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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1895)
U. S. Govt Baking Powder Tests. THE report of the analyses of Baking Powders, made by the U. S. Government (Chemical Division, Ag'l Dep't), shows the Royal superior to all other powders, and gives its leavening strength and the strength of each of the other cream of tartar powders tested as follows: ROYAL, Absolutely Pure, All OTHER POWDERS TESTED are reported to lain coin ume ana suipnunc acid, and the best of them to be of the following strengths respectively, These tests, made in the Gov't Laboratory, by impartial and unprejudiced official chemists, furnish the highest evidence that the "Royal" is the best baking powder. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., Eleotrie Freak In a Church. Recently there was an eclipse of the electrio light at Elm Road Baptist chapel, Southsea,and, curiously enough, the pastor had chosen for Ma texts, Proverbs lxxiv. 20, "The candle of the , wicked shall be put out, " and Psalm 'xvii, 28, "For thou wilt light my can dle; the Lord my God will enlighten my darkness," a combination rather cruel to the electrio light, for when the lights went out some of the congrega tion went out also and obtained can dles and lamps, whereupon service pro ceeded. The pastor could not conven iently change his texts in consequence of what had happened, and he may have been prepared for the general titter wtiinti frtllrrarofl thai ftnnnnnrvmimit Lately a somewhat similar oase occurred in an American church, and the amuse ment was heightened by the action of a deacon who absentmindedly lighted a match and applied it to one of the elec trio lights. London Lightning. African Grosbeeks. The social grosbeoks of South Afrioa live in large societies. They seleot a tree of considerable size, and literally cover It with grass roof, under which their common dwelling is constructed. The roof serves the double purpose of keep ing off the heat and the rain, and 400 or S00 pairs of birds are known to have the aame shelter. The nests in this aerial dwelling are built in regular streets Sad closely resemble rows of tenement ouses. He Wanted tbe Content. Dr. Holmes' library is valued at only $804. This has been thought a rather mall library for a literary man who had a lifelong fondness for books. But Dr. Holmes was not a binding worship er, and nearly all of the best works in the world, in cheap, substantial bind ings, can be bought for $804. The very best books of the world are quite limit- Elihu Burritt, "the learned blaok smith," knew 18 languages. He was self taught, generally needing only a dictionary and a grammar to master any langnagS he chose to learn. FOR CURES SCROFULA. BLOOD POISON. THE CURES CANCER, ECZEMA, TETTER. BLOOD HIGHEST AWARD The BEST PREPARED SOLD EVERYWHERE. if JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. if AMERICAN TYPE FOUNDERS' GO. PALMER & REY BRANCH Cor. Second and Stark 8ts.. Portland. Or. A SURE CURE FORPJLES DR. -BO-SAN KO'S PILE REMEDY, puts affected, absorb tamorsVal. t a nermanent enra. Price So& wMf.1l mjm Alt T m 17 iteming-, effeetiDs permnent enra. fnce o kj. Brotziau or mail. JJr. Bamako, xlitld.f aw PFUNlDER'S. ta$N Bij3qd Purifier. -CURES- KIDNEY Sr UVER DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA. V WUPt FB Rl nTnwrc lunevM rucraerc JjCADACH& jasiivcNEsaiyi" WORLD'S PAIR. i LEAVENINQ OAS. Per cent. Cubic in. per oa. 13.06 12.58 11 i 160.6 con - I : 9-53 9.29 8.03 7.28 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. A LEGAL GIANT'S STATUE. Chancellor James Kent to Bo Immortal lzed In Bronze at Washington. When he wrote his commentaries on American law, James Kent reared a last ing monument to his memory, but a grateful country Is to further honor him by placing his statue in the new Congressional li brary in Washing ton. George J. Blssell, the sculp tor, is hard at work on the statue In Foughkeepsie. Chancellor Kent's old home, and when completed the bronze like ness of one of America's greats est lawyers will be placed on the bal ustrade of the gal lery in the reading room of the (Jon- irressional library. chan cellos Kent s James Kent was STATUS. born at Freder icks, Putnam county, N. Y., July 81, 1763. His grandfather, Elisha Kent, and his father, Moses Kent, were both gradu ates of Yale, and James followed in their footsteps and was graduated in 1781. fie was one of the founders of the Phi Beta Kappa society and was a student at Yale ween toe British broke up the college and ' dispersed the students in 1779. I He studied law with Egbert Benson In Poughkeepsie and was admitted to the bar i In 1785. He rose early each morning and devoted several hours to the study of the classics and modern languages and prac ticed law during the day. His evenings were also devoted to study. In 1790 he be- gan a three terms' service in the New York assembly and In 1783 ran for con' gross, but was beaten by his brother-in- law. He was an ardent Federalist and be came the friend of Hamilton and Jay, who Had a high opinion oi his abilities. His growing reputation for legal erudi tion won for him the professorship of law at Columbia college, which he held until 1798, when Governor Jay appointed him a justice of the New York state supreme court. From 1801 until 1814 he was chief justice of this court and made an exhaust ive study of the civil law. He defined the limitations of the English common law in its application to the United States and was untiring in his efforts to determine unsettled principles. In 1814 he was ap pointed chancellor of New York state, and during his nine yean of service laid the foundations of equity jurisprudence in the United States. At the age of 60 he was retired, al though still in the full possession of his physical and mental faculties, and his name was prominently mentioned for the United States supreme bench, but Presi dent Monroe made another selection. Mr. Kent then returned to Columbia college. In 1826-80 his "Commentaries," covering the entire field of American and interna tional jurisprudence, were published and are still the standard textbooks every law student reads. Chancellor Kent died in New York oity In 1847 at the ripe old age of 84. Afraid of Xnxortoa, "Last winter," said Mr. EL H. Cole man of Chioago, "I had the pleasure of attending a swell dinner given by one of our millionaire townsmen, at whioh Gene Field was an invited guest "Field's brilliancy as a writer is in inverse ratio to his ability as a money getter. In fact, the element of thrift is sadly wanting in his makeup. "There were many good things to tempt the palate, among them straw berries, which are a costly luxury in the dead of winter at Chicago. "When Field's bowl of berries were placed beside him, he looked at them with the scrutinizing air of an epicure, and then, in a very emphatic way, pushed them to one side, noticing whioh his host said: " 'Aren't you fond of strawberries, Mr. Field?' " 'Yes, very much indeed, but they spoil my appetite for prunes. ' " Wash ington Post. His Girls. Mr. Wilcox, the husband of the poet ess of passion, is a common sense busi ness man, with one big piece of senti ment in his disposition that is his love for his wife. On cue occasion, when he Was traveling, he placed six or seven photographs of his wife on the mantel of his room in the hotel. The pert cham bermaid, whisking them off with her feather duster, electrified the loving spouse by exolaiming: "My! What a lot of girls you've got!" Chioago Herald. A. Long Life. Sir Benjamin Richardson, M. D., of England, thinks that the normal period of human life is about 110 years, and that seven out of ten average people could live that long if they lived in tbe right way. They , should cultivate a spirit of serene cheerfulness under all circumstances and should learn to like physical exercise in a soientifio way. No man, he says, need be particularly ab stemious in regard to any article of food, for the secret of long life does not lie there. A happy disposition, plenty of sleep, a temperate gratification of all tbe natural appetites, and the right kind of physical exercises, will insure lon gevity to most people. New York Tribune. - - THE FUTURE OF JAPAN. Concern Is Manifested as to tbe I7se Ja pan Will Make of Her Vlotory. Now that the treaty of peaoe between China and Japan has been formally ratified, some concern is manifested in certain quarters as to the use Japan will make of her victory. Will she. encouraged by her military success, be come aggressive and a disturber of the peace, seeking other Asiatic conquests? The answer to these questions is given by Count Okuma, one of the ablest. most experienced and enlightened statesmen in Japan, in an interview with the special representative of the New York Herald. .This gentleman declares that Japan has no military as pirations. "We seek only material ad vancement and home prosperity, and Japan can never play the bully." He adds that the people of Japan are in full sympathy with the spirit of mod ern progress; that they are concerned in education and the development of industry, and that their supreme desire is to live at peace with all the world. At the same time they will not submit to any aggression on the part of other nations. . Count Okuma expresses a particular solicitude for the enlarge ment of trade relations between his country and the United States, "our nearest amicable neighbors," and he suggests that if our counsels were as ac tive and zealous in promoting business intercourse as the representatives of England, Germany and France, the volume of trade might be greatly in creased. These general statements as to the future policy of Japan are in strict ac cordance with the avowals of the Mi kado and all the influential leaders in affairs. Their sincerity, in view of the moderation before displayed under circumstances peculiarly calculated to inflame the national temper, cannot be questioned. . Japan not only has dis played remarkable prowess in arms, but a prudence in and equanimity- of statesmanship, a self-control in dealing with her prostrate foe, which, it may with truth be said, few if any European governments would have exhibited under like conditions. Leslies weekly. FACIAL EXPRESSION. The Observer Can Learn Much by Per using; Linear Inscriptions. We naturally look at a young face for a prophecy and at an old one for re cord. But the materials from which we attempt to inform ourselves are of a very different character in the two classes. In the one case we see a gen eral arrangement of features, which, ac cording to some utterly inscrutable law, accompanies certain traits of mental and moral character. No satisfactory theory has ever beenput forward to ac count for such facts as that human beings with a certain inherited square ness of jaw are always of a tenacious disposition. . But when we scrutinize an older face we peruse the linear inscriptions upon its surface as we read a book on which we know the author. Not only do such and such confirmations of its lines have a definite meaning, but we can form an opinion as to why and when, if not how, they were written. j The caligraphy, of course, is not uni form in all cases, and there are various complexities about it which may render an exact interpretation a matter of difficulty. Trouble or passion, which in one instance is recorded in bold characters, in another may leave scarce ly a visible mark, and it is obvious that a lean face will betray the story of emo tional experience more readily than one covered with a mass of fat and smooth skin. Origin of Spring Cleaning. Housewifes who make a point of ren ovating their homes at this season of year may be interested to know the origin of the custom. According to good authority the Hebrew women led the way by the freshening up of every article about their house to prepare for Passover. At any rate, in the absence of any records to show that northern nations clean out their houses of all the past year's food before the 1st of May, when they celebrated an ancient pagan survival in. the dance around the May pole if even they swept out all old rushes, then, from the floors it is wor thy of notice that the Mosaic injunction about the removal of everything that would taint the house has taken strong root among the Gentiles of America. The birds are no more anxious about the building of their nests than are house keeping women,, from this time for ward, about thorough scouring out of pans and kettles, closets and attics, cel lars and storerooms. Philadelphia Times. An Educational Scrap Book. One mother has introduced a new occupation for her children. This is the construction of a scrap book of noted people of the day. Each has a page on which a newspaper picture is pasted at the top. Beneath this photo graph tha child writes when the person was born, the briefest account of his or her life, up to date and possibly the time of death. Among the fast-growing list is the Russian royalties, the little king of Spain, the queen of Hol land, Dr. Holmes, Robert Louis Steven son, ex-president Carnot, the emperor of Germany and his children, etc. An other mother has varied this idea for her own family of .bright little ones. She has set them at work collecting for a scrap book all the pictures they can find of royalty. The result is very in teresting. There are, of course those from Russia, the cunning pictures of the German princes, the youthful rulers of Spain and Holland and sev eral among the English family. Fashionable Stationery. The paper most used in social cor respondence is white parchment finish, and the preferred sizes are - the well known octavo and billet; the envelopes are square with pointed flaps. . Square note sheets with oblong envelopes in tints or colors are simply fads for the moment. Good taste dictates plain white paper and envelopes for femenine notes. May Ladies' Home Journal. The capacity for work of ..the horse depends in no small degree upon the condition of his shoulders, hence by preventing galls and sores he is able to do his field work faster. CONAN DOYLE'S FAMILY. Both tbe Doctor and His Wife Enjoy . SioyoUng and Other Sports. Of her husband's work, Mrs. Conan Doyle finds her favorite in "The White Company," for not only does she con sider that it is into this book that he has put his best work, but because, as she laughingly admits, she was allowed a share in the disposal of the heroine, writes Ethel Mackenzie McKenna in a sketch, with portrait, of Mrs. Conan Doyle and her children in the May Ladies' Home Journal. I think, too, Mrs. Doyle must have a special affec tion for "Micah Clarke," to my mind one of the best things he has done, for in speaking of the troubles of the Great Rebellion the author has much to say of the country around Mrs. Doyle's former home in Gloucestershire. Her father was a landed proprietor at Mins terworth in that county, and it was in the quaint old town of Monmouth that Mrs. Doyle was born. Dr. Doyle is a great athlete. No ex ercise comes amiss to him; Alpine climbing, football, tennis, cricket, skat ing .tobogganing, are all dear to him, and Mrs. Doyle shares his enthusiasm. Before she became ill she and her hus band were untiring bicyclists indeed, Mrs. Doyle speaks of bicycling as her favorite amusement and they used often to do from thirty to forty miles on their tandem tricycle. It was when crossing the channel on their return from Switzerland one year, where they had done some really hard climbing, that Mrs. Doyle caught the chill, from the effects of which she has suffered so much. To an active, energtio woman the inforced inaction, the long, tedious spell of invalidism has been a great strain, but she has borne it bravely and uncomplainingly, making as good s patient as she did a nurse. Her child ren have been a great comfort and de light to her. Mary, the eldest, a bright little girl, full of pretty ways and quaint sayings, and the baby, a bonny boy, who lejoices in the name Arthur Alleyne Kingsley, have both been of constant interest and delight to their mother. WORKING FOR UNCLE SAM. Government Service Is Not the Best Thing for Any Young Fellow. There are government positions which hold out excellent possibilities in the way of developing a young man's qualities,- writes Edward W. Bok in reply to the question "Is a government posi tion on general principles a good thing for a young man who is desirous of a future?" in the May Ladies' Home Journal. But these are rare. For the most part, and on general principles, I would not advise any young man to enter the employ of the government, that is, if he has any ambition. A government position holds out attrac tion to the average young man because he feels it is safe, that is, so far as the payment of his salary is concerned. Then, too, he is apt to believe that gov ernment salaries are somewhat higher than the salaries attached to civil pur suits. But, to. my mind, he buys these "sure" elements at a very dear cost to himself.- The average government clerkship is a very poor affair. Not only is it poor itself,' but, in ninety cases out of a hundred, it means pure clerical routine. It has about it a peculiar stifling monotony and restraint which are apt to quench the fire of am bition. Promotion is impossible upon the same lines as in a business house. The chances for development are meagre. While there are exceptions to the general rule, government service is not the best thing for any young fellow. He will be wiser if he enetrs into the more fearless freedom of civil pursuits, and leaves the average government posi tion alone. - In the first, he can be what he likes; in the latter, it is doubtfuL Pineapples for Dyspepsia. According to a correspondent with the coming of the pineapple season, the word is renewed that the fruit is of es pecial value to the dyspeptic. In countries where the fruit is indigenous its hygienic qualities are well known but the broad statement that the pine apple everywhere-and all conditions of pineapple are wholesome must be taken with a little judgment. Ripe, luscious fruit, not over-ripe nor under-ripe, but tender, sweet and succulent, is probably one of the most wholesome foods that comes to our table. It is easy, however, to have these conditions infringed upon. Tough, stringy, hard pines, as so often offered, are not wholesome, and are hard to digest. If the fruit is found to be not in perfect condition, cutting it twelve hours beforehand and pouring a wine glass of rum over it will add to its wholesomeness. Sugar freely an hour before serving, with good powdered sugar. Emphasis is laid upon the good quality of the sugar, as in powdered sugar it is possible to buy abominably adulterated sorts. N. Y. Times. Rules for Sunshiny Girls. When she was quite a little girl she wrote them out one New Year's Day on a clear white slate, and hung it on her dressing-case where it could always be seen, writes Rnth Ashmore in a very delightful description of "A JSunshiny Girl," in the May Ladies' Home Jour nal. She had found them in an old book. John Wesley had laid these rules out for his life,' and though she felt she might never keep them all, she tried to live up to them as far as pos sible. And when she made that resolve half the battle was fought. Written out in rather a shaky hand were these rules: "Do all the good you can; by all means you can; in all ways you can; in all the places yon can; at all the times you can; to all the people you can; as long as ever you can". The Various Uses of Glycerine. . Equal parts of bay rum and glycerine applied to the face after shaving makes a man rise up and call the woman who provided it blessed. Applied to the shoes, glycerine is a great preservative of the leather and effctually keeps out water and prevents wet feet. A few drops of glycerine pnt in the fruity jars the last thing before sealing them help to keep the preserves from moulding on top. For flatulency there is no better remedy than a teaspoonful of glycerine after each meal. It will, prevent and cure chapped hands. Two or three drops will often stop the baby's stomach ache. It will allay the thirst of a fever patient and sooth an irritable cough by moistening the dryness of the throat. EXTRAORDINARY I AN OCCURRENCE THAT WAS MARVELOUS INDEED. Not Merely Belief From an Insignifi cant Ailment, But a Unman Life Involved. The newsgatherer on his daily search for items of interest often comes across happenings of more than passing note. It was during a recent conversation with . Mr. A. H. Cransby, the well known commercial traveler, with the Cochran Lumber Company, that a re porter of the Commercial learned of a wonderful case. Mr. Cransby is well known in Memphis and surrounding country, and now resides at 158 Kerr street. "Just ten years ago," said he, "my wife noticed a small lump in her breast. She thought nothing of it, but it increased in size rapidly, and soon broke through the skin, and com menced to discharge. She was put under treatment of the best physicians, but they very soon found that they could do her no good, and simply prescribed antiseptics to keep the place clean. Both her grandmother and aunt, by the way, had died with can cer, and when apprised of this fact, the doctors told me that they would not attempt to save her; that she was in curable. Although the cancer had by this time become deep seated, and her health very low, I had one of the most noted specialists of New York to treat her. After treating her awhile, this doctor admitted that the case was hopeless and further treatment useless. It is difficult to imagine how despond ent we all became, knowing that she must die, and unable to give her any relief. I had spent over five- hundred dollars with the best medical skill to be had, and felt that there was no fur ther hope. "One day I happened to read an ad vertisement of S. S. S., recommending that remedy for cancer, and in view of the failure of the most eminent physi cians in the country, I confess I had little faith left in any human agency. However, I purchased a bottle of S. S. S. , and to my delight, it seemed to ben efit her; after she had taken a couple of bottles, the cancer began to heal, and astonishing as it may seem, a few bottles more cured her entirely. You can probably better understand how remarkable this cure was, when I ex plain that the cancer had eaten two holes in the breast two inches deep. These healed up entirely, and although ten years have elapsed, not a sign of the disease has ever returned, and we are assured of the permanence of the cure, which we at first doubted. "I certainly regard S. S. S. as the most wonderful remedy in the world, and it is truly a God-send to those afflicted with this terrible disease. Yes sir," he concluded, "you may be sure that I shall always be grateful to that remedy, for without it my home would now be desolate and my children motherless" Memphis, Tenn., Com mercial. The Age of Invention. Mrs. Binks My back is 'most broken. Mr. B. What have you been doing? ' Mrs. B Trying to fix some of our labor aving machinery so it will work. New York Weekly. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy lite more, with 'ess expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest .he value to health of the pure liquid 'axative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. ' Its excellence is due to its presenting in tne lorm most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; 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 acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. DIRECTIONS for unng CREAM BALM. Apply a particle of the Balm well up into the nost ils. After a moment draw strong breath throuah the nose. Use three t mes a day, after meats prejerra, ana oejore rewriny. CATARRH ELY'S CREAM BALH Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passagex, Allays Pain and Inflamma tion, Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane from colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and SmelL The Balm Is quick! ; absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril, and Is agreeable. Price, 60 cents at Drupelets' or by 66 Warren Street, New York. DR. LIEBIG & CO., Special Doctors for Chreold Private and Wasting Diseases. Dr. Ueblg's Invigorator tbe greatest remedy for Seminal Weakness, Loss of Manbood and Private Diseases, Overcomes Prematureness and prepares ail for marriage life's dalles, pleasures and respon sibilities; fl trial bottle given or sent free to any one describing symptoms ; call or address 400 Geary St.. private entrance 405 Mason St., San Francisco. 5 r.MRfX WHrHE all FISf FallS. Best Cough Syrap. Tastes Good. TJae m tune, boiq py oragtrmts. ,E 31 r t UKJt A SIBVB. The chief function of the kidneys is to separ ate from the blood, in its passaga through ttaam, or pertain Impurities and watery particles whioh make their anal exit through the bladder. The retention of these in consequence of Inactivity of the kidneys is productive of Bright s d lease, dropsy, diabetes, albuminuria and other mala dies with a fatal tendency. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a highly sanctioned dinretic and blood di purent, impels the kidneys when inactive to renew their sifting function, and strain from the vital current impurities which infest it and threaten their own existence as organs of the body. Catarrh of the bladder, gi avel and reten tion of the Brine are also maladies arrested or averted by this benign promoter and res ora tive of organic action. Malaria, rheumatism, constipation, biliousness and dyspepsia also yield to the Bitters, which is also speedily bene ficial to the weak and nervous. "He will be heard from in this world," The mother proudly said. Be was. He mowed the lawn each morn Ere folks were out of bed. HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure! P. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, Ohio. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the past 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry . L 1 1 1 A I " ! uui uny uuiigauuus lutiue uy tur.ir nrm. West & Tbdax, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, O. Waumng, Kinnan & Mabvis, . Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bot tle. ooia ny au uruggists. Testimonials tree. A man who has never had the toothaohe does not Know the real pleasure there is in not hav Ulgll. NEW WAT EAST NO DUST. Go East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla Walla via O. H. & N. to Spokane and Great IS orthern Kail way to Montana, Dakotas, St, Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St, liuuih, .nasi ana ooutn. nocK-Dauast tracs tine scenerv: neweauimnent Great North, ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family Tourist Cars; Buffet-Library Cars. Write j. j. Donovan, uenerai Agent, rortlana, HMrmn aw Ti T AT U . d TJ P- m . St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in- iurnutuun aooui rates, routes, etc. I could not get along without Piso's Cure for Consumption. It always cures. in km. hj. u. jm.oui.ton, jNeeanam. Mass, Oct. 22, 1891. MUSIC STORE Wiley B. Allen Co., the oldest, the largest, 211 First St., Portland. Chickering, Hard man, Fischer PianoB, Estey Organs. Low prices, easy terms. lO-CJBNT MUSIC Send for catalogues. Guard yourself for summer malaria, tired reeling, ty using now Oregon Blood farifler. Try Gjebmxa for breakfast. Dr. PIERCE'S PLEASANT- PELLETS SICK HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPETITE, and all derangements of the MUEKUJlM Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Of all druggists. . ONCE "in ALWAYS IN FAVOR. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Iigsst MsnnfMtMCT at PURE, HIGH GRADE Cocoas and Chocolates On tab Continent, hm rmeirwl HIGHEST AWARDS from ttw sraat Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA. Caution: ?T,o.t!on. OT tM llMl and WraMMN AM An Rood, consumers ahoald make sura that our place of muufactara. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER ft CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. N. P. N. XT. No. 600-S. F. N. U. No. 677 SEEDS I' I! I have bought from the RECEIVER of F. L. POSSON & SON, the stock, fixtures and good will of the eeed business lately carried on by them and will continue the same at 205 Third Street. BDELL LAMBERSON, Portland, Ok. HEEP-DIP LITTLE'S - Mixes JAMES LAIDLAW Antifermentine Preserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retains their natural flavor. WEINHflRD'S BEWARE of imitation trade is the whole story about 2f fttrfrrf Costs no more than other package soda never spoils 111 JldvlyCUwDt flour universally acknowledged purest In the world. Hade only hj CHURCH & CO., Kew l!rVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV'lViVVlV V y ayiajj "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR CAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES APOLIO . I PRIZE HOOD'S SaTsaparilla more than any remedy I have ever taken. I hare never been robust and was subject to severe headaches, and had no appetite. Since taking Hood's Sarsaparjlla and Hood's Fills I am a well woman, have a good appetite and sleep well. I cordially recommend Hood's 8ar saparilla. Mas. 8. M. Oobram, Fillmore House, Fillmore, California. HnnH'es Pills cnre a11 liTer 1,s b- (Lf. STAYER i GO. stjccessoes STAYER & WALKER . PORTLAND, OREGON General Agents for Aultman & Taylob Thheshkbs, Tbaction Engines and Ding ek Woodbuby Poweb. Have lor sale HAND-CASE SEPARATORS AND ENGINES And other Machinery of Staver & Walker Steele to elose ont cheap. Write for Catalogue and Prices. Room 550 Worcester Block, Portland, Or. DR. GUNN'S IHPBOVED UVER PLLS A MILD PHYSIC. OVK PITjTj Tim A DOSE. A movement of tha bowels eachday is necessary for health. These pills supply what the system lacks to Tbey neither gripe nor sicken. To convince yoi will mail simple free, or a full box for Inc. Sold every where. BOSAKKO MRU CO.. Philadelphia. F. CHICKEN BAisiaa piys if you use the Prtalam" laenbatsrs Brooders. Make money while others are wasting time bvoldorocesses. Catalogtells all about it, and describes every article neeaea ior mi poultry business. The "ERIE' mechanically the best wheel. Prettiestmodel. we are Pacific Coast Asrents. Bicvcle cata logue, mailed free.givea IPCTaXUMA nrCDBATOK to., Petalama,Call I Branch Housb, 131 8 Main St., Iva Angeles. Full iImmJaIIam .t. warn.... FRAZER BEST IN THE WORLD. AXLE CREASE Its wearlnaranali ties are tmsurnassed. aetnallv outlasting two boxes of any other brand. Free from Animal Oils. GET THE GEN VISK. FOB. BAXi BY OREGON AND ill 11 1111 1 im 11 1 1 1 hi mim riT tt r n a and Dealers generally. YOUNG YOU CAN MAKE MONEY B Air ing ha; with a good Hay Press. Write us for information. woMAN BICYCLES W sell all the liest first class Bicycles. Write - ior catalogue. I. J. TRUMAN & CO., 836 Bosh Street, San Francisco, Cal. Please mention this Paper when writing. MOTIVE HERCULES GAS and GASOLINE sjsrcsrTjsrjEis. 'ALKE & SET, Sai Fiaiclsco. Cal. anil Portland. Or. MRS. WINSLOWS FOR CHILDREN TEETHING - For sale bralllranrto. SS Ceato a bottle. NON - POISGNOUS, SAFEST AND BEST with cold water. Improves the wool. &C0 Poitand, Or. tt'SEEr&SSSSL WELL-KNOWN BEER -(IN KEfcS OB BOTTLKn) Second to none- T Y IT.. IORTLiKD, OB. No matter where from. wVwVwwwVwV r York. Sold by trocers everywhere. ft -"o