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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1892)
DECISIVE Baking Powder Tests The United States Official Investigation of Baking Powders, made, by authority of Congress, in the Department of Agriculture, Washing, ton, D. C, furnishes the highest authoritative informa tion as to which powder is the best The Official Report Shows the ROYAL to be a cream of tartar baking pow der, superior to all others in leavening power ("fifflj.' The reaton a dog can look to knowing 1 be turn: be can't my anything to ull the vilect. CHUM! COUOHII, HOABHMKW AND SoRR Til BOAT, "Brown'i Bronchial Troches" give immediate Marriage will continue to be a (allure till our young women lem to upport a man lu tbe iljie ne bai alwaya ttot n act-untuned tu. IENO VOFK lONaTITITION A II Wit. Constitution! are much alike, and In nine-tentlis of ua the tame causes produce the ame .fleet.. Vertigo, dizziness or pain of any kind, excepting that of an injury, can come only when there is In our bodies tome impurity of the blood which we have not HUtticient vitality to throw oil' without help. Therefore the proper thins: to do is to get immediately tbe necessary help. Xo aid is so etlective as Hrandrktu s Pn.u. When you feel these ilia coining on take from three to ten of these pills, according to your weight, and be relieved ut once. Never put oil' the feeling by thing you will soon be over it. Take the pills and do not rack the constitution. "Where are you going this unimer?" has be come a very trite aud wearisome question. The hypophosphites of lime and soda combined with cod-liver oil in Scott's Emul sion improve the appetite, promote digestion, and in crease the weight. They are thought by some to be food ; but this is not proved. They are tonics; this is admitted by all. Cod-liver oil is mainly a food, but also a tonic. In Scott's Emulsion the cod-liver oil and hypophos phites are so combined as to get the full advantage of both. Let us send you a book on careful living ; free. Scott ft Bown, Chemiita, 13a South 5th Avenue, New York. U the only Absolutely Water Proof Coat ! Quaranteed N'HT to Peel, Break: or Stick. to Leak at the Seims. Tti.M are twn wava Ton can tall the a-ennlna llcker ! the Fuh Brand trade mark and a soft Wool. a Collar. Sold everywhere, or aenl free for prion. A. J. TOWER, nanufr. Bolton, Mate. Oar MhleM Brand la belter than an Wat net coal nude eioenl (he flea Bamn. August Flower" Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no pood. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah T Cox, Defiance, 0. I CURE FITS ! When I ear care I do not mean merely toltop them or a time and then hare them rolurn again. 1 "";" radical care. I ban made the dineaae of FITS, hrl LBP&T or FAIXINO SICKNESS a lifeJoof atudr. 1 warrant Bymoiedj to onre the woretoaaee. Beceuae "there hare failed la no reaann (or not now recemn-a rare. Bend at awe for a treatiae and a Free Bottle ol ny Infallible remedy. Gite Einreea and Poet Offioe. H. u, HOOT. M. C 183 Pearl HI.. N. V I INDIAN DEPREDATION I , PENSION- I PATENTS Land "homestead postal Th"CXAMlNatK" BUKk.AU ofCfcAIM" -CKDaa tu Diaacrios or San Franciaco Examiner. It yw, hare a claim of any dracrlptlon whta..evr aajuut the United Slate Government and tab it epeedlly adjudicated, audreea JOHV WKDDEltBCKN Mannar, l F atraet, W. W. Waehlna-ton. n. C oooooooooo 0TuU'sTiny Pills OTb drepeptic the drbllltatr!. h,'h; O rr rJn c.e of work of ,m"tl Obody or npoeurr In malwteJ J""; Q wlU Bnel Tutr PIHa th. anoat Knml V rMormtle.rofrrrthtnTall' oooooooooo I "7 JLf ,krt 4 1 1 :1 rJ MiE. J i .mi0k iiiran. TeleGwa. t. IMPROVED iN:ljS&'. Slicker Kill Th French Iii'trctlv. Every good detective linn to come tent his own way of working, which U vuriod, of connte, according to the cir cumstances. We may say, however, that as a rule the Pariiun agent has a freer hand and works in a somewhat bolder, more self reliant manner than his Eng lish colleague. This follows from his isolation; he is less helped by "informa- tiou received" and too badly paid to buy it, so he is forced to acquire it by bis own ezemons. A favorite method is to assume the disguise of a workingmau or hawker, and here it may be said that the use of an elaborate makeup exists now only in books. Every zealous hand has his own little wardrobe, and the simpler the bet ter. The most effectual disguises are those which best assimilate the wearer to common life. The Parisian has two in particular the blouse and the work man's apron. "Shadowing" is always done by two men, 0110 some little way behind the other. Each carries a change of dress to wit, a blouse wound sash wise around the waist and a casqnette carried inside the shirt. The moment the first man fancies himself perceived he gives place to the second, and dropping behind slips the blouse over his jacket aud ex changes his felt lint for tho casquette. Thus metamorphosed ho resumes his place. London Saturday Reviow The Mini of Kopt. Egypt, says Herodotus, is a gift of the Nile. A truer or more pregnant word was never spoken. Of course it is just equally true, in a way, that Bengal is a gift of the (iiinges, and that Louisiana und Arkansas are a gift of the Missis sippi, but with this difference, that iu tho case of the Nile the dependence is far more obvious, far freer from disturb ing or distracting details. For that rea son, and al -t because the Nile is so much more familiar to most English speaking folk than the Americau rivers, 1 choose Egypt as my type of a regular mudland. But in order to understand it fully yon mustn't stop all your time in Cairo and the Delta; you mustn't viow it only from the terrace of Shenheard's hotel or the rocky platform of the Great Pyramid at Uizeh; you must push up country eany to Luxor and the First Cataract It is nn conntrv that Esrvnt unrolls itself vis- tbly before your eyes in the very process of making. It is there that the full im portance of good, rich, black mud first I forces itself upon yon by undeniable evi- dence. Coruhill Magazine. I Wheat Doe Nut (irow Wild. I The existence of names for wheat iu j the most ancient languages confirms the evidence of ttsgreat antiquity ana or im cultivation in the more temperate parts of Europe, Asia and Africa. From the evidence adduced by botanists of high standing, it seems highly .improbable that wheat has uever been found grow ing persistently in a wild state, although it has often been asserted by poets, trav elers and historians. In the Odyssey, for example, we are told that wheat formerly grew in Sicily without the aid of man. Diodorus re peats the tradition that Osiris found wheat and barley growing promiscu ously in Palestine, but neither this nor other reputed discoveries of wheat growing wild seem at all credible, see ing that it does not appear to be endow ed with the power of persistency, ex cept under continued culture. St. Louis Republic. Dickens aa an Art Critic The son of a neighbor of Dickens, then a very young artist indeed, quite a boy -had painted his first picture, the sub ject being an aged knight in full armor, apparently having recently returned from the wars, and overcome with fa tigue. Finding himself unable to reach his ancestral castle, he sinks exhausted on a fallen tree in a sort of orchard, aur some cottage children bring him some fruit to recruit his exhausted strength. Dickens took great interest in the young artist-who, by the way. is now very eminent-and greatly admired his pic ture, especially the figure of tbe old knight; but, "My dear felloV," be said, "those apples won't be of any use that old gentleman requires burned brandy to bring him round "-Temple Bar. Theology rrogreaalve Science. Theology i always as much a pro- ;., ...i......n in lwiloirv. If 1,000 of the wisest, purext, most intellectual, I n,t healthv scholars in Christendom today were to formulate a creed out of the New Testament scriptures, as they are known today, that theology state ment could not remain the same to the date of A. D. 292. The power, the thought, the study of a thousand years would throw it into new forms of ex pression, while the substance would re main the same. -Beacon. Electricity has been used in Sweden as a substitute for dynamite in blast ing. A strong current is turned into the rock and tbe intense heat causes it to crack. Sappey, the learned physiologist says that the human stomach con tains 5.000,000 glands which are con Btantly secreting gastric juice. The latest calculation of the earth's ' .i:. ...... Fn.m th nun. based UDon ULtUUMP ' the transit of Venus ia 1882, puts it at 02,01,07 miie. CAVES IN NEW ZEALAND. oma Vary Intrreatlng Facta Contained la an Offlrlal Report. A reeent report of the surveyor gen eral of New Zealand contain an ao count of a visit to the Waitouio eaves, In the King Country, In the North Island, a luminary of which li given in The London Times. The Woitomo river, a tributary of the Vaia, which fosses through these caverns, lies about righty-flve miles south of Auckland, in u straight line. Tho caves are about ten miles from Otorohonga railway sta tion. The country around Is undulat fcig. A quarter of a mile before the raves are reached the Wititomo, about twenty feet In width, is seen emerging from tho side of a hill under which it lias flowed through limratone cavern of various sizes for about twenty chain. A light canoe can be taken along tho river through the caves to within a short distance of the egress, where fur ther progress Is barred by the roof com ing down to the water. At the en trance to tho cavern the stream Is eight feet deep. The natives have never had the courage to enter. The entrance to tho cave is 30 feet wide and 20 feet high, and Is in the face of a cliff. It Is beautifully arched with numerous moss mid lichen cov ered stalactites. The visitor Is taken in a canoe ninety feet from tho en trance and landed on a silt covered beach. By the aid of candles, for all is now dark, he finds himself among ponderous stalactites, three feet to six feet thick, reaching from the roof, twenty feet above, to within a foot of the ground. Everywhere and over the extensive and intricate cavern are seen stalactites and stalagmites of Immense size in vast numbers, with marvelous beauty of form and color. At one place the dark vault is studded with thousands of glowworms, giving it the appearance of a starlit sky. Passing down the left bank of tho stream for 140 feet, over a largo deposit left by floods, the stream is crossed by means of a foot bridge. From tho entrance to the bridgo the cavern averages 50 feet In breadth and from 20 to 30 feet in height. After crossing tho bridgo a sharp turn to the right is made up a steep incline for a distance of seventy feet to the foot of the ladder, which leads to a narrow passage 4 feet wide and 15 feet high, which Is tho entrance to the Grand cavern. Here Is the bottom of the "well" a narrow shaft running to another series of caves above. The well is four feet across and perfectly regular, as if made by human hands, and its sides are beautifully marked witlp horizontal streaks formed of laminuted limestone. In the grand cavern is an immense mound of materials, evidently fallen from the roof. Beyond the roof rises and forms two domes, one 50 feet high. Forty feet up is the entrance to another cavern. Beyond the dome there is a sudden full, the roof lower big so much that tho visitor has to stoop. Tho length of the grand cavern, at the end of which the stream Is again met with, is 250 feet. It varies In width from 15 to 40 feet, and from 20 to 50 feet in height. Up to this point the color is a dull brown and light yellow, but In tho upper galleries, thirty feet above, there are alabaster and Parian marblelike scenes of un surpassed loveliness. Twenty feet above the grand gallery is the organ gallery, so called from the ap pearance of the great stalagmitio mass, 150 feet from its entrance, rising tier upon tier, like the front of an organ with marble pipes. From the grand gallery the main gallery above is reached by a twenty-five foot ladder, and 60 feet along it Is the "well." Here It is 12 feet In diameter, with smooth sides of hard limestone, and the sound of moving water Is heard below. This is 45 feet above where it wo first seen. Fifty feet from the upper wall is a fairy grotto, and through an arch way 30 feet in length Is the banquet chamber. At the end of this chamber is the white terrace, a stalagmitio mass, rising in a series of terraces. From this the upper entrance to the cave Is reached, high in a wooded cliff CO feet above and directly over the lower en trance. The report describes other galleries and caves In the same place, but these are the principal one. A Diet of Lean Meat and Water. Life and health can be sustained In definitely on a diet of lean meat and water, according to Professor J. W. Good, of the Manitoba Medical college. The servants of the Hudson's Bay com nnriv hi the Athabasca district and in the Mackenzie river region depend en tirely on the natural looa supply ol tne nnnntrv. some living on meat alone and some solely on fish. Great bodily and mental vigor has been retainea on sucn a diet for neriods of twenty or thirty years, with singular freedom from con stipation and Indisposition oi every kind. Scurvy lias appeared only where salt meat has been provided for winter use. Ad Ambition Gratified. When Joseph Darby, the English set out to learn Jumping he said that If he could beat any man In England he would willingly lay down and dia The day came when he was champion, yet because a man nn nun -it h a brick he raised a row and re fused to die and had his assailant sent to prison. Detroit Free Fres. Slightly Barcaetic, Tnfnr fwho has sent the servant girl after a light, and who was slow in nin inKatie, licht travels at the Ul ' - " rate of 100,000 miles a second, n here did yon go to get that ughtf 1 ehange. Eltreuiltlea of Animate. No animal has more than five toes, digits or claws to each foot or limb. The horse is one toed, the ox two toed, the rhinoceros is three toed, the hippo potamus is four toed and the elephant and hundreds of other animals are five toed. St Louis Republic. Hie Remarkable Staff. The principal of a graded school sur prised his hearers recently by tbe follow ing suggestive sentence, uttered in all seriousness: "1 ejn teaching at 8 , and have a corpse of eight Uacbers.-Wid AwaU. CUCKOO FOLK LORE. Cnrlout lilraa, rtellefa and Facta Abont tha Strange lllrd, lie must l a well read man who can exhaust tho subject of cuckoo folk lore. o bird is so much noticed by rustics and round no other bird have so many curious fancies crystallized. Like the goose, several familiar plants are named from It and when it has once arrived It must eut three meals of cherries, ac cording to tho folk lore, before It cease its song, while The flrrt cwk o hay Frii'lite the ruvkuo away. And then (after St. John's day) he turns Into a hawk. Almost every game keeper at the present day shoots cuckoos In consequence of this belief, although lie could not well spare them, iimsmtich as the cuckoo "sucks little birds' eggs to make her voice clear." In Yorkshire this bird Influences agri culture; When curkoo rail nn the liaret born Bell your cow and Imy your corn. Woe betide you if you do not turn tho money in your pocket on first hear ing tho bird I If you have plenty of coins nt that time endless good fortuno will follow you throughout tho year, and any wish within reasonable limits will then bo granted. Here is another fanners' proverb, the interpretation of which Is self evident : furkoo oat anJ woodcock bay Sluke a farmer run away. Not only dm-s tho cuckoo prognosti cate length of life, but what is still mora interesting it is able to tell maid ens how many years they will remain unmarried. A pretty Bohemian super st it ion accounts for tho fact of the cuckoo building no nest, but laying her own egg in that of a linnet or hedge sparrow. On the feast of the Annun ciation, it seems, old custom prescribed that birds should leave off building their nests; the cuckoo was nn excep tion, and worked as usual. It was therefore cursed and deprived of a hus band. Somo may be glad to know that they can insure themselves against lum bago the rest of tho year by rolling over and over in the grass the first time tho cuckoo is heard. Its noto is pro verbially monotonous, and the Scotch have a saying, "Ye're like the cuckoo, ye hoe but one song." Its depositing its egg in a strnngo nest and leaving It there to be hatched Is the origin of Shakespeare's rather forced Jokes on its name "A word of fear, unpleasant to a husband's ear." Iu tho ancient system of medicine the cuckoo was a bird of much vulue. The body of a cuckoo, for Instance, next the body in a liarcskin caused sleep. These ore samples of tho genius for the marvelous which so dominated men's minds in tho Middle ages, and which still remuins in out of tho way districts. The strange habits of the cuckoo tended to the formation of these myths, and nothing could be too wild or extravagant to father on so curious a bird. And yet tho facts of tho cuckoo' life and economy are so curious that no In ventive powers ore required to heighten the bird's attractiveness. It Is sup posed that tho males considerably out number tho females, and that tho lat ter do not sing. The cuckoo is a para sitical bird, leaving Its eggs to be hatched anil its young to be reared by foster parents. Two birds, belonging respectively to North and South Amor lea, somewhat akin to our starling (Molothrus peooris and M. niger) pos sess analogous habits, and with the cuckoos are the only birds which fasten, as it wcro, on another bird, upon whose food they live and whose death would involve theirs during the period of In fiuicy. Another fact has been discovered In regard to this. It Is found that the fe male cuckoo lays her egg, not in the nest which she selects, but on tho ground sometimes close, at other times some little distance from the nest and then transports it in her bill to the nest where she desires to leave It, Professor Newton remarks that cuckoos have occasionally been shot whilo thus carrying their eggs, and thinks, with much show of reason, that this custom has probably given rise to the bolief that they suck the eggs of other birds; to which we would add the corroborative fact that they are continually mobbed by other birds as if they were mischievous robbers. The egg, as most school boys know, is very variable in color. When it is hatched the young cuckoo speedily tlirusts out its foster parents' eggs, and even any young ones, shoul dering them, as it were, on Its back, as Jonner (who actunlly saw the process) describes it, and then throwing them out of the nest with a jerk. Most resi dents In the country must have noticed the ungainly looking young cuckoo after it bos flown from the nest, resting on the lawn or on a tree in a helpless, begging attitude, noisily calling for food, which is always faithfully sup plied by its foster mother, even when herself but a little water wagtail. This contrast between the pair in size and Independence Is ludicrous and striking. After some time the young cuckoo fol lows IU kind to the south, the old ones always going first. Cor. St James Budget. Rather VtQbarraaalng. "Know that young lady at the piano, Mr. Blunt T' "Yes, I am slightly acquainted with her." "Well, I wish I was." 'Whyf' "I'd cultivate her until I knew her well enough to tell her she can't ing. Her voice reminds me of the cry of a fish hawker. Can t you introduce me i "With pleasure. I am her father." A Word About Stags Dialogue. The art of writing good stage dialogue is still inchoate. It must be natural, and vet when it is natural it is beneath tbe dignity of the drama, and must be elevated again to tbe proper pitch. Man ifestly the stage is not to blame for this, hnr tha world of society, which is too tnnnarfona and frivolous, and live with out regard to the compensations, keep ing snd culminations of art Only the esoteric essence of our life is now fit for dramatic representation, and tbe dram' arista who can see and adequately Dor tray that essence are shall we say be is? not numerous. Lippincott's Maga- tiflfc IN FOOTHILL GROVES. Where Ira G. Hoitt Has Found Retirement. i;:e ikterestikc mm he is iwk. The Well-Known Educator Give an Interesting Account of Himself. Pince the expiration of hi term of tllioe ns Stato rHiiicriiiWnilc nt of Public Instruction, a little over a year ngo, but little has been heard of Ira U. Hoitt who filled that otlice for four vears. An Ertning I'unt rojiorter who went in nuest of li i in yesterday found him at one of the most cliarim'ng places of re tirement in California. Alighting from the train at the pretty suburtiau village of ran Mateo he was soon speeding over tho country road which presented a panorama of luxuri ous licautv. Two miles from the town a narrow lane opened in the mud. The long graceful curves of this lowely and shaded lane were followed for nearly a mile westward toward the foothills, and at length the 0 n gate of a magnificent private estate was entered. After round ing tho top of a little hill, picturesque country scat nestling in a sheltered place at the foot of graceful hills burst on the view. A well-kept orchard, acres of flowers and a neat garden spot were successively passed, snd then came a ph'tiires'iie bridge over the neck of a little lake and uiuler an arch of massive live oaks. The long porch which ended the journey was eiulmwered in roses and paliiis;'flowersatid foliage of various kinds charmed the eye at every turn. This was the country home of the late J. II. U Islington who for years lavished wealth on the house snd grounds. It was secured last year by Mr. Hoitt who opened thero Hoitt's Oak (irove Scho.il for boy. The house is elegantly furnished, has a library, billiard-room and every facility for tl'ie enjoyment of home comfort. Not a sound of exterior human life readies this romantic retreat sheltered by hills anil by live-oak groves. Here the well known educator was found, enjovinghis life and labor as muster of a school In which his own educational ideas could be wholly carried out. Iu response to a servant's' suiiiihoiis, he came from the si'hool-biiildiiig where recitations were going on ami cordially greeted the re porter. "Yes, we are rather in retirement now," he said, "but we are enjoying the life. We have twenty-five Ixiys now and there are four instructors besides nir wife and myself. I find that my health has been better here than for years past, although I have never had any serious trouble since my severe attack of sciatica about six years iigo. My physician tinal'y gave nie relief, but symptoms ol rheumatism continued, sppcaringespeci ally in my right arm. Many people have been surprised that I did tint go to my physician again, but 1 did not. Some friend suggested that I try Warner's Safe Cure," and as it was very easy to do I did it. It gave me immediate relief and since then I have used it at every recurrence of rhenmittiu symptoms. I have not used anything else and it has never failed to 'give prompt relief. I have a bottle on hand now, and only day beforo yesterday I bought a bottle for one of our hoys who had pains in his back. If I felt at liberty to do so I could mention the names of acquain tances who have used it with great success. One is a man in business in Oakland who tried Warner's Pafe Curs for kidney trouble and was cured, As you ask me the question directly I have no hesitation in saying that I regard it as a very valuable remedy, for my own experience has demonstrated that it is," The reporter thanked Mr. Hoitt for tho information he hail so candidly and courteously given, and almost regret fully withdrew from the beautiful groves where the eminent educator has found an ideal place for a scat of learu ing. iSan Franciuro Kvniini) Voti. Hoaie nnWoinen are rover heard of at home or abroad until they marry American glrla. A GOOD l'LACK FOR HOYS. Hoitt's School, near Mlllhrie, San Mateo county, Cnl.. In charge of ex-Htats Super intendent Ira (1. Hoitt and wife, is un doubtedly one of the best schools for Hoys on tne racuic uoasi. fee Euamcllne Htnre Pullah; no dint, no smell. TStStSZ m A DAY. Lawrence, KANS.,Aug.o,'o8. Ceorge Patterson fell from a second-story window, strik ing a fence. I found him using 8T. JACOBS OIL. He used It freely all over his bruises. I saw him next morning at work. All the spots rapidly disappeared, leaving neither pain, scar nor swelling. C. K. NEUMANN, M. I). "ALL RICHTI 8T. JACOBS OIL DID IT." URELY a vegetable compound, made entirely of roots and herbs ealhered from the forests of Georg '.enrirla. and has been used bv millions "77 !.L.L.U . li. I. PI people Wlin me ucai icaiiua, at QCIRE3 AH manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and Treatise nn Blood and Skin Dlieaaet trailed baa, Swirr brsti'ic Co, Atlanta, da, CONSUMPTION. leMapueummaedjforth e!xe dia.aaa; bf kta asetboBaandaofeaae of tba werat kind aad at lon eUadm ban ba eared, IndeaS eo etmat la mf falUl kaHeeiSaarr. tlu I UandTwoaoTTUarasaerUk tVaLUaBMi 1RRATIHB aatlu4leaeBaiira ant b wiU eeaa aw taeer Ktueeea aad K O. aevtreaa, T. A. Meraa. H. C 1S3 Pearl L X. T. V. P. 5. U. No. U5- t. V. U. No. 822 ACKOSI Tn DEEP, TO TBI FAR WKST, On ateamboata.rara and itK coacbea, Itiielet UT' BUiniai'b bitter la carried a tha Bioel luv pnilaul Item lu the inaivrla mrdlca ol th trey elln puollc. It deprive vitiated, bricklab water u( Ita hurtful irn.rtlr and eircrahle tlor, roiiiiU'iavi the ix-rnlt-lotia fltu'ie upuii the aUuuai'h ol bad or ImllKratlbla food, reme Ulra cramp, heart burn and wind upou lb etoru ai b. It la a Due di fHiae asalnat malarial dlaor dm, nallltlr Iheeltcclaoi eicraelv heat, cold nd damn, relieve all a headai bra, and li all In row parable cure for eoatlruraeaiid bllliiuaiieea. Th lailKueof travel olleii tell mil dlwumiua ly upou invalid ami convalrM'enla lataalouallr In aui h ail ex lent a bi Jenpardlte II'. 1'eraoii In fix ble health, aiprebeuiveof bad effect I torn travel, will, If provided with tne llliieia, be far lea likely to have tbell fear leallced. A leading actrea aaya that "a kle tobeartlttlc muat be luiroual," Th.M la ABlawvk I it Ihla uu.llnn rtl ,h country than all other dlaeaaea put loKlbr, and until tne ll few year wa aupuiMed to be In curable For a great many year noelnt pro- (,'iii.k,, p, nun vj .iifiaiviiii; ,n,i(.i . uiv ..... local treatment pronounced II Incurable. Hel ence ha proven catarrh to b a coualllulloual dlaeate, and theretore require poiialllullonal . lllll. ...... ...... ..I. .i ....I ....... ..... I., fill... . . Mil Ml Mrlth wrniiurm. iie'i e t ntnnu ,uir, it,wiiui.t;iii-u k. L' I ,'h. ...... .1. In 'Clln .,!,(.. la t hi. I V eonatllulloiiai cure on the market. II I taken internally in nneva ironi ten aroiie 10 a ieaaNiii fiu 1 1 .(.I. ,1 In' 1 1 v mwtii i h hlfMMl ami miiciina eurfacc ol the ayaiem. They oiler flu) for any caae It lalla to euro. Send for circular and U tlinoulal. Addrta r . CHUNKY A CO.. Toledo. O. Hold by dnuiilita; 7M. Tst Oismia for breakfast. coavaicMT im The wrong teay, with Catarrh, is to Btop it without curing it. The poisonous, irrita ting snuffs, strong caustio solutions, "creams," balms and tho liko may, perhaps, palliato for a time. Hut they may drive tho disease to tho lungs. Tho wrong way is full of danger. Tho right way is a proved one. It's with Dr. Sago's Catarrh Rem edy. It cures, perfectly and per manently, by its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties, tho worst cases of Cluonio Catarrh. It has proved itself right, thou sands ot times, when everything else has failed. And this makes its proprietors willing to prove that it's tho right thing for you, no matter how bad your case or of how long standing. If they can't euro your Catarrh, they'll pay you $300 in cash. Thoy mean it. They're certain of their medi cine ELY'S CATARRH CREAM BlLMnsra V Clean tha Naaal Paaaaa-ea. Allay Pain and JuIImiii matlou. Ileal the Sorea. Keatorea tha Senaea or 1'Hta aud smell. TEY THE CURE HaY-EHVER A parllrlr ia applied Inloeach niMlrllandlaagre. able I'rlee, M e ula at ilruairleta' or by mall. KI.V Hltoi'limta.Ml Warren Htreat, .New Yurkl J II riCaf Aaaayer and Analytical Chemlat, . II. I lOH, H WMhtus..iaat Portland, Or. Old flold and Silver BouaMl eend four old Gob and SUvat kl mall to th old aud relialOe aua ot A Oeleuaa. 4 Third atraet, Saa rraaeiaeo; I will eead t return mall the eaah, aonmuiiif to aaeej ; K the eaeooai I aol aeUafeotnry will return nld. J. MoCRAKEN CO., DIALERS IN Raent Harkor lima, PartliaS Camant, tal San Oth) and Utah Plaatar, Hlr, Flra trial sad Fir Clay. LAND Plallla. SO North Frank Street, Oor. D, PORTLAND. OB. ANY WEAK MAN Who U ufferlnf . ttthr In bu nlntl or lifM.jp, from tti Injurious or wkeiiliif flocU of bU ova tiinoraut f nil let, Iium ftndtooiMoinl-iquiclilr nl Mrn nekitLltr mirawl linN frMI (fteftlrMll DR. COLE ft CO., Portland, Or. Tbeea old Doctor hat had 30 Iran' 'eiperlenoe la curing I'rlrate, Hliwd, Ner -nut anil Hkln THmm-l Write trvdav. - Wellabla Bmdli lent pritalal) to any iqdrat. I XI(JItharknowi(if leading renteoy tor u tu. onnatural dlaebarff aad prlealadlaeaaeeol njea. A Crtalaeur lor the dekllr ting waakBMS Dtcilua tn .nTML ar.eairvr iinaoriu.ii.wi TmEvlOml",'tHr). In recommeauliaa It M BTONf R, M D.,DfOITua,nA ,11 hi Braastaia. trait rsiva fjuaHt METALLIC SKYLIGHTS Iron Cornices, CORRUGATED IRON ROOFING. J. 0, BAYER. Portland, Or. Pianos and Organs. WINTER li HARPER, 71 Morrlaon Street, Portland, Or Bos aoa. 1 1 w 'mil LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES For Ladlea r naumaiiv Head lav. i til J ill flllltf t tMMM. '" -w-t , - r . -T J JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.,Mfr.,M7 WkiMngte. St, BOSTON, MASS- mmm i mi Wi mm it hjj w iijtaM Slmonds Crescent Ground Cross Cuts, And All Klnda ol MILL 8AWS. Alto Saw Repairing. f- 8IMONDS SAW CO.. 75 Front Stroot, Portland, Or.-l I I ll I aT AH 1,0 yu fee ba1T 1)0 yu have teadacheT UIiaLwMLal Doea your back ache? You can't eat and don't feel like work. The Vf " I I O trouble Is your lirer is tor pid. You are full of bile. I vUil Get rid of it without delay. Three doees of Moon's lemled limed; will do it and make I II f CJ O you feel like a new person, For tale by all druggists. U I V La 1 4 OIVIS B1V.TOY9 Both thft rtWlioJ rt iTiiilfa wliiii. ---- oeaavat 1.HUIII n UV syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant ana reircsumg to the taste, ana jcu eently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, rlnansra tha av. tern eflectually, dispels colds, head tches and fevers and cures habiturl lonstipation permanently. For sale in OUcand el bottles bv all ilriwistA 4 OD CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO. I ah MkHcisco. cn. tomtviiu, Kt. y tORK, H.r. WILLIAM C.BECK ARMS CO WHOLUIAI.a AMD IlKTAIL IIKALKKB IN Cuns, Rifles and Revolvers. Flahlng- Tackle, Sporting Good, FIREWORKS, Athletic, Theatrical and fiymnlum flood, Uwu Tennl Oiiltlla, Foot Bulla, t rixiuvt, Toult, Flag, Burning, liallooua, Lantern. N. I. Car. Third an. Yamhill til., PORTLAND, OR. Patent Tip We are pnahlng iale. of ladle' Fine Kid ghoca, iiatenl Up, iiiare . p, tu II. al I.'. I'laln loe, t:. H. i r Opera, tl Ml (i.r a K lit .hoe. fend (or lull hoe IM.qtilrk, tiiHinlllia' t Store, 4IU-41S Kront St., Sail r ranrUeo. Season for Trout Opens April 1st. If Ton Ara In Need of Trout File, Oat th neat. Btamlftrrl qnal'tr, 4 to I hooka, per dot pM Or urn) Trout Kile, 4 t" book", per dot M rine KDvereeo w mg me, (omiooKk, perdnt. 1 to Any of ftbov Qmtlitlea nent hy nut II on receipt of prlri). Alto ft full Una of KODH, KKEL8, LlNtS, Ula.ftt Hudson's Gun Store. 3 FIRST T PORTLaNO, OR. tW Send for llluttra'ed catalogue. Wanted, BICYCLE GLOBS fin evert town lu Oreron -nnl Waablngton. Writ rlor parlleulaia, FMED T. MERRILL, 1ST Waahlniton at., Portland, Or. DROP IT If In anr biiilne not paylnr yon drop li aim 'Uuy an nn r roved i'elaluma ueubator. MORE MONET ran bo mado lu tela tug Chicken than la any other bualneaa liirtheeapltallnveat. ed. A beautifully II Imtraled Catalogue ot Incubator. Brood er and all klnda ol .CblckeDFIxUigarKti AuMiira fur llini'l Bona Cutter, Neeea iity Clover Cutter, aud everything re quired by pouluy ratter. PET1LUMA INCUBATOR CO.. Pitil.ii, CiL YOUNG MINI The 8polfio A No. I. - -.llV,.t a.11 .11 nf Om tea od Via, ao matter ol how loiif lauding, Frevanla alrtciure, H being an In ternal rt'Buily. Cure when everything eta. HauulaeUinrKTtwA.tli'hiieiiheltMedldna MORPHINE HABIT I Book ft. SURE CURE raotoo Madtotne Oa Clai SC Ban rraackna SURE, you ejuw TRY m. Em California Diamond PATABTJTJKemedy, Itls VAlAftXlu Tho Croat Cura. So on la tad whar III eiUte but may be helped ky thla treat ear, Wclnbydnaialtuorrnall . r ITCXI t CO , hnu, ICO 3rml:k Ct , JT. T Ci FRAZEO AXLE Best in the World! GREASE Est tha Genuine! Sold Everywhere! Shipped Anywhere on Trial. 'tloar.rea. so. bstsl a O0..6 Kr at. toiMc.ux,Dj-. LES A fir and Cent. Sli at lea flHii'l vuwnun ana avua i iiw a PRESS fcU a-asJWV Diamond Frinw, ie utep roriivi, iwi 7 m& Tubinf, Adjutt.bl JH Betiu(. to ail ruNiifif pvtt, inciudmf Pedeia. utpewoii Saddle. Strictlr HIGH GRABS i Brrr Partlculw. t la ! foraar I00-airi lliaatrated eataH .., HI ft, ateeelvera, ortla Coed, tte.j w""t iijenaiawv-w