'"y ' .. . 1 nuderstand it nJ"J"l among the vuiucw j mpwi fw.iU w. value, when not in use, in these estab lishment. The people also store there during summer their winter clothing, and loans may be obtained against the goods stored. To have dealings with a nawnshop la in no way considered do- neurery. gentleman In Tacoma not long ago . j: tn na T,i. tu. jfi5 gave a dinner to M people, ths d ining room being the Interior of the trunk of a tree on his estate. . . THE "ICAKAOIJA CANAL. Th project of the Nicaragua oenal has been debated In ths 0. 8. Senate very vig orously. Ono thing should bsrsmeuibsred about that oltuiats; it It death to almost very foreigner who goes there, and labor era especially suooumb. It Is sstd that the IWnaU.flroad cost a life lor -vary tie. W hat an Idea of palus and aches is in this sentence. It is mostly due "arelessiifss. Kvery laborer provided with St. Jacobs Oil would be armed against these troubles. Men's muscle, there ara oiampM with. rhenmatio pain and they ache a' I over. That's just the oonditlou whers this s v. reign remedy oau do lis best work. I hs fearful malady is very muob like the break bon fever In certain parts of America. A Woman Diamond Broker, Mrs. T. A. Lynch is the woman Jewel er iu Now York, aud her big corner building on Broadway is a brilliant testi monial to one woman's knowledge of diamonds, for that Is the cornerstone of her sucoess. "Women are proverbially fond of ths sparkling gems," she smilud pleasantly, "and not a few of them put money into them instead of banks and bonus. I not only moke money out of their value, but pleasure out of their beauty, and you may tlnd me in tncir nuusi v u.j hui nt almost any time of every day, except Sunday I do not care for social lifo l,.,f i. tl.a manna nf existollOe tO OtllOT womeu. I have a large family, and ws are hnnnr within ourselves, but if thew . . , i i i.... . is any entertaining aim ' "P " calling list to be done my cuimrei. nave to do it for me. "How did I hapten to go Into the busi ness? Well, my first venture was in single diamond that I bought as a child with my spending money. My father v,.',-.i .i ai.i .,. was a irun ueourauu urn v, Of gewgaws, but when I sold tho gum for twice what it cost me he sanctioned the transaction and encouraged my Inter efforts at others. I goabroad and Mice. In person the gold and silver curios, the carvings sot with loweisanu me antique, as well as the newest patterns in Jewel ry. I am an Irish woman from Dublin Amoricanized, of course and I have reason to believe that the Irish-American combination of business ability, added to a woman's instinct, is as good one as can be found for metropolitan use," New York Telegram. jrmpalnett Inks. Rabelais compiled a curious list of Inks ot a sympathetic nature, which wore largely in vogue in his days. In his book entitled "Pantagruel," he makes his read ers acanaiuted with Pannrgue s exploits in trying to decipher the invisible char- J actors of a letter which a Parisian fo- ' male had written to PantagmeL "He 1 held it np before the fire," says Rabelais, "to see if it was written with spirits of ammonia mixed with water. Then he placed it in water to discover if the writing had not been done with simp of i WkAn this tVAnlii nif. VtrgM-lr tithymal. When this would not work, he held it over a candle, which would have brought out the characters had , they been written with the juice of white onions. By rubbing a part of it with 1 nut oil he tried to find whether it hod , not been written with the sap of a fig . . , . , , , i.i . . tree. And it frogs blood bad been used In f Via t a elf itllr ill A mil If fl-isITi til A II kliv Jl.liwv xa aua - - v ... breast ot a woman suckling her firstborn daughter would have betrayed the se crets of that letter. While at Rabelais' time during the sev enteenth century French people adhered t strongly to the belief that sympathetic ; inks of this character could be and were used, they are now in high feather over the discovery of a luminous ink by one ot their countrymen. This ink makes it possible for letters to be read in the dark One of the French journals recently gave the recipe for this ink. A phosphores cent compound can be obtained by cal cinating carbonate of chalk with sul phur. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. HOWS THIS? . We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that caouot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure! . F. J. CHENEY A CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. We. the undersigned, have known V. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations mail by their firm. Wivt&Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, 0. Wai diko, Kiknah A Masvih, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood snd mucous surface of tbe system. Price, 75o. per bot tle. Hold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. PIAlfOA Haidman Chlckerlng Fischer. Low prices; easy terms. For snle by asy terms. For smi WILKY K. AI.I.KN CO. (the oldest and Largest music store), ill First tit, Portland. Tbt 0 crmx a for breakfast. PURIFY tOUR BLOOD Strengthen and invigorate your nerves and muscles, tone your stomach and digestive organs, and build up your whole system by (he u;e of Hood's Harsaparilla if yon would Hoods Sarsa parilla avoid the grip, pneumonia, diphtheria and tvnhold fever. Cures These diseases trfW, seek for their most ready victims, persons who are weak, tired, debilitated and all run down, owing to Impure and impoverished blood. Hood's Barsaparilla purifies and vitalizes the blood, and wards olf disease. Hood's Pills cure nausea, sick headache. An agreeable Laxative and K ERVB TONICL Bold bDriiKirlsis or sent hrmatL ZactOo, and $1.00 per paokaga. bamplea frae, KO HOfoKaaSS IMPROVE YOUR SIGHT. EYKB fitted by mall. Write for our home sys. lam t A ri ,.. i.a a.u xr it i.- tr vaaa Wl Ult.ll 1IU VQS-VnCit., RCEO Established 1881. A MALCOLM Ortgonlas Bl '), Pofllsnd, Or. .,.. WS..II UhlS WHtHt Mi lL USt IA LS. Coush Srrun. TanusOuud. TJss In time Hold by dniirirlsls. ii is task U""lw jn r IsTtBT l"T"ii sm 'lia,a Ti a,--, lTi a cur it mn i mot r.,nJt 19 -eawi nri t HOl'K I'lUmilKD TO EARTH win rise aa-alu Is the boom of a dyppt' hive bamboosM him ou ol hu belief In the .IhllT.v ol cure, the real mvl.or.nt end mnuhle. Hosteller stomach ".liters. His uu u u he ni-rvou". the dylM''. rheaniallo la .10 mwllol lie. rVrsoi.s udorliiK Iron. Indl; Si wli sain no pnalllv. ..etmanenl aood fra. h !rr, asmeeeied tlmulauls ol em.. ineree, loooltsli used roHlly. The allien M Immeasurably to b l'r,e,,.V! '"Ji1?? ...... it- .iik. Iianlalal iitiullllHil bV till Hon wlih It ol vesetabl ti.gieSiei.ls ' i.innlintu'a. Malaria I I"- vunie.1 and rmiilla by II, suit It InltiM vigor Into Hi weak ami slekly. A wluiewlal laree times a day la In average uos. The I ml Urn with his nhw f peso Wl I semi have naum) awayi B it Haildy, with his plixw ol pipe, IUsim , pieuared tosiay. TKLL YOUIl riUENDa. Hosts of letters have beeu written, some to the proprietors of Almhh's's Fos'iui Putk, some to friends, telling of their Inestimable value. Hers it on from ths Hon. Kdmtind b. Pitta, ths latt President of the New Yoik HI at Senate! "Stats or Nsw Yoas, SbitiCiisihii, A ..many. March II. IMMI. I have used Alumna's Huantis Hi-astsm it. my family lor tl.a past Ave years, and nan triiiiiliillv aav thev are a valuable rem- I wou.u not do wljMoUt tli.mi. I have In several Instances given s me to friends sintering with weak I ami lame liae.ks, and they have Invariably e.ioru.. vita T"" rr . They uamiot be loo highly commended." llaAKuasTii's I'll. i-s will purify ths blood. nas lor I har mat viiu er li i,., .,iKiit. Hn.s.h r--re nghil Notou y.mr tay biro. 1 paid 1 10 aud ooau (or It this rnoru- MttW WAV VAST NO DUST. Go East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla Walla via U. it, A N. to Hpokane and Great Northern Hallway to Montana. Dakotas.Ht 1 i'aul. Mlnneamilis. Chicago. Omaha, Bt, ....: k,. ...d Hoilh. Ho. k.halll (rack: H,,0.(l,ry: new equipment Great North. ern 1'alace Blrepers and Diner; Family ToitHjt Cars; linnet-Library Car. Write W,WSiW' Ht, -ml Minn., for printed matter and In' lormatioi. anon rate, routes, etc. tfseKiuimlliiMor Polish; no dust, no smel THE ONWARD flARCH of Consumption Is topped short by Dr, Fierce' Golden Med ical Discovery. If you haven't waited beyond reason, there' complete re coverv and cure. Although by many Drltcvrq to be incur able, there is the evidence of hundreds of living wilnesaes lo the furl that, in all x"4 its earlier atae-ea. con. '5. snmntlon i a curable liZfZty. disease. Not every . case, but a larrt per. i - cenlatf of cates, and we believe, lui.y vn re cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, I , ' . . .. l.a. I the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious espcetnrnuon (including tubercu lar mutter), great loss of flesh and estreats emnciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such rr reported to us cured by " Golden Med icul Discovery " were genuine rase of that dread and futul disease F Yon need not take our wuiu iu, 11. i ney nave, in nearly every ittHtItnc, ,. , prin.mnc,,! by the beat .n,l e.vA.;..HAsl KUu.anI.- anu saiwiii, tapv iiviitu lliflllJT JUJ"s.sBa, who have no interest whatever In ruia- .iicui, .11,1 w Mr .ci, oiirq strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery." but who have been forced to confrsa that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicine with which they are acquainted. Nasty cod liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried In nearly sll these case and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit little for a short time. Kxtract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophoa ph.teshnd also been faithfully tried in vain. The plintogrnnh of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladiea, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of too pages which will be mailed to you, on re ceipt of address and six cent In stamps. You can then write those cured and learn theiresperience. AddressWoai.D's Dispkn sasy Mkdicai, AasociATlow, Buffalo, N.V. R. HALL'S PULMONARY BALSAM Th Boat I I MK for t'angh, Cold snd tansunsDIIon. Hold b all Druiirl.tn. prli-e, cent. i. K. UATK8 a CO.. Proprietors, 4l7BeosomHt.,B. F. AMERICAN TYPE FOUNOEBS'CO. PALMER a RKY BRANCH Cor. Second and Stark 8ts., Portland, Or. K. P. N. U. No. 684-8. F. N. U. No. 801 'A FAIR FACE MAY Tiiinisiii.igaiii tstab.i8a. CORDITT & MACLEAY CO HnTSM lMPOKTKnH.Bim'I'lNO and COMMIHHIONMKHi'hs iTn , i., , . ' l8B3' coiisliiqineiits . I Wheat, Klowroais, Wool and al SJ""1..""" m,li PProvd dia: Tea, toffee, Kice, Malting a. "f Hns, K'. '."1 '"W '".,m t;""'' iapsn and In- eijwol: l'veiH.ol Kine, Coans an " liiinn ZiTlfV.J,,V,c" h.''' N" Oil, eto. ' from I IV No. 1 rclur.iB,Wheteg lnd..l'li.pll,Milet.d lf"" Whhky:"y CAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLIO MALARIA I Three doses only. Trv It. HOW TO SAVE MONEY. new price list, which will be out i soon7 Ws i olinr tn'alSf V m. Jr.V' nd 7 wl" m" TO oil &r?b MARK U OOMfe 0O urn aont Street, Portland, Or. Ik, ..jy KNOWLEDGE Prlng comfort and Improvement And teiiils to personal enjoyment when rightly ui. The many, who live bet ter limn other and enjoy life mora, with 'ess expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's bfst product to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to With of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced In the remedy, Syrup of Flga. Iu eiovllouce la due to Its presenting In the form moat aceeptaltle and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial profiles of a perfect atlve i effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acta on the Kid neys, Liver and Uowele without weak ening them and It-U perfectly free from every objectionable substance. riyrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in Wo audll bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig By nip Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Byrupof Figs, and being well informed, you will hot accept any substitute it offered. W.L.Douclas ri i cune istmibi-st. ? wllWbriTro a kino. S. CORDOVAN", raiNCN tlNAMlUXa CMS. JWFiMCAtflKAieMOa 3. V POUCCs soLta. 2.l.rPBflW'SChmSHfll LADIES' Over One Million Peaoto wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally astlsfactory iey give tne aeei vein far in sney. eanal ! aeo la etyle and in. r wearlaa aaalltlee are nesnrpaaeed. the erica are enlsoras. etaaipe en aol prom Si te ( j saved ever other Malt. 11 your dealer cannot supply youwecaa. Leave Itoubtft.l Meade atone. Th beat re easy to set, and cost no more. Ask your dealer tor FERRY'S SEEDS Alware the fc. Known very where, r.rrr'i Steed Annual fur I sua tells you r wnnw now. ami wuen i inntik . i Bent r re. ici iu Allures D. M. FURRY CO., rl imrou, mica. CHICKEN RAis.aa pays if ym uh Iht Ttf Missta IsKWtMtsKt HrweMifraV Mak money while othrrfl art waXing If ..... T CBtait'kttiiUiill atauut tt .and Jrfrritm rYrry rliclt nwlrd IV the, pwuliry buMnctt, The "ERIE" mechanically the test wtiecl, rrvtileatatcMlel. We are Pan 8c Coast A rents, ntryrle esta- lo.sialld free .aim rrTALVMA DJCcaaTOt to..Malma,Cal. .i.v.n fiwrna, s.l n stain IH. , t.ua Allgetr. Manhood rMtoratJ , I ka Hla a . m Nig hi ttaitlno Wak memory! Atrophy, bwauil WisttsM4, tlC. Suraljr curctl kf POLLIH AC I rual a aiaiav sad vital fores f plsan and lowsrsi ll glee vlger, power and ,l;t te Ik vital ergsnt et POIUM AORI Th eiMt woa IsrfulsclilcvsmsBl in Medical Hcmsc. Tbt only siknowl- dgsd permsnsnl curs gnaraaissd. Ntw Yoik sddress Ill-lij KuIiod St. III. Sis furls. Bant la plain 111 DrugKi.it. SrSMaane asa. So, orsDDsr. or al BSTTU, WSM aae.eoTenaaeai FRAZER AXLE CREASE HIT IN THI WORLD. ItSWearlUtf (lualitliis am nnilm.uuA setn.tlw nullaatlng two bnxaa ol any nthnr brand, rree rout Animal (Ills. U K'w Tim UKNUIMst. FOR BALK BY OKKUON AND WAKHIMOTON MKIK'HAMTS-n aud Dealer generally. w mri nwr booth HllldLUII d nvaus rOR OHILDRIN TIITMIHO a sals sr all OrwtU saOsataataMI HO DIRT OR SMOKE. four Wit Can Hun It, HenuUt Vat r OoenUM Palmer A Hey, g. y., cel.' and Ponlaad, Or. PROVE A FOUL BAR- r -V an BV M i aV AT "waiMi sr"sjn i n LI lrir.ir:?:,ea I i. C!rOgtt Led X Acts. I I .rt- I 11 Tfl I l I Ry lo carry In IsT .A IX YOU FEEL BAD? DOKS YOUK BACK MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. 1