Highest of all b Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Govt Report
FT)
1 1 rwv t
THE DANGER IN SUGAR
Industry la Which the United
States Should Lead.'
YET THE COOLIE TRADE THEITES
Supported by Imriou Consumers, Is
rant of tha Deafer to Whlclk .
Few people probably tha world over,
particularly in thia aotive, vigorous
life, ai they drop the little aweet exye
tali into their tea and ooffee, ever atop
to oouaider the origin of sugar, ita oen
tnriea of use and improvement, Ita en
ormous factorship in trade channel
ramifying the complete circle of the
, globe, in almost every nation, of every
clime, and the prodigiooa figure
reached in the volume of ita manu
f actare and consumption. A brief
synapsis of the growth of this remark'
able product might not prove uninter
esting to the reader hereof. Formerly
chemists called every aweet anbstanoe
agar. The original habitat of angar
cane haa never been folly established,
bnt so far a known, was first cultivat
ed in the country from China to Ben
gal, and did not reach the West from
India until a later data The art of
boiling sugar waa known in Qangetio
India from whioh it waa carried to
China daring the first half of the sev'
enth century, bat sugar refining was
not known, for the Chinese learned the
use of ashes for this purpose only in
the Mongol period and from European
visitors. Cane sugar was first analytic
ally made practical in 1610 by Fra
brizio Bartoli, who isolated the sugar
of milk and proved ita individuality.
Not, however, until the 18tb century
did Marggraf make the important dis
covery that the juices of beets, carrots.
etc, were identical with one another
and with sugar of cane. It it remark
able how the trade centers of sugar
have during the ages varied. Sugar
refining waa developed by the Arabian
physicians. In the age of disoovery
the Spaniards became the producers of
sugar cultivation, being planted by
them in Maderia in 1420, carried to
San Domingo in 1494, and thence into
. the West Indies and South America in
the 16th century, and from the duties
levied by Charles V, that monarch ob
tained funds to build his palaces at
Madrid and Toledo. In the Middle
Ages, Venice was the great European
center of the sugar trade and toward
the end of the 15th century, it is re
corded of a Venetian citizen being
awarded 100,000 crowns for his inven
tion of loaf sugar.
The earliest reference to sugar in
Great Britain is that of 100,000 pounds
shipped to London in 1819 in exchange
for wool. At this same time the ac
count of the chamberlain of Scotland
show the payment of 1 (hilling Oif j
pence per pound for sugar, or about
41 cent per pound in United State
money..- Throughout Europe it con
tinued to be quite a costly luxury, be
ing used for medicinal purposes only,
until increasing use of tea and ooffee,
ia the 18th century, brought it into
as it ia today the list of staple pro
duct. The first disoovery of oommon
sugar in beet root referred to above,
was in 1747. by Sigmund Marggraf,
but no practical use of his disoovery
was made until his pupil and succes
sor, Fra us Carl Aohaed, in Silesia, in
1801. took up his sugar predecessor's
and to onr own home people of tha
Paoiflo ooast wa desire to apeak mora
direotly, with all the alnoerity words
may impress, Wa have called upon
our lawmakers to protect them from
the notoriously cheap labor across the
Paoiflo, by the passage of the exclusion
aot, yet every day we are aiders and
abettor in sending money to that
filthy, pestilential, disease-spreading
raoa. Just think of this for one nto
ment! Daring the years 1894-1895,
the people of Oregon and Washington
paid to foreign manufacturers and pro
duoers in Hong Kong the enormous
sum of $1,000,000 for Chinese sugar
alone; thia appalling figure, made up
from the quarters, halves . and dollars
of the people, never to return. Just
think of it I Could this amount nave
been retained among ourselves, what a
wonderful factor those 1,000,000 hard
earned dollars would have been during
the many hard, hard months of econo
mising and pinching and starving
through which we have just passed. If
it were necessary that we should buy a
a necessary staple like sugar abroad in
order that we might sell our surplus
of some other produots, we might as
well, perhaps, buy sugar aa anythng
else, but such is not the necessity. We
can sell our produots at the world'a
prioe, which ia our market with
others, and what we do when wa ex
port If in return, however, for our
products we receive back coin in pay
ment we are Just that much better off.
The pernicious trade in Chinese sugars
which haa grown to large proportions
on our Paoiflo coast, ia deplorable to
think of. Americans, free working'
men, supporting the labor of a raoa of
people born in poverty, reared in
squalor and living in pestilence and
disease. Ton have but to walk through
any city of any oonsequenoe, having a
Chinese quarter, made to a certain ex
tent wholesome by the sanitary laws of
a better civilization surrounding them
to realise the beggary, the atench, the
nauseous handling of a moribund pop
ulation whose labor exists upon the
payment of 13 cents for a day'a labor.
We have seen how the Chinese live in
our own midst, thousands of them hud
dled and bunked together in dark, nar
row rooms, void of ventilation, the foul
stench of which makes the strongest
heart grow sick, and draw our own
conclusions, in buying Chinese sugar.
A gentleman who came to America
when the cholera and plague prevailed
in the Orient, said "that every pack
age of merchandise, and even silk,
etc., should be fumigated thoroughly
to eradicate the cholera germs lurking
in that disease-stricken oountry."
These are not idle words, but the
deep sounding words of warning from
one knowing well the dangers to whioh
we are subjected, from an eye-observer
of the natives themselves, and the hor
rors of the ghastly work of death
among that myriad of fast-breeding,
pestilential people. Suoh are the risks
taken by every person buying Chinese-
made goods. Such the chanoes, unneoes
sary chances against the homes of our
working people, and without cause
other than the support of degraded, ill-
paid labor, as described. These facta
are daily becoming better known to
our own people. So much so , that
many stores now display the sign,
"We handle the American Refined
Sugars only,"' and it ia a safe rule to
follow, where no such announcement
is made, to be sure you are not getting
China-made augar is to ask the question
or promptly transfer your custom.
THE END OF A DESPOT "not that kind of a boy."
THE RULE OF THE UNSPEAKABLE
TURK IN EUROPE WILL SOON END.
A Bmw of tha Rise and Deoadenee of
Thia MohamBMdan Dynasty la Karon.
Constantinople No Longer tha Key to
Asia What It May Doeomo,
All the signs indicate that the Turk
ish empire as one of the powers of the
world bus reached its end. Whether it is
to be partitioned among the European
powers or is to be kept in nominal life
under a government to be constituted by
those powers, as one of the latest reports
indicates, the result will be the same.
The great Mohauimedun empire, whioh
at one time threatened all Europe, haa
existed for the p:tst 40 years only by the
toleration of Christendom, and is now
reaching the end, and will be practically
buried by its own corruption and vice.
It is instructive to recall the rise and
fall of this Mohammedan power. Re
cruiting ita strength from the wild aud
fierce tribes of Aaia, it overthrew the
effete and decaying Greek empire and
wiped it out by the taking of Constanti
nople eight centuriea ago. For many
generations after that it was the im
pending threat of Christendom. It
reached its high tide at the siege of Vi
enna in 16SS, nearly a century after the
last of the Saracens had been expelled
from Spain, and when the kingdom left
by Ferdinand aud Isabella waa already
falling into weakness. Since then its
power has been slowly ebbing, until
now it Is on the verge of disintegration
At the same time the process of decay
has afflicted Mohammedanism nearly
everywhere. The two exceptions nidi
cate the extremes of the scale. In the
Sudan the pristine fanaticism and sav
agery which gave it the original vigor
is still extant. In India the spectacle of
more Mohammedan subjects than Tur
key ever had living under the same gov
ernment with Christians and Buddhists
shows the possibility of the reoonoilla
tion with civilized government of that
ancient enemy of Christendom.
Exactly what will become of the coun
tries included within the Turkish em
pire is a pnzzla But it is possible that
the charm which baa for centuries hung
about Constantinople may be dissolved
by actnal experience. From the time of
Constantino to that of Alexander II the
possession of that city where Europe and
Asia touch has seemed to imply the
ownership of the capital of the world.
This may have been sounder under for
mer conditions. But the age of steam and
electricity has made great changes. The
water route to India is through the Sues
canal, and Alexandria is the command
ing point of that line of commnuica
tion. The land routes from Europe to
Asia will pass through Russia more
easily than through Constantinople. Un
der civilized rule Constantinople may
be a great resort, a charming place for
rulers and diplomats to carry on their
negotiations and intrigues, but it is not
likely to become a seat of power to com'
pare with London, Paris, Berlin or St.
Petersburg.
Still the change that is coming will
terminate an epoch in history. If the
European powers can dispose of Turkey
without quarreling among themselves.
the empire whose term connects us with
the decay of Rome will be finally wiped
off the map of the world. Pittsburg
Dispatch.
gaeer Attica of a Candidate Tot Admis
sion to m Colles Fraternity.
A. B. Bullev, a young man from
Helena, walked down State street, Chi
chro, at 8 o'clock the other uight with
his eye tightly bandaged and wearing
on his head au enormous straw hat trim'
wed with old ropes, onions mid two do-
coy ducks. The crowd that followed the
fautastio figure grew so large a police'
man finally stepped tip and said i
"Look here, my man, are yon crasy I'
"No," softly replied Mr. Bailey.
"I'm not that kind of a boy. "
This did not satisfy the policeman
and he was about to take Bailey to tha
station when four young men, who had
been walking on each side of the blind
folded man, rushed up and said Bailey
was simply being Initiated into tlio iiiys
telle of the Delta Sigma Delta frater
nity of the Chicago College of Doutul
Surgery.
The explanation was sufficient, and
the dental stcuhmts and thoir victim
wended on. On every corner a stop wa
made aud Bailey plied with questions,
to all of which he hud to answer, in
the words of a placard on his hat, "No,
I am not that kind of a boy. "
Tho lost seen of Bailey was when he
was sittiug patiently in a dark stulrway
! on Dearborn street His companions had
started to the theater after asking Bailey
if he would like to go.
"Yes that is, no," said tho young
man from Montana. "I am not that
kind of a boy." Chicago Tribune.
TO FIGHT THE CIGARETTE.
Prof color lad la lo I nan cur to a Croaad
Against tha EvIL
Professor John M. Lafliu, the strong
man, he who challenged Sullivan aud
was used as a model by Geroiuo, the
great French painter, ia about to inau
gurate a war on cigarettes. Professor
Lafiin has alwuys been a deadly enemy
of the cigarette, but now he has taken
his coat off and is going to work to fight
the evil in earnest.
Be ia compiling statistics which
would frighten any cigarette smoker
who bad particle of sense remaining,
These include authentic records of cases
all over the Union of boys and young
men who have been brought to an un
timely end by indulging the habit.
They also include facts and figures
which physicians and college profussors
have compiled on the subject, based up
on experience aud experiment. This
matter will go to form a book which
Professor Lafiin is writing.
He also aims to band together the
Sunday schools of the country in one
vast anticigarette league that will strike
a harder blow at the cigarette trust than
any of its competitors. Clergymen aia
to be interested in the new movements.
and there are to be branch clubs in ev
ery state and city of the country. No
better exhibit could be found for the
lecture platform than Professor Lnflln
himself, who ho been called "the per
fect man" physically, and who never
smoked a cigarette in his life. New
York World.
Greenland Delteaelee,
Among the Oreenlander'a principal
dainties is the skin of different kinds
of whales. Tbey call it matak and look
upon it as the acme of deliciousness. It
is taken off with the layer of blabber
next to it and is eaten raw without cere
mony. Mr. Nansen declares that he
mast offer the Eskimos his sincerest
congratulations on the Invention of this
dish:
1 can assure the reader that now as I
write of it my mouth waters at the
very thought of matak, with ita inde
scribably delicsfa lusts at nnta and
' oysters mingled. And then it has this
advantage over oysters, that the skin ia
American cleanly factories, operated
work and established a beet-sugar fao- i by American capital, paying American
tory To show the phenomenal growth ' wages, in good American coin, and
of this product, the consumption of keeping that American money at home,
sutf.ir in Great Britain in 1700 waa 'not sending it abroad to support the
10,000 tons; in 1800, upwards of 160,
000 tons, aud in 1885, it had grown to
over 1,350,000 tons.
In Europe it is an industry of na
tional " importance, especially in Ger-
See that yon are supplied with no aa tough as india rubber to masticate,
other than the American-made artiole, ' ao that the enjoyment can be protracted
made by American workmen, in
to any extent.
Of vegetable food the primitive Green
landers used several sorts. I may men
tion angelica, dandelions, sorrel, crow
berries, bilberries and different kinds
of seaweed.
One of their greatest delicacies is the
contents of a reindeer's stomach. If a
Greenlander kills a reindeer and is un
able to convey much of it home with
Chinese nation.
We have here in our own glorious
state of Oregon and sister state of
Washington as evidenced bv the exnosi-
tion of the Mannfaornmr' and Pro. him, he will, I believe, secure the
many, which nation controls an im- dncers' Association, one of the greatest stomach first of all, and the last thing an
manse output, ine worlds product a
few Tears Biro was about 1.750.000
tons the greatest consumers of which coolie-made sugar, and bavins; onlr he mast reserve for her the stomach of
are the Gotbio and Teutonic stock, the ' American-made (roods, vou are enoour- his prey.
English and their offshoots being the aging and strengthening the hands of ! 11 is 00 doubt bees use they stand in
highest The output in Europe of beet your neighbor farmer, and building up Deed of vegetable food that tbey prize
root a few years ago waa 85,000,000 an industry in which yon will your
tons, and its product in sugar 1,811,- eelf share, and in time proudly realize
000 tons. Crops range from five tons tha greatness of the soil upon which we
of root per acre in Russia, to nine tons live and which God ha blessed with a
in Germany, while in England it has apeoial providence as unsurpassed on
tha face of the globe. ,
risen to twelve tons per acre. It takes
about fourteen tons of root per ton of
sugar generally in Europe, the propor
tion of saccharine matter being 7 per
oent now, to 4 per cent twenty years
ago. . -
Whom Do Americans Steady
Having given the above very brief
synopsis of the history of sugar, let
us now look for a moment at the posi
tion of the United States in this indus
try and the possible dangers constantly
surrounding us, particularly on the
Western coast, from importations from
Chinese-made sugar, and realize thej
oonseauenceof navinirtribntetnfnralim 1
labor, foreign canital and foreiim ahina !
in an article placed upon nearly every
table in the land; from the banquet
table of the rich, to the lowly, humble,
unoovered board, serving as table, in
the lowliest cottage of ita poorest in
habitant, and deduce, if possible our
remedy in the matter. It will be con
ceded, we think, that the American
workmen, as a whole, receive more pay
than corresponding labor in any other
country; are the most prosperous; have
more money to obtain their desires, and
consume more of the necessaries and
luxuries of life, generally speaking,
than those of any other nation, yet it is
a singular fact that in the consumption
of sugar they are behind the English
about 14 per cent, the proportion being '
about 781 yi pound per capita in Great
Britain, to 691 pounds per capita In
tha , United State. For a long terra
tha Working classes have groaned under
depressed times, continued taxation,
and want of employment, and it ia of
this so highly, and also because it is in
reality very choice collection of the
finest moss and grasses which that gour
met, the reindeer, picks out for himself.
It has undergone a sort of stewing in
the process of semidigestion, while the
gastric jaice provides a somewhat sharp
and aromatic sauce.
ffothin to Attrct tho Mob. Many will no doubt make a wrv face
'mere were more millions represented at the thought of this dish, bnt ther
yesterday in the Stillman-Rockefeller ! really need not do so. I have tasted it
wedding in New York than in the Van- and found it not uneatable, though
derbilt and Whitney nuptials combined, somewhat sour, like fermented milk,
yet the young people most concerned As a dish for very special occasions it is
naa lortunatejy neither divorce nor ti- served np with pieces of blabber and
ties to attract the mob, and the ceremony
passed off quietly and with no parade of
police.
It is not mere money, then, that we
sightseers crave.
There n-nst be a side show, a news
paper notoriety worked up, before the
"great heart" of the publio can be
touched, and when it is, then call in po
lice and spread out the bride's lingerie
to the public gaze. Cholly Knicker
bocker in New York Recorder.
A Befaeal With a String to It.
Mr. Whitney has put forth a positive
statement with regard to the Democratic
nomination for the presidency. "I am
not a candidate aud have not been
candidate and must not be considered a
oandidate," says Mr. Whitney. Yet if
the Democratic national convention
should insist upon nominating him there
is nothing in thia declination to prevent
tne nonor being forced upon him, and a
very handsome and popular candidate
ne would make, notwithstanding his
present refusal. New York Sun.
A Complete lie fin! tion.
"A statesman," said the Hon. Thom
as B. Reed, "is a successful politician
who is dead. "Fart Plain Standard.
crow berries. Youth'a Companion.
loft Till Called For.
An elderly doctor, who was aa pep
pery as a cayenne pod, was from time
to time sprung upon by the practical
joker.
On one occasion a well dressed yonng
fellow called and asked the doctor to
prescribe for a breaking out and rash on
bis left arm. The doctor examined the
limb and pronounced it to be a bad case
of psoriasis and eczema.
"I suppose, doctor, yen can cure it?"
said the patient.
"Why, certainly,' replied the doc
tor. "How long will it take to get well?"
"Ob, I should say about two months,"
said the doctor. .
"Quite sure? Is it a bsd case?"
"Positively the worst I've seen."
"Then 1 will leave it with yon and
call for it again when cured." solemn
ly said the patient, slowly unfastening
his arm, which was an artificial one
and painted for the occasion. London
Tit-Bits.
Photographing French Criminals.
The system of photography in use is
peculiar to the service and is the result
of its experiments. It is free from all
conventional operations, for the photo
graph is made simply to be recognized.
The poses chosea are: A perfect profile,
since that gives a sort of anatomical
cat of the face; then a full face view,
since there one has the habitual expres
sion and the pose of the bead. The pic
ture is never retouched, since scars,
moles and spots are suoh infallible
means of identification. Absolute uni
formity is sought in the size, form and
style of the different photographs. In
order that the distance may be invaria
ble the chair and camera are screwed to
the floor, and there is a perfect system
of adjustment. The light is thrown into
the face. The result is hard on the sub
ject. One does not care to display his
judicial photograph, but for the purpose
tbey are admirably, brutally exact. j
McClure's Magazine.
Thirty-Are Tears For a Few Dollar.
An old man in England was sent to
prison for four months for petty steal
ing whose record, the judge who sen
tenced him said, "is one of the most
awful pieces of reading that haa ever
come to my notice." In 1863 be was
sent to jail for three years for stealing
two tame rabbits. He then got seven
years for stealing 5 shillings and a
shawl, then ten years, with seven years'
police supervision, for stealing three
ducks, and finally consecutive sentence
of five years each on three charges of
stealing a coat, a pair or reins and a
shovel, with another seven years police
supervision, in all So years of penal
servitude for six thefts of objects whose
value amounted to a few dollars. New
York Sun.
Xo Bond Ihoo Contemplated.
- Notwithstanding the continued steady
loss of gold, it is still asserted at the
treasury department that there Js no
immediate prospect of a bond issue, and
that such action will not be considered
while the balance remains above the
76,000,000 limit, and not even in case
it should fall to that figure unless con
gress fails to take cognizance of the
situation at least to the extent of nrovid
ing some other method of maintaining
the national credit by the protection of
tne gold balance. Washington Star.
Different Styles of Advertising.
A new advertising wagon introduced
in New York is fitted np with two cyl-
maers wnicn Keep revolving, giving
momentary view of various business an
nouncements. There are people who
would rather spend $10 to catch the eye
or two or tnree thousand people with a
contraction of this kind than invest SO
cents to reach a hundred thousand read
ers in a good newspaper. St. Louis
Globe-Democrat
A LIVING SHADOW
REMARKABLE TRANSFORMATION
OF A NORTH CAROLINA MAN
Btrango, Rut True, Story From tho
Lumber llegluna of a Southern State
Verified by a lleporter of tho
Greenville Reflector.
The following interview ha just
boon given our reporter by Mr. u. A.
Baker, the oversoer at the farm of Colo-
uol Isaao A. Sugg, of Greenville, N.
0. It will Interest anyone who ha
ever bad typhoid fever. Mr. Baker
said iu part;
"I was living in Beaufort county,
and on the Id day of October, 18U8,
I was stricken .down with typhoid
fever. 1 had the best physician to at
tend me and on the loth day of Juuu
ary, lBU-t, I waa allowed to get up. 1
wa eniaoiated, weak and had no appe
tite. I oonld only drag along for
short distauoa and would be compelled
to sit dowu and rest. This ooutlnued
for some time, and I began to give np
hope of ever getting well. I lost my
position in Beaufort oounty, and, hav
ing secured one in Pitt county, olerk
ing in a store, I nudortook it, but was
so weak I oonld not do the work and
had to give it up. The disease settled
in my knees, legs aud feet I waa tak
Ing first one kind of medicine aud then
another, but nothing did me any good,
I was mighty low-spirited. I moved
out to Colonel Sugg's about four or five
months ago and oommeuoed taking
Dr. Williams' Pill I took three a
day for about three months. I began
to regain my appetite in a week'a time,
and then my weakness began to disap
pear, and hope sprung np with a bless'
edness that is beyond all telllug. At
the expiration of the throe mouths I
was entirely cured and could take my
axe and go in the wood and do as good
day's work as any man. I was
troubled with dyspepsia and that haa
disappeared. It is also a splendid tonic
for weak people. I say, Mr. Editor,
God blesa Dr. Williams; may he live
for a long time; I know ha will go np
yonder to reap his reward for he has
done a wonderful lot of good. Tell
everybody that asks you about Dr.
Williams' Pink Pilla fur Pale People
that it they will come to me I can
always satisfy them aa to their merits.
I always carry a box of pills with m
and when ever I feel bad I take one."
We are forcibly struck with tha
earnestness of Mr. Baker and bia state
ments may be relied on.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla contain, in
condensed form, all the elements
necessary to give new life and richueas
to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing ipeoifio
for such disease a locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, Bt Vitus' dance,
sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nerv
ous headache, the after effects of la
grippe, palplitation of the heart, pale
and sallow oomplexion, all forms of
weakness either in male or female, and
11 diseases resulting from vitiated hu
mors in the blood. Pink Pills are sold
by all dealer, or will be sent post paid
on receipt of prioe, (60 cent a box, or
aix boxes for fa. 60) by addressing Dr.
Williams' Medicine Company, Bohe-
neetady, N. Y.
Are von the new woman I" "Yea." "Well.
come In end I will give you some of bit hua
baud'a old clothe."
What's la a Warner
A things go, syndicate should be
spelled sindicate. New York Recorder.
Step vp and Begleter, uentlemen.
The friends of General Alger h.ve
established a precedent which is likely
to increase the candidate liHt to a large
extent. They are putting him forward
as willing to become secretary of war.
Now let everybody who is not a candi
date for the presidential nomination an
nounce his proferment of cabinet port
folio. Pittsburg Chroniole-Telegrapb,
Start at tha Boot,
The new French university declares
ita intention to thoroughly purify par
liament and the press. As the press is
necessarily a reflex of the time to a
great extent, a good way would be to
make a strong start on parliament
GHOSTS AKI FALK AND 8HAOOWT,
Hit tboie who profeaa to hare Interviewed
them. Whether nonke are tallow-faced or not.
mortal! are whoee blood la thin and walerr In
conneqneiice ol Imperfect aMlmllatlon. when
Invalids retort to Hijeteiier'i Hiomar.h Biiura.
auu unv ui uneiDaiiea ionic peraiaienf i j, mer
soon "Dick ud" In treneth. flt-ah ai.ri mint it
noma ne a ilea to prevent malarial, rheu
malic and kldnev complaints, and to remedy
wueiipauuu, ire oveuacne ana ocrrouauesSi
"John, did jou On any eira in the old hetT
net tola mornluc?" "No. air: if aha laid anv.
ahe nlftltiri IhMtn '
DEAFNESS CANNOT Da CURED
Bv local application, aa tliev cannot reanh
the dlaesaod portion of the ear. Then ia
only one way to cure Deafae, and that i
by constitutional remedies. Deafness la
caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the .Eustachian Tabs.
When this tube gets inflamed you bav a
rumbling sound or imperfect bearing, and
when it is entirely elosed Deafness is the
result, and unless the Inflammation can bo
taken out and tula tube restored to It nor
mal condition, bearing will be destroyed
forever; nine eases out of ten are caused
by oatarrh, which Is nothing but ao in
flammed condition of theniucona surfaces.
We will jive Una Hundred Dollars for
any ease of Deafness (caused by oatarrh)
tbat cannot be oured by Hall's Catarrh
Our. Bend for circulars, free.
K. J. CHENEY k CO.. Toledo. O.
Bold by DrUKsriats, 7fio.
FITSj-AII Ste Mopped tree br Oe. Kline's
Great Nerve Restorer. Ho au alter Uie II rat
day'i uae. Marvelous cares. Treatise and faw
..a. uinii im tu VII I ). BMiaa IO Vt.
Ml Arch St.. Philadelphia, ra,
Tbt Oibmsa tor breakfast.
MKW WAT MAST-NO DOS.
Oo Kaat from Portland, Ptndleton. Walla
Walla via O. R. 4 N. to Baokan and Great
Northern Hallway to Montana, Dakota, Ht.
Paul, Minneapolis, Uhloagu, Omaha, Bt.
lunula. Kaat and Houth. kiKik-ballaat trackl
flneaoeneryi new equipment; Oreat North
ern False bleepera and Diner Family
Tourlat Oar: llutlat-Ubrarv Car. Writs
A. B. 0. Dennlston, O. P. A T. A.. Portland,
Oregon, or F. 1. Whitney, O. r. T, A.
St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and hi'
rorniauon aooui rata, routes, iw
Knlryla your flat (reproof? Town Yoa'd
mini ao ti job a anivema mere sit wiuter.
TUB ABSENCE OF IT.
If there Is any truth in tha saying that
happiness is the a been o of all pain, men'
tal and physical, tliej tnjoyment of it can
only bs found In heaven. But so far a th
physical is concerned, it 1 within easy
reach; at least measurably so, aa far a
cure will go. Th a tun of human utleery in
this Un Is mail up of greater or lea d
Rrees of phyalnal Bulletins:. Th minor
aches and naliis wbiota sill lot mankind are
eaav to reach and aa eaallv oured. Ther
are none in in wnoi eategory, winoii, ii
taien in tune, cannot o otireti. iney
must In soute form nllliot th nnrvea. th
bone, th muscle and lolut of th
human body. They are all more or Im
hurtful and wasteful to th system. Ht.
Jaoobs Oil I mad to our theui. to search
out hidden pain spot, and to our prompt
ly in iru remedial aim lasting way.
V ery, very many have not known nappi'
miss for wars till tlicv used It. and very
many are putting oil cur and happiness
imcaus wiey uuirt ue it.
Hhe Jack Inld ma that that hoenllal waa
Dittit entirety at nia expwnae. is mat poaiuir
lie-wen, jaua a uncle cut htm on wim t.uw,
aii.1 tell th reel ol nla muuev to build uie nui
pita.
I am entlrelr .cured nf hemnrrhara of
itings oy riso uur for l'oniumptton.
l.ouiaa MNbakua, iiettisoy, Mo., Jan. S,1M.
Fits
a rSAwiMle IMMm
Fraf. W. X. reek, who
make a specialty of
KpUepay, baa without
doubt treated and cur
ed mureraaee than any
living Pkyalclani hi
usees I aatonlahlng.
We have beard nf caaee
of se year' standing
Cured
tle of hla abnolnte en re, free to any offerer
wno may send their P. O. and Kapreae adureee.
We aitvlae anv one wlahing aenre In adilrea
frat. w. run. r. .. a uiu it.. aw tt
F
i Seeliaas ; r Jffiiiilik
J 1 m tu f y arCTMa I I
ribs, winsiows novTrrvNO
- FOR CMILOalN TflTNIMO
FevaeleerallUveewMa. Vtmtm a Battle.
C- r "' oi rnenmatumt flan h mini
Moot Mood's BareapnriUa ourae rhit!
Carsaparllla
Tha On Tm Blood Pnrlfiar. It sl ibr n
Eood'i Pills ta.1 vjg
From early cl
hood until I
grown my family
pent s fortune
trying to eursms
of this disease. 1 visited riot Springs
and was treated by tha beat medical
men, but waa not benefited. When
all things had f fl f f I aUed I da.
termlned to 11,1 If 1 try 8.S.8.
and In (our I U 11 months waa
entirely cured. Tha terrtbh ectema
waa gone, not sign of It left My
general health built up. and I have
never naa any return oi tne aiaeaae,
I have of tea
recontmenil.
deUJt.and
have never
yet snows failnrei
uaiu. it,
CHILD
to
awT
HOOD
euro.
JHWIK. lrwta,F.
Never latte to core,
wen en wiwr
whea
.Ilea have. Our I
treMlMoabMbdand j
kin diaaeaaa mailed )
free to any add
raUrK co huh, o.
DR. CUKfTS
mraovsD
LIVER
Z X PIIXS
A Mutt-hTS On rill for tM.
A mmfmmmt MwwiU asvob 4m w tmmmmn 9m
ItaY Teaennaa Ski I la fata (Mai atltaA iKa Lust. Asm
fW .vMW mnpm tm yk, tm ttatt,
THE AKRMOTOIt CO. seat halt Ut mWI
wtnlwlil kmineei, heraeat It kaa rMure Uie enel of
wlaafwwaf la ) weal II waae II eae aati eraark
m . ninawe. ami tipping tie ewe eae raiMUte
A a. at rear ear. II eaa aa Suae lumun
rr a - aruel fn im nnnf ituui
a njr I li masae fniBptn en
7. VV liMni, suet, uetvenue iliar.
1 f aOeaiMetlMi wlndmiiM, Ttltln
. en rue Steel Tewer. Max Baal aaei
e. r rraiaM, steal read Italian an t4
n k drlMier. On epplkwlian H will same ene
til et Haa eruriae that M artu litmus anul
January let al la Uie weal anee. It alae taaa
tanka and Ham pa at all ktwM. naod rer etakwue.
I We, aeckire asi Wflejira atreata, taut
flFTPIlTI VFR Iwo"lnTh.niV ! Ruelnwaa
ULILWIIILU stamp lor parUrulere. Uu)
Delecllve Asenar. ltIS o. Broadway. Lo An
lle,Cal.
H . r. K. TJ. Ho. 633-8. F. H. 0. Ha. 700
KleellfejAaAaj
Be Snare
'7ts pure Cocoa y ami not made by
the so-called "Dutch Process."
JFalter Baker Co: s Break
fast Cocoa is absolutely pure no
chemicals
WALTER MAKER A CO., IM., tHexbaawr, Maw.
EVERY FAMILY
BHOULD KNOW THAT
tjllle, Dl.rrt.wn, DtX,,.!
Cbelera, and au Bowl CVmUJinS. Cr""
Paln-Kltlcrll?? "fn.
iv.,.Cr.0.' SS't' t"M '.
P&lft' Kilter ! (h rM ana
IViSeerinWrer,.?:"'""
13 REOOMMBNDKO
mr FhiiHrUint, nr Jflirlonnrfci, hv MlnltUn ke
mr VKrmooK
Pain-Killer lfsL
. nn -i.i..... ". . I'.": "d nw vweals
fam,;, Tan 7SSI & ,
rlce brlnn
Invaluable ;Zi:7;7r:"" "?.w""'
itv man flr..u . . V . " .nl mn
h. -V . , . a WOnw Mils,
H?wr of Imitation.. 1k. ,,. -.aw..
MfUs.V aVAVII"
SURE CURE roR PILES
-
I HI 1 1 MM' I HMMae A II I
Vmir I if ('I aV7 I
1111 SM faVeS U smaaaaBn m.M M m SW
111! sr vapsBSkv SBbSBIBB ennnr nr mm a- a aw -aW"
rt tv if r
111 ' .a- AT - ,-e
III mm mr m m mm
in iirinui f aft i sT m w wfss
HWUli I I R I J w I X
I If I . r - II I I M SJr
il Jl V I
va r u sr n w u s
f lsT my m r -A
Rl S Mil I
Ml f r 111 I S
3 V I I I 1 f S
H a Jr -j a i v y v
il" i in il I s
isevjr
I ill I m I kJmT
S a. I J
Ik-. ..z.
makas
tho nrvei
Btrorur. svnd
brirun baak
the fbellaira) of R
BUkturelv old msvn.
Zt reatorea loat wliror. I!
Ton mar rain tan Mi
poonaa to tea days.
GUARANTEED
T0S1CC0 HIT ClL
Oo bar and try a ho tMav. t
ooata only all. , V ntlV own ilmi Jmrts
Will cruarantaM a mra no u
funded. Booklet, written
and sample tree. Address nearest ofltoa,
THt fiTL mn BFtjarnv nn
CHIOAOO. MONTREAL, CAN. MBV VORK.
CASGARET8
omndy Mthaitto ear eonntlpatton. Ptjruly Tetotable, smontb and
eaar, sold by tUusctots tvarrwbare (uaraatooa to guv. Only tua.
If yon want a aura relief for pains in tha back, aide, cheat, or
iiuiue, use an
Porous
Plaster
Bear in Mind Not on of tha host of counterfeits and Imi
tation is as (rood aa tha genuine,
WEINHARD'8
well-known beer
(Ill KSOS OR BOITLIS)
""ootid to none- THT IT.,
Mo Batter wuer fawn. l'OBTt,AND, OB
I MALARIA!
ymmmmmmlmmMMMmmmWMmVM
DO YOU FEEL BAD 7 DOES VOUK BACK
ache? Dons every step seem a burden T Yon need
MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
"HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS
SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOLIO
ftDlllf yh,t Cored In 10
l8o6 SEED Buelt Lamberson
1UyU aaJsUraULf.,, 20X Third Street
CATAI On Nowrea"y ...PORTLAND, OR.
'r 1 AlaLajVFVJ Send for one... Mmtum tu pap