The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899, January 16, 1896, Image 4

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    Highest of all in Leavening Power.
THE DANGER IN SUGAR
Industry in Which the United
States Should Lead. .
YET THE COOLIE TRADE THRIVES
Supported by American Consumer. Ig
norant of the Danger to Which
They May Be Exposed.
Few people probably the world over,
particularly in this active, vigorous
life, as they drop the little sweet crys
tals into their tea and coffee, ever stop
to consider the origin of sugar, its cen
turies of use and improvement, its en
ormous factorship in trade channels
ramifying the complete oirole of the
globe, in almost every nation, of every
clime, and the prodigious figures
reached in the volume of its manu
facture and consumption. A brief
synopsis of the growth of this remark
able product might not prove uninter
esting to the reader hereof. Formerly
chemists called every sweet substance
sugar. The original habitat of sugar
cane has never been fully established,
but so far as krown, was first cultivat
ed in the country from China to Ben
gal, and did not reaoh the West from
India until a later date. The art of
boiling sugar was known in Oangetio
India from which it was carried to
China during the first half of the sev
enth century, but sugar refining was
not known, for the Chinese learned the
use of ashes for this purpose only in
Che 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 its individuality.
Not, however, until the 18th 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 is remark
able how the trade centers of sugar
have during the ages varied. Sugar
refining was developed by the Arabian
physicians. In the age of discovery
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 1319 in ezohange
for wool. At this same time the ac
counts of the chamberlain of Scotland
show the payment of 1 shilling 9
pence per pound for sugar, or about
47K cents per pound in United States
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,
in the 18th century, brought it into
as it is today the list of staple pro
ducts. The first discovery of oommon
sugar in beet root referred to above,
was in 1747, by Sigmund Marggraf,
but no practical use of his discovery
was made until his pupil and succes
sor, Frauz Carl Aohaed, in Silesia, in
1801. took up his sugar predecessor's
work and established a beet-sugar fac
tory. To show the phenomenal growth
of this product, the consumption of
su-far in Great Britain in 1700 was
10,000 tons; in 1800, upwards of 150,
000 tons, and in 1885, it had grown to
over 1,250,000 tons.
In Europe it is an industry of na
tional importance, especially in Ger
many, which nation controls an im
mense output. The world's product a
few years ago was about 1,750,000
tons, the greatest consumers of which
are h Gothic and Teutonio stock, the
Etiirli-th and their offshoots being the
highest. The output in Europe of beet
root a few years ago was 85,000,000
tons, and its product in sugar 1,811,
000 tons. Crops range from five tons
of root per acre in Russia, to nine tons
in Germany, while in England it has
rien 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
cent now, to 4 per cent twenty years
ago.
Where So American Stand?
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 the
consequence of paying tribute to foreign
labor, foreign capital and foreign ships
in an article placed upon nearly every
table in the land; from the banquet
table of the rioh, to the lowly, humble,
uncovered board, serving as table, in
the lowliest cottage of its 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 1
about 14 per cent, the proportion being
about 781 pounds per capita in Great ;
Britain, to 591 pounds per capita in
the United States. For a long term
the working classes have groaned under
depressed times, continued taxation,
and want of employment, and it is of
Latest U. S. Gov't Report
and to our own home people of the
Pacific coast we desire to speak more
directly, with all the sincerity words
may impress. We have called upon
our lawmakers to protect them from
the notoriously cheap labor across the
Paoifio, by the passage of the exclusion
aot, yet every day we are aiders and
abettors in sending money to that
filthy, pestilential, disease-spreading
race. Just think of this for one mo
ment! During the years 1894-1895,
the people of Oregon and Washington
paid to foreign manufacturers and pro
ducers in Hong Kong the enormous
sum of $1,000,000 for Chinese sugar
alone; this appalling figure, made up
from the quarters, halves and dollars
of the people, never to return. Just
think of it! Could this amount have
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
mizing 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 products, we might as
well, perhaps, buy sugar as anythng
else, but suoh is not the necessity. We
can Bell our products at the world's
price, which is our market with
others, and what we do when we 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 has grown to large proportions
on our Pacific coast, is deplorable to
think of. Americans, free working
men, supporting the labor of a race of
people born in poverty, reared in
squalor and living in pestilence and
disease. Yon have but to walk through
any city of any consequence, having a
Chinese quarter, made to a certain ex
tent wholesome by the sanitary laws of
a better civilization surrounding them
to realize the beggary, the stench, the
nauseous handling of a moribund pop
ulation whose labor exists upon the
payment of 12 cents for a day's 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 siok, and draw our own
conclusions, in buying Chinese sugar.
A gentleman who came to Amerioa
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 oholera germs lurking
in that disease-stricken country. "
These are not idle words, but the
deep sounding words of warning from
one knowing well the dangers to which
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. Suoh the chances, unneces
sary chances against the homes of our
working people, and without cause
other than the support of degraded, Ill-
paid labor, as described. These facts
are daily becoming better known to
our own people. So muoh so that
many stores now display the sign,
"We handle the American Refined
Sugars only," and it is a safe rule to
follow, where no such announcement
is made, to be sure yon are not getting
China-made sugar is to ask the question
or promptly transfer your custom.
See that you are supplied with no
other than the American-made article,
made by American workmen, in
American cleanly factories, operated
by American capital, paying American
wages, in good American coin and
keeping that American money at home,
not sending it abroad to support the
Chinese nation.
We have here in our own glorious
state of Oregon and sister state of
Washington as evidenced by the exposi
tion of the Manufacturers' and Pro
ducers' Association, one of the greatest
fields for beets this or any other conn-,
try can produce. In rejecting the
coolie-made sugar, and buying only
American-made goods, yon are encour
aging and strengthening the hands of
your neighbor farmer, and building np
an industry in which you will your
self share, and in time proudly realize
the greatness of the soil upon which we
live and which God has blessed with a
special . providence as unsurpassed on
the face of the globe.
Nothing to Attract the Mob.
There were more millions represented
yesterday in the Stillman-Bockefeller
wedding in New York than in the Van
derbilt and Whitney nuptials combined,
yet the young people most concerned,
had fortunately neither divorce nor ti
tles 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 imst be a side show, a news
paper notoriety worked up, before the
"groat heart" of the public 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 Refusal 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 and have not been a
candidate and must not be considered a
candidate," says Mr. Whitney. Yet if
the Democratic national convention
should insist upon nominating him there
is nothing in this declination to prevent
the honor being forced anon him. and a
very handsome and popular candidate
he would make, notwithstanding his
present refusal. New York Sun.
A Complete Definition.
"A statesman, "said the Hon. Thorn-'
as B. Reed, "is a successful politician
who is dead. " Fort Plain Standard.
' "The Isolation of England.'
The wind is hushed; the darkness grows;
The fainting moon is lost in flight.
Death lifts a somber hand and throws
His clonds across the face of night.
With parted lips and haggard stare.
That strives and Btrains to pierce the gloom,
Each nation crouches in its lair.
And, breathless, waits the coming doom.
Dim shapeless shadows pass like ghosts;
Along the trembling earth they feel
The distant tramp of marching hosts
And hear the smothered clash of steel.
Till, reaching out for friendly hands
To guide them through the gloom, they prea
To where one silent figure stands
Sere in lofty loneliness.
They hnrl their taunts, their oaths, theb
prayers.
The snarl of greed, the growl of hate;
They spit upon the cloak she wears
Or grasp its heff to supplicate.
But still, as though she heard them not,
Eer anxious eyes are fixed afar
Among the clouds, on one pale spot.
Where faintly gleams a single star.
By that same star she chose her path
For every night in vanished years. "
Though screened by mists of doubt and wrat'
She sees it still, as if through tears.
Then, glancing at the fretful horde
Who call her now to bend the knee.
She lays her hand upon her sword
And turns her eyes toward the sea.
IMPERIAL MILLIONS
By JULIAN HAWTH0ENE.
Copyright, 1891, by American Press Associa
tion.! 'Sallie certainly did not iook so at tnat
moment. There was something, not an
gelically, but superhumanly attractive
in her eyes and aspect. To see her now
was to understand how some women rise
to the highest points of social or politi
cal eminence with nothing but them
selves to help them themselves or the
devil. Beauty, brains and utter tin
scrupulousness in combination make a
dangerous power, before which the
strongest men have weakened.
The count looked at Sallie, and as he
did so he removed his gold rimmed eye
glasses. This altered his appearance not
a little. His eyes were powerful, and it
seemed to Sallie that she had met their
glance before somewhere but when or
where she could not determine. The
count looked at her keen, handsome
face, at her white neck and arms, at her
graceful figure in its golden hued dress;
and he saw that she was fair. But, in
stead of softening, his countenance grew
stern.
"You say yon are willing to make
reparation for any harm that yon have
doner' said he.
. She nodded her head slightly,
"Will you come back to the ballroom
with me," he continued, "and tell the
people there who you are and who you
are notr
"Why should I tell them what they
already know?'
"Do they know that yon were never
married, either m France or elsewhere,
to Harry Trent; that he refused, in spite
of all your threats and entreaties, to
make yon his wife; that after his death
you caused a bundle of papers, among
which was a will purporting to be bis,
to be discovered in a drawer or a piece
of furniture in a Philadelphia hotel?
And will you tell them that this will was
a forgery, copied from a genuine will
written by Trent himself, but deeding
his fortune, not to you, but to another
woman, whom he designed to marry?
For that woman's name yon substituted
your own; and you yourself hid it in the
room at the hotel which, as you hap
pened to know, Trent had once occupied.
Bv means of that will, and of the
certificate of marriage, also a forgery,
but written on a printed form which you
had procured while traveling in France,
you made good your claim to the estate.
Will you tell them this?"
"1 will repeat no such foolish tale, re
plied Sallie steadily. "How could I have
forged a copy of the genuine will unless
I had had the genuine will to copy from?
And how could I have become possessed
of thatr
"I will tell yon, since you have forgot
ten," said the count. "You found the
genuine will among Harry Trent's papers
on the night that he was murdered."
"Indeed! I was with him on that night,
then, it appears?"
"You were. You were the last to see
him alfce. He was alive when you took
the Japanese knife from the table and
passed behind him and drove it into his
heart. It was you who murdered Harry
Trent, Mrs. Matchin!"
She laughed. "You amuse me," she
said. "You seem not to be aware that
there was a trial for that murder, and
the evidence showed that but one person
was admitted to the house that night,
and that was a man the man who was
found guilty and condemned."
"Yes, 1 Know the story," rejoined the
count quietly. "But it was not told in i
the evidence that when that man left
the house, neglecting to latch the door
behind him, another person, who had
been hiding in the shadow of the porch,
slipped in unseen and went np stairs to
the library where Harry Trent sat. One
of the witnesses, I think, testified that
she had seen a short man with a dark
beard speaking with Trent late that
night."
"That evidence was not believed. But
suppose it were true, how would it affect
me? I fear your imagination will get
yon into trouble, Count de Lisle!"
"Men's clothes are sometimes worn by
women, and a false beard is easily come
by," said he, with a slow, inquisitorial
smile. "With means and a will one
solves harder riddles than that in three
years, Mrs. Matchin."
"Take care, sir!" she exclaimed, her
eyes flashing in her white face. "Yon
are saying what yon can never prove! I
can only suppose," she went on, con
trolling her emotion by a desperate ef
fort, "that yon have been made the vic
tim of a cock-and-bull story by a man
who is believed to be dead, but whom I
now know to be alive Keppel Darke.
He is here under your protection, and is
lash enough to play ghostly pranks on
what
to guess. But he is an escaped convict
Let him look to himself! I will de
nounce him."
"I give you full leave to do so," the
count answered unconcernedly. "But I
must tell yon that there is only one es
caped convict in this house, and that is
myself. Is it possible yon have not rec
ognized me? I am Keppel Darke."
Sallie stood motionless, many thoughts
Whirling in her brain.
"My claim to be Count de Lisle is also
legitimate, however, as such things go,"
he wefit on. "But a woman like yon
should have a better memory. It seems
you have likewise forgotten your friend
Alonzo Garcia, though yon must have
known that he lived many years in In
dia, and became an adept in . Indian
magic. But the denunciation!
Let me call an audience."
He stepped to the door and pushed il
open. - General Bristowe was passing,
talking confidentially to Miss Fitz-Mur-ray,
who was leaning on his arm.' From
the distance came the throbbing of the
music, playing a waltz.
"Pardon me," said the count to the
two, "here is a lady who has something
to say to you." -
"Oh, Mrs. Trent," said the general,
coming forward, "are we to lose you!
You're all right, I trust? That juggler
was enough to scare anybody."
"I only wanted to say I didn't mean
to disturb you I was going to have a
little tea at my house tomorrow after
noon if you and you, too, Miss Fitz
Murray" -
They bowed and expressed their ac
knowledgments. Sallie drew her )cloas
round her, took the count's" arm and
went out.
PAET FOUR-LOVE.
CHAPTER XIV.
THREE ON ONE SIDE.
He held out his hand as he spoke. Tom
rose and stuck his own into it
Thomas H. Bannick, Esq., no longei
occupied the small office room on the
top floor of a down town caravansary,
He now did business in a very handsome
suit of rooms in a new building on
Wall street, and the cynical office boy
had been multiplied into half a dozen
grave and gentlemanly clerks, each one
more imposing than the last. In the
inner sanctum, remote from the noise of
the street. Mr. Bannick sat. He was
still the same good hearted, clever, hu
morous being that he was before fortune
found him out, for even prosperity can
not spoil such men, but be made an
effort to keep this fact a secret from all
but his best friends, and there were peo
ple who fancied he was rather a severe
and formidable personage. He had
plenty to do. Keeping Count de Lisle's
estate in order was no small undertak
ing, but the count could not have
chosen a better man, and Tom had now
got everything in good running order.
The count for we will allow him still
to wear a disguise which has from the
first been transparent to the reader,
though not to persons less well informed
Count de Lisle, otherwise Keppel
Darke, called at Bannick's office a day
or two after the events last narrated,
accompanied by Mr. Alonzo Garcia,
whom we last saw in the role of a Hin
doo magician. They were at once con
ducted to the interior retreat, and orders
were issued that no callers be admitted.
It may here be observed that Bannick
had been made a participant in the
count's secret for obvious reasons, and
Garcia also, for reasons perhaps not so
obvious. Further than these two and
Sallie Matchin the secret had not gone.
"Is she all right?" was the count s first
question after the door was closed.
"As well as ever she was in her life,"
Tom replied.
"Does she seem to have any recollec
tion of the affair?"
"Not the least in the world! Upon my
word 'tis a wonderful thing this hypno
tizing business! I don't understand it at
all, and I don't believe any one else does
not Garcia, here, himself.
"You both understand," interrupted
the count, "that there is never to be a
repetition of the experiment, and hence
forth it had best be a blank in our mem
ories, as it ia in hers. It has answered
its purpose. Sallie Matchin is now con
vinced that it lies in my power to destroy
her whenever I see fit, and yet all legal
process has been avoided.
"But don't you mean to proceed against
her?" inquired Bannick. "Haven't you
the evidence?" -
"Some evidence and plenty of moral
certainty. Garcia could prove the for
gery and the fraud as to the finding of the
will, for in order to get his assistance
sue was oDugea to rnaue admissions
which, coupled with other known facts,
amount to proof. As to the murder the
evidence is of course circumstantial.
No one saw her strike the blow, but w
: know that she several times was dressed
! in man's clothes, that she was present,
so disguised, in Trent's house that night,
ana tnat tne papers in her possession
could only have been taken on that
night from the safe in his library. The
j net is strong enough no doubt. But it
is enough for my present purpose that
sne Knows sne stands in deadly peril.
To bring her to trial and have her sen-
, tenced would be a relief to her. I wish
to punish her myself. She did what she
eonld to get an innocent man hanged in
her stead. I will keep the same rope
dangling over.her head till she is ready
, to draw the noose herself. There is no
I law to punish adequately a criminal like
I her."
i "I can understand her putting a knife
into Mr. Trent," observed Garcia. "He
had given her the best of reasons to
; think that she ought to be his wife, and,
having finished him, the manufacture of
' the marriage certificate and of the will
.followed as a matter of course. Those
, are foibles, and become a beautiful wom
an. It was her treatment of me that
. caused the iron to enter my soul, and no
TO BE CONTINUED.
Too Strong a Diet.
Parents and caretakers of young chil
dren should be warned by the example
of little Marguerite Freeman of New
ark, N. J., to not feed them safety pins.
This little miss suffered for five weeks
under the suspicion of diphtheria, until
the surgical operation of tracheotomy
relieved her throat of a full grown safe
ty pin that had been held in place
rather in the wrong place by its spring.
New York Telegram. i
The TJses of the Occult.
Of late, when a man does anything in
which there is nonsense, he says he was
hypnotized. Atchison Globe.
A LIVING SHADOW
REMARKABLE TRANSFORMATION
OF A NORTH CAROLINA MAN.
Strange, But True, Story From the
Lumber Regions of a Southern State
Verified by a Reporter of the
Greenville Reflector.
The following interview has just
been given our reporter by Mr. G. A.
Baker, the overseer at the farm of Colo
nel Isaac A. Sugg, of Greenville, N.
C. It will interest anyone who has
ever had typhoid fever. Mr. Baker
said in part:
"I was living in Beaufort county,
and on the 2d day of October, 1893,
I was stricken down with typhoid
fever. I bad the best physicians to at
tend me and on the 15th day of Janu
ary, 1894, I was allowed to get np. I
was emaciated, weak and had no appe
tite. I could only drag along for a
short distanoe and would be compelled
to sit down and rest. This continued
for some time, and I began to give up
hope of ever getting well. I lost my
position in Beaufort county, and, hav
ing secured one in Pitt county, clerk
ing in a store, I undertook it, but was
so weak I could not do the work and
had to give it up. The disease settled
in my knees, legs and feet. I was tak
ing first one kind of medicine and 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 commenced taking
Dr. Williams' Pills. I took three a
day for about three months. I began
to regain my appetite in a week's time,
and then my weakness began to disap
pear, and hope sprung np with a bless
edness that is beyond all telling. At
the expiration of the three months I
was entirely cured and could take my
axe and go in the woods and do as good
a day s work as any man. 1 was
troubled with dyspepsia and that has
disappeared. It is also a splendid tonio
for weak people. . I say, Mr. Editor,
God bless Dr. Williams; may he live
for a long time; I know he 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 Pills for Pale People
that if they will come to me I oan
always satisfy them as to their merits.
I always carry a box of pills with me
and when ever I feel bad I take one.
We are forcibly struck with the
earnestness of Mr. Baker and his state
ments may be relied on.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in
a condensed form, all the elements
necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific
for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, St. Vitus' danoe,
sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nerv
ous headache, the after effects of la
grippe, palplitation of the heart, pale
and sallow complexions, all forms of
weakness either in male or female, and
all diseases resulting from vitiated hu
mors in the blood. Pink Pills are sold
by all dealers, or will be sent post paid
on receipt of price, (50 cents a box, or
six boxes for $2.50) by addressing Dr.
Williams' Medicine Company, Sohe-
nectady, N. Y.
"Are yon the new woman T" "Yes." "Well,
come in ana i win give yon some oi my nus
band's old clothes."
GHOSTS ARE PALE AND SHADOWY,
Say those who profess to have interviewed
them. Whether spooks are tallow-faced or not,
mortals are whose blood is thin and watery in
consequence of Imperfect assimilation. When
invalids resort to Hostetter's Stomach Bitters,
and use that uneqealled tonic persistently, they
soon "pick up" in strength, flesh ai d color. It
should be used also to prevent malarial, rheu
matic and kidney complaints, and to remedy
constipation, sick headache and nervousness.
"John, did yon find any eggs in the old hen's
nest this morning?" "No, sir; if she laid any,
she mislaid them."
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED
By local applications, as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
only one way to cure Deafness, and that ia
by constitutional remedies. Deafness ia
caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube gets inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed Deafness is the
result, and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its nor
mal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flammed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by HalFs Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c
FITS. AU flta stopped tree by Dr. Kline's
Great Nerve Bestorer. No fits after the first
day's use. Marveloas cures. Treatise and 12.00
trial bottle free to Fit cases. Bend to Dr. Kline,
31 Arch bt, Philadelphia, Pa.
Tbt Gzbmxa for breakfast.
EVERY FAMILY
SHOULD KNOW THAT
l'J"7 remarkmble remedy-, both tor 13V.
aerial in Us quick action to relieve distress.
Pain-Killer TtTlItl
. . A nront. concha,
Chills, niarrhcra, Dysentery, C ran pa!
Cholera, and all ovxl OmplainU.
Paln-Kil1erTk THE best rem.
-UJJ-JYJJJCT rdT known tor
Sfkin;!S.J8,cHeadu;,,e Pnl he
Back or Side, Rheumatism and Neuralgia.
MADE. It brings tpeedy and permanent relict
krern0; ft-" C"tt'
Pain-Killer saffifta
Meehaalc, Farmer, Planter, Sailor, and
to fact all classes wanting a medicine always at
hand, and tare to vte Internally or externally
with certainty of relief. '
IS RECOMMENDED
Bf TfiytieUmt, by MUMonarie, by MnUttrt, k
Mechanic, by A'urta in EotpilaU.
' BY EVERYBODY.
PalnmfTilfaf to Medicine Chert m
XJJfV"' Itself, and tew vestals
leave port wttboot a supply of it.
. "No family can afford to be without this
Invaluable remedy In the house. lis price brings
It within tbe reach of all, and It will annually
save many times Its cost In doctors' bills.
Beware of Imitations. Take none bat tha
CtDBlne "Panax Da via,"
SURE CURE for PILES
iMuiDg ua .una. Bieeamg or nwHHf mn VMM at M to
DR. BQ-8AN-KO'8 PILE REMEDY, siod. ltck-
og, absorb tumors. A poutire onre. Circniftra sent ttm. PrlM
tio. Drussiuiorauu. im. BOSAJiaiO, Palhfa, Fa.
ARIIIMKorphine Habit Cared In 10
I U 111! I to JO(ii s. Nora; till cured.
M - M)3
m0
NEW WAT EAST NO DTJ8T.
dn Trust from Portland. Pendleton. Walla
Walla via O. R. A N. to Ssokane and Great
Northern Railway to Montana, Dakotas, St.
Paul, Minneapolis, UMoago, umana, ot.
Louis, East and South. Rock- ballast track ;
fine aoenerv: new eauinment: Great North
ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family
Tourist Cars; Buffet-Librarv Cars. Write
A. B. O. Denniston, O. P. k T. Ay Portland,
Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. fc T. A.,
St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in
formation about rates, routes, etc
IT entry Is vonr flat fireproof? Towne Yoa'd
think so if yoa'd shivered there all winter.
TBE ABSENCE OF IT.
If there is any truth in the saying that
happiness is the absence of all pain, men
tal and physical, the enjoyment of it can
only be fouad in heaven. But so far as the
Dhvsical is concerned, it is within easy
reach; at least measurably so, as far as
cure will go. The sum of human misery in
tnis line is maae up oi greater or less de
grees of physical suffering. The minor
aches and pains which afflict mankind are
easy to reach and as easily cured. There
are none in the whole category, which, if
taken in time, cannot be cured. They
must in some form afflict the nerves, the
bones, the muscles and joints of the
human body. They are all more or less
hurtful and wasteful to the system. St.
Jacobs Oil is made to cure them, to search
out hidden pain spots, and to cure prompt
ly in a true remedial ana lasting way.
Very, very many have not known happi
ness for years till they used it, and very
many are patting off cure and happiness
because they don't use it.
She Jack told me that that hospital was
built entirely at his expense. Is that posKlblef
He Well, Jack's nncle cnt him off with l,00O,
and left the rest of his money to build the hos
pital. ' -
I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of
lungs by Piso's Cure for Consumption.
Louisa Lihdaman, Bethany, Mo., Jan. 8,'iH.
!rVom U.S. Journal of Medirin
Prof. W. H. Peeke, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur
ed more cases than any
living: Physician; his
success is astonishing-.
We have heard of cases
of ao years' standing
lar&re bot
tle of his absolute cure, tree to any sufferers
who may send their P. O. and Express address.
We advise any one wishing- a cure to address
Prof.W. S. PEEKS. P. D., a Cedar St., Hew Tar
JL1ILJ
Qira
113 Best Cough BynipVTaatesCrood. Use I I
Id In time. Bold by druggists. f 1
MRS. WINSLOW'S
i - FOR CHILDREN TEETHING -,
' ' For sole by all VroaelaU. SB CeaU a bottta. 1
BeS
' Tts pure Cocoa, and not made by
the so-called "Dutch Process"
Walter Baker & Co.'s Break-
fasf Cocoa is absolutely pure
Chemicals,. WALTER BAKER & CO., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
Don't Tobacco
Spit and Smoko
Your Lifo
Away!
10
costs
will
funded.
CHICAGO
fllOAl () ETC candy catbarMc cure constipation. Purely vegetable, smooth and
U ASC Allt I W easysold by druggists everyirbwe, gaarauteed to cue, Only xo .
If you want a sore relief
limbs, use an .
AUcock's
Bear in Mind Not one
tations is as p;ood as the genuine.
WEINHARD'S
MALARIA!
Three doses only. Try U.
"HE-THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS
SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOHO
i R Ckfk QPPn
lOtJVF
ATAI CCl Now ready ...PORTLAND, OR.
I LVU Send tor one... itcnibm thu paper
Ami pains of rheumatism can be curesl
by removing the cause, .actio acid in the
Mood. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures rheu
matism by neutralizing this acid. Thou
sands of people tell of perfect cures by
trDoodT
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. $1 ; six for 5.
HOOd'B Pil1Z 5P harmoniously with
HUUU 9 riua Hood's Sanaparilla. Xeta.
Bsl from early
LPlLrlll' hood until I was
tULLLIJl
trying to cure ins
of this disease. I visited Hot Serines
) and was treated by the best medical
amen, but was not benefited. When
a n t.jsBisBa dfc at mtlA 1 Am.
termined tosIIr try S.S.S.
and in four I IIUIil months was
entirely cured The terribls eczema
was gone, not a sin of.it left My
general health built up, and I have
never had any return of the disease.
i! CHILDHOOD
vat known a fallnrn to imi-A
ojuib it, iflniflt irwiiifia i
Never iaiis to cure, -
even when ail otner
remedies have. Our
treatise on blood and i
free to any address. (
Mn diseases mauea
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Auuta. Ca.
DR. GUNtrS
IMPROVED
LIVER
. Mild Ph
hvti.. fin A fin
for a Dene.
nf th hflwAlA-aAah AAv 1m hmmw Saw .
health. Thme pills sapply what the system lacks to
oaks K regular. Thay euro Headache, brighten the
jUBe,and oloer tbe Complexion better than i usmeltoa
They neither gripe nor sicken. To convince yon, wo
will mAil BAmplo free, or full box fiir 2fc. Rolderery
whera. R. BOSAHKO MED. CO Philadelpbia.
THE AERMOTOB CO. doss half the world's
windmill boaineas, because it has reduced the coat of
wind power to l.W what It was. It has many branch
nouses, ana supplies us gooas ana repairs
at your uoor. it can ana aoee iurnnui a
Dener article zor leee money uiaa
otheis. It makes Pumping and
OA&red. steel. OAlvAnlBed.after-
eTaalrtaninlAn WlnHmi 11. TUtln
AW and fixed steel Towers. Steel Buss Saw
Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed
W JSk Grinders. On application It will name one
of these articles that it will furnish until
January 1st at 13 the usual price. It also makes
Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalog tie.
Factory s 12tk, Rockwell aa FUloKr Strecti, Cklcaxe,
DETECTIVES
To represent as In every
town in the U. S. Enclose 2o
atamn tor particulars, olobb
Detective Aeenoy. 101K S. Broadway, Los An-
teles, Cal.
N. P. N. U. No. 632 B. F. N. TJ. No. 709
tire
no
9
makes
the nerves
stroncr. and
brings back
the fee liners of
youth to the pre
maturely old man.
It restores lost visor.
You may train ten
pounds in ten days.
GUARANTEED
TOBACCO HABIT CURE.
Go buy and try a box to-day. It
only 81. Your own drutrorist
guarantee a cure or money re
Booklet, written guarantee of cure
r 4j"
and sample free. Address nearest offloe.
THE STERLING REMEDY CO..
MONTREAL, CAN. NEW YORK.
for pains in the back, side, chest, or
.
porous
Plaster
of the host of counterfeits and imi
WELL-KNOWN BEER
. (IN KKG8 OS BOTTLES)
Second to none IKT II..
No matter where horn. POBTLAHD, OB.
DO YOU FEEL BAD? DOES YOUR BACK
ache? Does every step seem a burden? You need
MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
Buell Lamberson
205 Third Street