The U. S. Government Tests
Show the Absolute Superiority of
Royal Baking Powder.
. Data from the latest Offitial U. S. Government Report on Baking
Powders, Department of Agriculture, Bulletin 13, page S99-)
"OCTYAL is placed first of the cream of tartar
1 powders; actual strength, 160.6 cubic inches of
leavening gas per ounce of powder.
Every other powder tested exhibited a much
lower strength than the Royal, the average being
33 percent less.
Every other powder likewise showed the presence
of alum or sulphuric acid.
The claim that this report shows any other powder of superior
strength or purity has been denounced as a falsehood by the
Government officers who made the tests.
RfWAI BAKINO POWDtrt CO..
REMARKABLE SOMNAMBULISM.
4 Girl's Salt Prepared Plight Lad to tfc
Suspicion of a Terrible Crime.
That wa dreadful crime reported
from Toledo 10 days or so ago about an
outrage perpetrated upon a girl by two
tramps. The valley papers hava been
printing various comments and specu
lations about it, and now the Elk City
correspondent of the Corvallia Times
offers as authentic a version of the affair
which is no less wonderful than the first
story, and if true, as it seems to be, es
tablishes one of the most remarkable in
stances of somnambulism or sleep walk
ing ever recorded. The account is as
follows: .....
"Miss Cora Mays, the 18-year-old
daughter of Mrs. Sam Dogan, resides
wit'- her family on the south side of the
Yaquina river, six miles east of Toledo.
Between 1 and 8 o'clock Friday night
during her sleep, and clad only in a
nightrobe, she arose from her bed and
walked out on the back porch. There she
secured an old oilcloth coat, and after
wrapping it around her picked up a
piece of rope and started for the river,
100 yards distant At the boat landing
she entered a boat, rowed herself up the
river about 400 yards and landed on the
opposite bank. After setting the boat
adrift, she climbed a steep bank on the
railroad track, where, with the rope, she
tied her lower limbs together, passed the
rope around her body twice over her
shoulder, and then tied her hands behind
her body. Then she hobbled up the rail
road track for a distance of about three
quarters of a mile and suddenly fell.
She was awakened by the fall, and al
though nearly paralysed by cold and
fright started to retrace her steps.
"Her cries of distress soon alarmed the
occupants of a house near by, who came
to her rescue and f onnd her still tied,
nervous, chilled and in the saddest of
very sad plights. She was taken home
at once, and then her family learned for
the first time that she had been absent
from the house and of course accepted
her condition as the evidence that she
had been the victim of an abduction.
This was the news that first reached the
community, and enraged men scoured
the vicinity for the supposed guilty par
ties. Two tramps were arrested at Sum
mit on suspicion, and after staring de
struction in the face for several hours
were finally released after establishing
an alibi. .
"A good sleep restored the young girl
to her normal condition, and thus what
appeared at first a shocking crime was
only the queer escapade of a somnam
bulist or sleep walker." Portland Orego-
Mldwlater Surf Bathing.
Sea bathing in late January! It is 11
o'clock in the morning, and here are
bathers just out of the surf. The tem
perature of the water was 70 degrees
just right for a salt water plunge and
much warmer than the ocean will aver
age at the New England coast resorts in
summer. The air was only slightly
warmer than the sea. The mercury at
noon registered 76 degrees. There was
a good sea running, and the surf combed
over toward the sands most gracefully
and invitingly. It would break over the
head and shoulders of a grown person
standing up to the waist in the water. The
color of the sea here appears to be paler
than that of the ocean farther north, and
at high noon today, with a cloudless sky
overhead and the rays of the sun glint
ing on the crests of the waves, few have
ever seen a more strikingly beautiful
combination of sea, land and sky. Or
mond (Fla.) Cor. Atlanta Constitution.
California' Fair.
To see all the sideshows at the Cali
fornia Midwinter fair will cost the visitor
just $10.10, inclusive of the general ad
mission. There are 41 sideshows, akin
to that of the Midway, where a gate fee
is charged, and a dozen or so concession
naire features where the visitor may
squander his wealth. But, as was the
esse at Chicago, the visitor will have
much more to see for 50 cents a day than
he can attend to. San Francisco Exam
iner. -
In Black and White.
Rev. Sam Jones once preached to the col
ored Deoole at Dyersburg, Kv. After the
sermon s eood old sister came to htm and
said! "Brother Jones, God bless you! You
ia the Dreacher for me. I understand ev
ery word you say. Yon preaches just like
a nigger. You has a white skin but, thank
God.you has a black heart." Ram's Horn.
WE
-QIVE
AWAV-
Absolutely free of cost, for a
' LiniTED Tine ONLY,
The People's Common Sense Medical Ad
viser, By H. V. Pierce, M. D., Chief Consulting
Physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical
Institute, Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large
pages and y colored and other illuatra-
j tions. in strong paper cover to any one
- sending 21 cents in one-ccui stamp r
- I Mlrir mnA ivutav , Over 6H0.ODA
copies of this complete Family Doctor Book
already sold in cloth binding at regular
price of f 1.50. Address : ( with stamp and
this Coupon) Wosld's Dibpeksarv Med
ical Associatiost. Ha oo Main Street,
108 WALL ST.. NtW-VORK.
SERVED IN TWO WARS
THE GRIP ALMOST WON WHERE
THE BULLET FAILED.
Who Can Look on the Infirmities or a
Veteran Without a Feeling of
Deepest Sympathy T
r -nm to Herald, Woodstock, Vs.
There is an old soldier in Woodstock,
Va. , who served in the war with Meii
ioo and in the war of the rebellion, Mr.
Levi Mclnturff. He passed thorugh
both of these wars without a serious
wound. The hadrships, however, told
seriously on him, for when the grip at
tacked him four years ago it nearly
killed him. Who can look on the in
flnnities of a veteran without a feel'
ing of the deepest sympathy for him?
Hia townsDeoDle saw him confined to
his house so prostrated with great ner
vousness that he could not hold a knife
or fork at the table, scarcely able to
walk too, and as he attempted it, he
often stumbled and fell. They saw
him treated by the best talent to be had
but still he Buffered on for four
years, and gave up finally in despair.
One day, however, he was struck by
the account of a cure which bad been
effected by the use of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. He immediately ordered a
box and commenced takinar them. He
savs he was greatly relieved within
three day's time. The blood found its
way to his fingers and his hands which
had been Daisied assumed natural color,
and he was soon able to use his knife
snd fork at the table. He has recover
ed his strength to such an extent that
he is able to chop wood, shock corn
and do his regular work about his
home. He now says he can not only
walk to Woodstock, but can walk
across the mountains. He is able to
lift up a fifty-two pound weight with
one hand and says he does not Know
what Sr. Williams' Pink Pills have
done for others, bnt knows that they
have done a great work for him.
He was in town last Monday, court
day, and was loud in his praises of the
medicine that had given him so great
relief. He purchased another box and
took it home with him. Mr. Mcln
turff is willing to make affidavit to
these facta.
The proprietors of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills state that they are not a
patent medicine but a prescription used
for many years by an eminent practi
tioner who produced the most wonder
ful results with them, curing all forms
of weakness arising from a watery con
dition of the blood or shattered nerves,
two fruitful causes of almost every ill
to which flesh is heir. The pills are
also a specific for the troubles peculiar
to females, such as suppressions, all
forms of weakness, chronic constipa
tion, bearing down pains, etc., and in
the case of men will give speedy relief
and effect a permanent cure in all cases
arising from mental worry, overwork,
or excesses of whatever nature. They
are entirely harmless and can be given
to weak and sickly children with the
greatest good and without the slightest
danger. Pink Pills are sold by all
dealers, or will be sent poet-paid on re
ceipt of price, (60 cents a box, or six
boxes for 12.60 they are never soia in
bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr.
Williams' Medicine Company, Schen
ectady, N. Y.
SAYINGS OF BISMARCK.
Twenty-four Honrs Would Cover All the
Pleasures of U Is Life.
A Berlin dispatch to the London
Times a notes some interesting sayings
of Prince Bismarck. To some one who
grxke to him as a happy man he replied
that he had seldom been happy, and
that if he could count up the moments
of real happiness he had enjoyed in all
his life they might perhaps amount to
twenty-four hours. Political success nad
not brought him happiness, because he
had not had leisure to enjoy it Politics
with him had been an incessant struggle
and the necessity of holding what he
had eained had always brought in
creased care with each success. In pri
vate life he said he had had moments of
happiness, as in boyhood when he had
shot his first hare, and he had been
happy later with his wife and children
and as a farmer. He thought that to
enjoy happiness one needed a peculiar
temperament, like that of his old mas
ter, who had a mixture of the sanguine
and the nhleematio temperaments. "It
was often difficult to bring him to a de
termination, but once taken, houses
could be built on it" Of him he said
that clearness and tranquility preserved
hia mind and disposition in the most
harmonious equilibrium, and he added:
"He placed truth above everything; and
I also aimed at being truthful in my
diplomatic career, but sometimes affairs
required us both to diverge publicly
somewhat from the truth. How hard
that was for the old Emperor I He in
variably blushed on such occasions, and
I would not look at him, and turned
quickly away. "Harper's Weekly.
There is no business on the farm
against which there is so much unrea
sonable predjudioe as the poultry bust'
neat,
THE RETIRED BURGLAR.
Bis Story of a Night of Tribulation and
Unexpected Keeeplloa.
"One night late," said the retired
burglar, "I went into a house in a vil
lage in western Connecticut, . entering
by a cellar window, as I usually did
when I was late, so as not to disturb
the folks. I looked around the collar
and located the stairs, and started up.
About three-quarters of the way up
thnv made a sham turn to the loft
I had my jimmy in my right hand
and my lamp in my loft, so as to be all
ready, expecting to sot my lamp down
on the top step and gently pry the door
oncu: and I was going along connori-
ably enough, when, just as I was step
ping up at the turn, a rope streiuuou
across caught me under the chin and
tooulodme over down stairs, 'inure
was only the stone wall of the cellar on
one side and no rail on the other, so
there was nothing to grab to, and 1 just
tumbled down the stairs. As I bumped
along, something scattered along down
the steps, over me and under me ana
around me, chasing me all the way
down; and when I finally got to the
cellar bottom, that thing was lying
across my chest It was the coal
shovel, which had evidently been stood
up against the rope, and which 1 had
jarred loose.
"But the worst thing 01 all was mat
my lamp was broke. I lost my jimmy
on the way down, but I hung on to the
lamp; but new the light was out and
the glass was broke and the slide was
jammed around in front, and I could
not turn it I felt around till I found
my jimmy, and then I waited to see if
I had woke any body up I didn't hear
anybody so I started again, and this
time felt my way carefully up the
stairs to the door. I found it unlocked
and had got it open about an inch, I
should think, when I heard a little bit
of a scraping on the other side, and the
next instant the dreadfullest racket that
anybody ever heard the falling of a
dishpan, that must have been hanging
on the other side of the door knob or
the key and at the same time what I
imagine must have been the potato-
masher I don't know, because I didn't
look for it dropped from the top 01
tbe door upon my head.
"This door to the cellar opened from
a little square hall or entry-way that
had, as I learned by feeling, a door to
the left, to the kitchen, and one to the
right, I guessed, into the front ball.
I waited again, but no sound from
the upstairs, so I turned to the right
and opened that door, and stumbled,
the first thing, against a chair close by,
in the hall and almost broke my shins, j
I felt along and found a row of ohairs
standing close together from that door
clean to the front door. I sat down in
one of them and nursed my shin and
waited. Still no sound, and I tried
again, and got along all right this time
and turned off to the left and into the
parlor, without falling over anything,
and I began to feel encouraged. But
in the dining room there was nothing
but plated spoons and forks, which I of
course could tell just as well as though
I'd had an electric light If they had
any silver they had carried it upstairs,
as some people do at night I turned
back into the hall and groped my way
through that row of chairs to the foot
of the stairs. To make sure of the first
step in the dark I stepped high and
stepped into a pan of water on the bot
tom step. That made me mad but I
didn't make any noise, and I stepped
out of it and started on up. At about
the third step my leg struck a string
that was strung across these stairs, and
set a bell ringing that was banging on
it; and kicking that string started
down on me from above, loosened I
suppose by another string tied to the
one I had kicked, a shower of tin pie-
plates; and I bad got my leg tangled up
in some way in the string across the
stairs, and as I struggled to get free the
bell kept on ringing and the pie-plates
rattling, and presently I fell over a
wash-boiler that had been set on the
stairs a step or two up, and brought
that down on me.
"As I was floundering around in this
tinware and strings and bells and
things, I heard children's voices up
stairs, and a minute later I heard steps
in the hall above, and could see in tbe
blackness up there the white of a night
gown at the head of tbe stairs. Then
something came slamming against the
balusters, hitting me as it rattled down.
and finally landing with a great bang
on the floor among the chairs in the
halL The minute he threw it, who
ever it was, he ran, and I began to
think it was about time for me to go
too. I had freed myself from tbe bell
cord by this time, and I got on the
stairs into the hall again, and there
this time, I stepped on a base-ball bat
that was what had come banging down
at me from above that rolled out from
under me and up-set me once more
among those chairs.
"I got up and opened the front door
it wasn't locked and got out on the
piazza. Before I bad got to the top
front step I heard a horn blowing from
an upstairs window on the side of the
house, and an instant later a shot irom
a revolver and a big bell ringing.
There was a late moon jnst rising
and a little lieht just now, and as I
went away I looked and saw three chil
dren all in white, all leaning out of
one window on the second story. On
one side there was a boy of about four
teen, as I should guess by that light,
firine a nistoL He was the boy, no
doubt, that had thrown the base-ball
bat On the other side was his younger
brother with a good pair of lungs blow
ing a fish horn about as long as a bean
pole, and in the middle was their little
sister swinging a big bell witn both
hands; and take 'em all together they
were making a great deal of noise.
" I didn't stop to inquire about it,
but it was just as simple as rolling off
a log. The children's parents had to go
away somewhere over night sickness
or something and had left the child
ren alone. The young folks had forgot
to lock their doors; but there Wasn't
really any necessity for locking 'em
with snch a burglar system as that"
N. Y. Sun.
Tbe death of the oldest cat in Con
necticut at the age of 24 years and 7
months is recorded at Hartford. The
cat was named Dick, and was a hand
some fellow, Maltese and white, bright
and intelligent above the average of
bis race, and had plenty of admirers
outside of bis home associates.
BUSY WOMAN'S GARDEN.
A List or Son of ths Beautiful flowers
It Should Contain. ,
The busy woman wants for her sum
mer garden such flowers as will give
the largest amount of blown throughout
the svasou with the least possible amount
of care.
One of the best annuals is the phlox.
It is of the very easiest culture. It bo
gins to bloom early in the season. If
prevented from developing sawl it
blooms all summer. It comes ill a
great variety of colors aud shades, from
pure white to deep crimson. The two
tinost varieties are the white and the
bright rose, Grow those oolors in a
bed by themselves, and you will be
more pleased with the result than you
will if you have half a doseu other
oolors in it
The petunia is another easily grown
plant It blooms With wondurful free
dom, and keeps at it until frost comes.
If you go over the bod once a month
and out off the ends of the old branches,
the supply of flowers will be greatly in
creased, as new branches will be stmt
out, on which a great many flowers
will be produced. The oolors range
through all shadoa of roso and violet to
pure white. Many varieties are blotched
and marked in peculiar aud striking
ways. Some of the nower sorts are
beautifully fringed aud very large.
The calliopsis is a charming flower.
It gives a great profusion of most showy,
brilliant blossoms, some of a rich gold
en yellow with a maroon blotch at the
base of each petal, others all maroon.
It is excellent for outtiug, because of
its long stoma.
Every garden should have a bed of
nasturtiums. If you want many flowers
from this plant, do not give it a very
rich soil. If you do, there will be a
luxuriant growth of branches aud foli
age, but few blossoms. The dwarf
varieties are best This is an excellent
plant to cut from. Its colors range
from palest yellow to dark crimson and
maroon.
Balsams are beautiful plants. Their
flowers are like miniature roses in form,
and thev are produced in great numbers
all along the branches. The foliage is
also profuse, and a great deal of it must
be out away in order to give the flowers
chance to display their beauty.
Of course sweet-peas should be in
cluded in this list So should the old
morning-glory, which I consider our
best flowering vine for general cultiva
tion. Itisol rapid growth, of the
easiest culture, and what oau be more
beautiful than a great mass of It covered
with its pink, white and crimson, and
blue "glories"? It is a plant whose
popular name is a most appropriate one,
Harpers' Bazar.
PAIN AND PLEASURE.
Psychologists Say They Cannot Be Re
membered, If an ordinary person who has at
some time in his career experienced the
miseries of toothache were asked if he
remembers the pain in question, there
is very little doubt as to what his re
spouse would be. Unquestionably he
would say he remembered it But this
incautious admission might lead at
once to controversial difficulties, for it
appears that psychologists are in doubt
as to whether any one can under any
circumstances remember a toothache
or any other pain.
It seems desirable to follow this
statement at onoe with the assurance
that it is not a joke. Psychologists, as
a rule, are not hnmorists, and they
have no thought of being funny when
they assert that pains and other sensa
tions cannot be remembered. X hose 01
them who hold this view are strictly in
earnest, and mean exactly what tbe
words imply in their soberest sense.
They are perfectly aware that we com
monly speak of remembering pains, and
suppose that we do remember them.
But they contend that in such a case we
remember not tho pain ltseu, but the
ideas that were associated with the
pain. We remember, for example, that
we are unable to work because we had
a toothache; that we applied remedies
to it unsuccessfully; that finally we
went to a dentist and had the tooth ex
tracted, and at once gained relief. All
this we remember very vividly, as every
one admits. But, it is said, we do not
retain in our minds the slightest trace
of the Dain itself as a memory, or of
the sensation of relief that came when
the pain ceased.
To the person not accustomed to
looking sharply into the darker comers
of his own mind this will no doubt
seem a very unnecessary splitting of
hairs. But the psychologists do not so
regard it They are discussing the
matter pro and con with a good deal of
vigor, this, being indeed, one of the
controversies that go to make np the
current history of that world apart in
which the philosophers live.
Another mote point of perennial in.
terest to the philosophers is the ques
tion as to what pain and pleasure real
ly are, psychologically speaking. There
is ormortunity for whole dictionaries
full of controversy on that question.
Bicycling TJp a Bill.
In the first place, for general riding
it is safe to say that one should never
try to keep the same speed in going np
a hill that he has been setting himself
on a level road. Yet this is the nat
ural tendency of all riders. The bicy
cle should be allowed to slow down,
and the pressure on each pedal should
be made the moment that it tarns be
yond the highest point of its arc. The
push should be strong for the moment
and should then be withdrawn before
the Dedal has turned so far down that
the pressure on it is partially wasted.
In other words, the principle is the
same as in rowing, where the stroke
shonld be made most powerful at the
moment when the oar is at right angles
with the body, and therefore in the
positon where tho oarsman's strength
counts for the most. If the bicycle is
allowed to run slowly, and this pressure
is alternately made on one pedal and
then on the other, you will find it moves
along slowly, to be sure, but steadily,
and that you are at the top of tho hill
before yon realize it, and withont hav
ing even quickened your pulse to any
great extent A very steop mil may,
of course, be made somewhat easier by
taking it diagonally across from one
side to the other if the road is wide and
smooth enough that is, by asigzaging
up the bilL From Harper's Young
People,
MORE HASTE, LBS Sl'ERO.
There 1 a natural aud vary strong desire
In ths spring and early summsr to get rid
of underwear and overwea', so that ths
fresh air may thoroughly refresh. But the
worst eolds of the whole year are taken,
and especially at open windows, where the
drafts are strongest and a ohlll the surest.
It Is there where IuiiiImiko sets in. It is
just the condition and olrmimstanoa to
make such an attack sure. It is just the
time also when Ht. Jsoobs Oil should be
handy for immediate use. It Is a time,
too, when it makes its surest cures, For
lumbago it Is a certain remetiy.
A NERVY WOMAN DANCER.
he Dose Her Act Inside a Cage Contain
ing Restless Lion.
While Now York Is enjoying exhibi
tions of the prowess of HerrSandow, the
crowning point of which is the holding
of a parlor grand piano on his chest, with
four men fiddling on the top of the piano,
Paris is enjoying the performance of a
"serpentine dancer," Mile, Sandowa, who
does her duueing inside a cage contain
ing ferocious looking lions. The lions
are made to do some performing on their
own account, when, to quote from the
foreign contemporary, suddenly all the
lights are put out except the limelight
from the wings, thrown directly on ths
cage, and Mile. Sandowa appears in her
voluminous draperies, which she handles
most adroitly and gracefully,
Tho lions seemed very ill at ease, how
ever, during the constant changing of
light, and once the lioness made sav
age spring at the intrepid danseuse, who,
for the moment, was pushed np against
the bars. The dance was stopped until
the savuge animal was induced to go
back to her place and then immediately
resumed with the utmost sang froid,
This at the end of the nineteenth cen
tury! '
People speak with horror of the gladi
atorial contests in Roman arenas, and
yet it is to be doubted if they were any
more brutal than this. The ancient Ro
mans at least selected mun to face such
dangers. If one scratches deep enough,
it is to be feared that he will find as
much of the barbarian under the dress
coat aa under the toga.-
A TKKKIHLK VISITANT.
Pain Is alwars a terrible visitant, and often
domiciles itself wilh ons tor life. This indie-
lion Is prevenllblr. In nuns ol rn. nmatt.m, by a
timely rosorl lo Hosteller's Stomach Bluer,
which checks Ihe siirmaehmenla ol ibis obsil
nate ami dangerous mslariy si tbe ail-tL Tbe
term "usnxerou ' Is med sdvlsedly, lor rhea-
sialism Is always liable lo suae ine vital or.
tans mihI tHrmlnate life. No testlmouv I more
conclusive and concurrent than Ibat of physt.
olHii wuo leslliy 10 me excellent caers or ina
Hlller, In Uil disease. Persons Incur a wettln
In rainy or snowy wmlber. and whoaretxposeo
10 uruii"ii snotim as tne miier a. a pre
ventive uf ill vtferu. Mslaria. dyaixnata, liver
and Sidney trouble, nerroasnew ami 'ability
are al o amour the allineut lo whloft this pop
ular medicine is adapted. Kor Ihe liinrmute,
soreness and tltrut-a of ths aged It Is highly
beneSclal.
"Jennie has married a man who slave noser.
Inu't It dry 1 Oil ' said a Harlem woman to her
husband, "it isn't hall as bad a a man who
thinks be can play poker, but ean'l," was the
BEWARE OK OMTMENTS FOR CA
TAKHU THAT CONTAIN MERCURY,
as mercury will surely destroy the sens of
smell and completely derange the whole
iyslem when entering It through the nui
cous sut faces. Such articles should never
be used except on prescriptions from repu
table Physicians, as the dainaira thev will
do is ten told to the good yon can possibly
derive Irom them. Hall s Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., To
ledo, O., containa no mercury, and ia taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. In
buying lisU's Catarrh Cure be sure you get
the genuine. It is taken Internally, and
made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A
Co. Testimonials free.
f-Sold by all Diugglsts, price 75c per
buttit-.
T li.u. F. .n twl Ptai'a Pur fn Pjinuitnn1
tion an unfailing medicine. F. K. Lots
1305 bcott Ht Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, WH,
MUSIC STORK-Wlley B. Allen Co., the
olilest, the largest, 211 first St., Purilaud.
Chli'St-rlmr, llarilman, Fischer Pianos, Kter
Organs. Low prices, er term.
10-CKNT MCHIC-Wead lor catalogues.
utiaru yoursrir tor wirmur mniaie, urea
feilU(-,by nslng now Oregon Blood Purifier.
Tst Osrmsa for breakfast.
Cough 1 Cough I I It's the
hacking cough that often ends
in the. most serious trouble.
Emlfiler
stops the cough at once by
removing the cause and thus
prevents the trouble. Put two
teaspoonfuls of this good old
remedy in a small cup of
molasses, take teaspoonml
often, and your cough will
quickly cease. Sold every
where. You now get double
the quantity of Pain-Killer for
the same old price.
Perry Davit tc Son, Providence, R.L I
k ASK YOUR DRUQGIST FOR
IMPERIAL
THE BEST
FOR
INVALIDS
JOHN CARLE SONS, New York.
A SURE CURE FOR PILES
Itching P.Ias known hf mokt'ir likst vnnirtlon omm
itiWniM) tt4ib.Dc when warm. Ttiia form and lUlud, B1m4
uif or Protrudinc PUw yirld at one Co
PRi BO-KAH-KO'U P11.K REMEDY,
which et diiwntlr on ptvtU fftrt4, bvrtMtamoTrI si
Ujm Itchtn, arffooUojr a MnnwrMMit nr. Prut ,
IVrafiiifU or Buui. r. fkAltUt., fa.
CH
0AG
SPRING
MAKES
To many people Spring and Its duties
mean an aching head, tired limbs, anil
throbbing nerves. Just as the milder
weather comes, the strength begins to
wan and "that tired feeling" to the
complaint of all.
The reason (or this condition to (ound
In the deficient quality ol the blood,
During the winter, owing to various
causes, the blood becomes loaded with
Impurities and loses its richness and
vitality. Consequently, as toon as the
bracing effect ol cold air is lost, there Is
languor and lack ol energy. The cure
will be tound In purifying and enriching
the blood.
Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the greatest
and best spring medicine because It to
the greatest and best blood purifier.
It overcomes that tired feeling because
Hood's Sa rsa parilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently in tho PuUie Kye Today.
SEEDS
I have bongbt Irom the RECEIVER, ol F. L. POttON &
SON, the slook, fixtures and good will ol the rwsd business
lately carried on by them and will continue the same at 205
Third Street. . BUI-XL LAMBKUSON, J'obtlakd, Ok.
SHEEP-DIP
t.tab. 1800. COROITT &
IMPORTERS, HiHFPINO snd COMMISSION KKKCrlAKTH. liberal sdvsna mane on spprovM
oouslinment ol Wheat, Hour. Oat. Wool and Hope. Special Impnrl Irom China, Japan and In
dia: Ta,('olfe. Klce, Ratling ami Huts, Npirea. itago.'laploca. Chins Nat Oihele. rmmllr.
pool XlTerpool rine.Coeraeand Lemp HurkWll, Cnemlcals ol all Slnd. Tlnplale, eelMtad
T. r7 !.. .. rViT-V. u... u..- u...i.n hh Hrisian. Ha Ala. umnn Porter. kn.uta ana
Irish tVhukrrBrandr snj Win., lor si In quantllles to suit Ihe trade. PORTLAND, UK.
WEINHARD'S
1
F.1ALAR1A I
Threo draw only. Try It.
'HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS
SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOLI
Ely's Cream Balm
QriCKLY t'l'HKS
COLDmHEAD
c
I'rlM. ftO Onls,
Apphr Hslra IMo Moh atiMrll
Bill aao.,tWsmaSk,M.V
Artificial Eyes
Elastic Stockings
Trissts . . .
Crotches . . .
Writs tor Priest...
I00DHRD, CURlltCO.
Dauasim
M.PsrllssS, Orfs
It isWS""" TAKE
cars
pruNDER's
Obeqpn Blood Purifier.
cuRra - .
kKIDNCY SV LIVCR DISCAStS. 0YSHCP8IA. V
V PIHPU9.BL0T0HCSAN0SKM ORMSCS. jT
Amerlea's Finest toeul flisrs.
CO CO
CIGAR
Klve Inches In slses 4 Havana
fllled. II vour uraier dors nl
krp Ihsm, srud SIS. SB ana rs
win man you a noi niou rigar.
I. r. Msl Kit I M, Ml lart H fsrSial Jr
eB0GEt1lS-AND-PROVISIONS
Wilts for Speelsl Ceth Priee-LItU
EVEROINO FARRELL. P0STLAN0.0R.
DR. GUNN'S
mraovu
UVER PILLS
A MILD PHYSIC.
WNR Fll.Ii TOR A PAflR.
A lamrnMtt of tb bowoit.
tnaJth. TlrssMi piU apply whjU th rMsrin Isvettt lo
nstlisj it fMulw. Tbsry eum HMd.hL brttiUm Mm
iimm, and cWtvr ih CompJion btiw ihtvn tiaMigtjoav
lira assj H
bnaJtl
will nuaii aamiiU frtm.m ruli hn for VsVa, IviM rnpnf
My mm naff etim nor wtewn. is wanjttm
mrinm tuar atonfa. To sMHttiru rna. i
uuuflsvu 4UUA vuN ruutuMipaisv m
NEW
Portlsnd, Wslla Walls,
Spokane, via U. E, A N.
Hallway fand Ureal
Northern Railway to
WAY
Montana points, Ht.
Paul, Minneapolis,
Omana, St Uula. Chi
cago and Kast. Address
FART
nearest agent. V. V.
Donavan, Qen. Aft.
Portland, Or.; K.O. SI
Bwaagar sahs vens, (ten. Ast. Jleattl
Wsata.: C.a.Olxon.flen. Act..BDokne.Wssh. Ne
dust; rock-ballast track; flne scenery; palaos
Sleeping iin uiniug car; uiinvi-UDrary i
family loarlst sleepers; new equipment. .
AAT Th" mon'f roa bare paid for rent Is
0X1 Forever VSn'rsrJS ffi
WW I prove, build or puruhsse th bouse,
lot or both, anywhere you may reside or se
lect It. It Is deeded lo von. You oceunv It
and pay monthly renttousnntll the s mount
iin is diiu. in ease yua ui mi iicu, is iibiu.
Men oi push can represent ns everywhere.
AiwUtlton Hltlff., tfm Miiaon St., room 7, Uttn
rranrttrn, ,m. ntsrnp ror prospectus, eio.
Inducements lor monlhljrliivest
menu are equally proOUb .
FRAZER axle
BEST IN THE WOULD. VEVsn Wi
lts wesrlngaualltle are unsurpassed. sotualli
outlasting two boxes of sny other brand. Pre
irom animal una. hit i n k usnuisi,
FOB BALK UY OBICUON AND
frWASHIN4T! MEKGHAKTaV
ana neaiers generally.
tr. T. K. U. No. 697-8. F. N. TJ. No. 674
1 AfrVI
rO OHILOMIM TfatYHIMO
fssMlssyaliaisssilili SSOaat atotsss,
f IJI B.si i sat a i l
a J Best Cvush SyrupVTaM Ooud. OssI 1
m TIRED
it makes Dure, rich Wood, It ilrei
strength to nerval and muscles because
it endows the blood with new powers of
nourishment. It creates an appetite,
tnnns and strenathens the stomach and
digestive organs, and thus builds op the
whole system and prepares 11 to meet
the change to warmerweatlier,
Hood's Barsaparllla Is a medicine
upon which you may depend. It to the
only true blood purl Her prominently
before the public eye today. It has
record ol cures unequalled In the his
tory ol medicine. It to the medicine ol
which so many people wrlte '.'Hood's
Barsaparllla does all that It Is claimed
to do." You can take Hood's Barsa
parllla with the confident expectation
that it will give you pure blood and
renewed health. Take It now.
UnU'SKGX-P0tS8XQtJS. SAFEST 1N0 BEST
Ml with sold wster, Improves the wool.
JiMES UIBLII 4 CO., Pitti., Or, ft- ASZ'gSsn SXS2XL
f.lACLEAY CO. iss.
1
WELL-KNOWN BEER
(IN KKUB OH BOITLfcl)
none TT it..
hers Iroet. rouTi, n. ok.
IX) YOU p-EfcX BAD? DOEtt YOUK BACK
achaT Does) avary step swam a harden Yon newd
MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
The) Aarmotoe Ml Fsad C utter Worth
6 yi a
1 FOR
W mm furmfk U fm mmr, mm to mm p
mm mm laMr tW Jp I, JMtf, ar $M(m mtrnY mm sW.
frmmM mf mm MsBa&sNaerv SNaaf mmmwm4mmrm 0 toe! sssselWs3
hummn pwmmaMm my mm tW rasaisissstas sMa mjhmmlml mmf
tm tkmr lmmittm mrna mm4 mmi mr MM ) sWy s
f JWasf sa mat mm mm mm. Afmr nlm J, mmi tm
mm sW mpmr mm) m mmmrnmlh to mmdmr mmd mmmmmmmmmM
UttrmUm mmTmVmmm' tmt srtlsW?Mmf4 X Ik
CfciMM. If satpMsl frM slaS)s, IssMtM
MAUlalMwIUMItW.
nnsiSstoslrwMsaS
mm win, w p., Mt a, I
ssil lr .i nsoa. n mu Si J mm ac ta. !
wbs . ASRsSOTON 00. Chloegw.
RAMBLER
BICYCLES...
Ladles' and OsnU
AU Sizes... AH Welch ta
940, oo, see, ao, 0100
Sccond bsud Wheels for sals snd siohsngs
Send lor astalofas, FHKI. Live sgt's wanted
FREO T. MERRILL CYCLE CO.
1ST Washington Bt , PORTLAND, OK.
cmcrcEn misisQ pays
If you use ths Pttala
lacaaaSSf S Brar.
iar. l
whilst!
IMl.. W
Make saoacv
others are wasting
lira bv old ejrocMst.
Catalog tells all about
tt.and describe every
snicia nrvara tor ll
poultry business.
The "ERIE"
mechanically Ihe heat
wheel, prettiest modal.
Iw srs Psclfle Coast
Agent. Bicycle csis
logn,malledfra,glv SlU.d!Pt,Jele.,oTS wrrD,
PITALUMA nrcVBATOl 6o.,Ptalsms,Cl.
Bsasica Mopsa, sji Main St., to Angls.
V s
V aM" rf srlf
.....31
MSr1, Mi
aooalo, sr. V.