pay the Price of the Royal for Royal only. Royal Baking Powder is shown by actual chemical tests absolutely pure and 27 per cent, greater in strength than any other brand. Many grocery stores have recently ' been stocked with second-class brands of baking powder, which are urged upon consumers at the price of the high-cost, first-class Royal. These powders cost from 8 to 30 cents a pound less than the Royal, besides being of 27 per cent less strength. If they are forced upon you, see that you are charged a correspondingly lower price for them. tle'd Hern There. Bobby-Do"'' they evor trj to till the bulb j bean on Wall treot, papar papa-Ye, tliey do kill tbom sometimes. Bobby-With a gunl Papa-No. tlioy catcb them tti a trap and pjci them todeatb. Burliugtuu Kre Prem Tho Highest Honor. Every male rbild born in America," tayi , artier, "stand a chaw of becoming prerf. tot of the United Stab." la tbii all tbat unbltlotM American youtb niay aspire Hi (That's the matter with bit becoming ,jrre pitcberf Chlcaeo Herald. Unconscious of II li Existence. A Maine soldier, who was a partici pant in one of tlic battles of Sherman's rch to the Sea, a (Iglit lasting sev pal hours, a vets thai from the tiring of the a'nt Lostile gun until the battle closed, li is conscious existence was lost, arid ho was never able to recall a ingle incident of the fight. Lew iston Journal In the field of war invention meets inreuticm. A new French invention it 1 smoke bonii), inicuucu to oe nreu into the ranks of tho enemy who uses smokeless powder and obscure his w. . There is beginning to be an outcry iraiusl big dinners; that is, dinners of too many courses. Nine courses ire as many as one's digestion will Hand with comfort, and these should be well seasoned with cheerful cou nratinn "German Syrup 99 Judge J. B. Hn.iv, of the Superior Court, Walker county, Georgia, thinks enough of German Syrup to send 113 voluntarily a strong letter endorsing it. When men of rank ind education thus use and recom mend an article, what they say is north the attention of the public. It is above suspicion. " I have used your German Syrup," he says, "for my Coughs and Colds ou the Throat and Lungs. I can recommend it for tlem as a first-clas3 medicine." Tike no substitute. INDIAN DEPREDATION I PENSION I PATENTS LINO I HOMFSTF'JD I POTT A I CLAJJViS Ts"BXAMINER" BUREAU of CLAIMS -DNDBB THI DIBSCTION OF San Francisco Examiner. Too have claim of any description whatooovoi Hxlnnt the UiiIuk) states Oovemment and with It speedily adjudicated, addreas JOHN WKIIDEHBUKN, Manager, iritnet, N. W. Wwahlna-ton, D. 0. I CURE FITS! Jtwo I mt euro I donutmMniMWlTtoiUipthMi wiumauid tiin bate tlx-ru return again. 1 mem a imI cure. I bat mada the disease ol FITS, KFI tlSY or FALLING MC'K NESS a lifa-lon study. 1 tinaiitmjreniedy to cure the worst oasea. KocaiiM sari bate failed is oo reaann for not nnw recemna" a s timid at once for a treatise anda Free Bottlooi Jiotallible remedy. OIts Kipress and Post Oltioe. 8. 0. HOOT. SI. C, 183 Pearl 8t., N. T. HOOOOOOOO Tuli'sTiny Pills Qualilti (he dyspeptic to cat whatever Q " trlihea. Tliey cause the food toam- Imllate anil nourish the Ixxlr, R-lveaa. Ppetite and develop Until. I'rlre, 86 J ornt, Exact size shown In bonier, HooQoeooo MORPHINE LI A D IT I - rr SURE CURE alMldoe Co.. 828 Clay Bt Ban Francisco FRAZER AXLE lestinthoWnrMinnr AT RtheGenuinellKha.ir old berywherel' iaB,-AnTwhere on Trial. CM nlneufFi. - TL a Co., a k au quincy. iix,0 a. YOUNG MEN! The Cpeclf lo A Mo. I. Core., without tall, all eaaea ol ott "- wtd Owt, oo maiu-r i.l ! ' sublux, l'res-enrsetricliire.lt br an Iih jtii J r hh.it. con's wlien e rerjUilK east saaf:i4, B.'l1hTaUDracat. , .. . Uaoulnrrarrra: The A.tv-iwierib.. e3 in-ai--i'lllV UmU tint at Ail r!l rAiU. I lough bf rua. Tates Good. v M BIHDIE AND I. 0 how t pity you. And In your proton. Singing, but lutein r the free air to roam. Pouring forth Uopinj that niuybe the morrow Will ope wide the door And let you fly bom. But It l bunt for you. Sweet little birdie, Safely to live in rour prison on high; Snares are without that you toon would devour. And you would fly forth To sing and to die And am I like you. IHur little birdie, Beating the bars of my elate prison wall. Wearing out hope witli long flight of bar fancy, And would 1 come forth, Hut only to full! And If the sunshine should reach the poor flower Of life that Is le't within my sad heart, 0 would It wither and kill the or blossom Used to the shadows and cold from the start! And I am sorry, then. Poor Hale birdie. Sorry for songs that ate wafted In vain. Sorry for hopes that are dreams of a fancy. O sorry for us Surrounded by pain. 'Margie K. Bell in Atlanta Constitution. Johnson and George III. Boswell tolls a very characteristic story of Dr. Johnson and George III. Johnson was allowed tho privilege of reading in tho royal library. On one occasion tho kinir, hearing or his pros enco there, cnUired tho room in order to see and converse with the great au thor. After much interesting conver sation about books and the universi ties, tho king asked him if lie were writing anything. lie answered that ho was not, for lie had pretty well told the world what ho knew, and must now read to acquire more knowledge. The king replied: "I do not think you borrow iimeli from anybody." Thou Johnson siiid he thought he had already donohis part as a writer. "I should have thought so, too, if you had not written so well, retorted Ins majesty. Johnson observed that "No man could have paid a handsomer compliment, and it was fit for a king to pay. ' When some one asked him if ho made any re ulv to tho kins's speech, lie answered: "Sir, when the king had said it, it was to be so. It was not for me to banuy civilities with my sovereign." Cham bers' Journal. Real and Hugos. A dealer in canvas back duck said the other day that there were very few chefs or caterers in town who did not occasionally subsitute red head for canvas back, and ho supplemented this statement with the cheering in formation thut only about one man out of fifty is able to detect the differ ence. A pair of canvas back Havre de Grace ducks, weight seven and one half pounds, are worth $S. When tho heads of the ducks are removed the difference between them is so slight that a great many frequent buyers of them will not buy at all unless the heads are in the place where nature intended them to be. Tho canvas back ducks which come from Lake Supe rior and Michigan feed on celery to a great extent, and their meat is there fore less fishy than the meat of the Chesapeake duck. When it is pre pared, however, by a skillful cook, they can be very readily passed off for the genuine canvas back. Pittsburg Bulletin. Muscovite Spelling. A recent order for Tolstoi's "Sevas topol" was written "Sir Uasterbold. It is perhaps not surprising that Rus-, sian names should be distorted in this queer fashion, and the fact that orders for the journal of Marie Bashkirtseff should give the surname of the author as "Basketshift" illustrates the diffi culty that prevails among our people of mastering the difficulties of Musco vite spelling. It recalls the story of a Russian general in the wars of the first Napoleon, who was reported by an English newspaper as found dead on the battlefield with a long word sticking in his throat The inference was that he was choked to death in at tempting to pronounce his own name, the misprint of "word" for "sword not occurring to the lynx eyed proof reader. San Francisco Argonaut Human Hair Imbedded In Tree. While workmen were engaged in felling a huge old hickory tree on tho S of Mrs. J. H. Ogdenin Snr ni?fleld I'a.. t"ey came upon a ffi S ' Ar deeply Imbedded in ita Sink An auger hole had been bored into the heart of the gigantic hickory and the curly lock placed therein. The hole had then been plugged up. This strange find is considered a relic of su peXn. OldresidenUUkeiUobe ihe last remnant of one of Black Jakes" spells, who employed this cu rious remedv to cure tits. The old ne-e-ro lived in'Darby about seventy years aro and his numerous queer whims have been often told. A eerie, of noemsby Ilalliday Jackson tome years ro pictured bis mysterious healings. Washington Star. A Snafca That Swallowed Mask Lante specimens of boa constrictors have been known to swallotf men whole. The case is related by the traveler Uiro niere of a criminal in the Philippine islands who hid from justice in a car em. His father, who alone knew of hia bidins place, went sometime, to we hun to tak. him rice for food One day he fonnd instead of his son an enormous boa asleep He killed it and found hi. son's body in the snake's stomach.- Washington Star. HOW ONE OLD MAN LIVES. Krouoailral llouril uml IIihhu Keeping of . a It. . t.l. nl of 1 a.hliiKtuii. It U wonderful how tlio theories of our ut live come liut k to us now m the realities T the present. Daniel WelMtcr constantly m:t lu iiJte of cur rent itleus. h;iJ when it-tkod how long it was Uforo hu used them, replied some times twenty yeuru, sometimes longer. When I was a boy, in Shelby county, I went one day to Mr. John Cooper's shoo maker's shop to bo measured for a pair tif shoes, as the custom of the country then was. ilu and his little son Robert lived alone in the woods iu a house of ne room, which was dwelling and hoe shop. Soon Dob's uncle, Gideon Kaylor, about his age, came in, and Bob Joyfully exclaimed, "Come, L'ncle Gid, we've got some potatoes, aud there is plenty of salt It seemed strange to me to see how eagerly they roasted and ate the potatoes and how happy they were. Tliey lived happily, and yet this was all their liv ing. 1 have repeated this Btory fre quently during my protieroas days as a great wonder, never dreaming that it would become my own reality, as it now is, and 1 am happy too. A Gcrmuu woman .who could 'not speak a word of English came into my ofllce one day with one of my German circulars in her hand, which Mr. Coop bad given her in Saxony. 1 sent her out into the country with a German mer chant to look at lands, and that day she bought a farm. The next day 1 made the deeds, aud she became tho owner and moved in. A neighbor soon after Ward told me that it cost that lady nothing to live. He says she put. a tin cup of coffee on the stove and a tin cup of cornmeal mush, and that is all her liv ing, but she is getting rich. 1 thought that very strange, too, never thinking that 1 should live so, but 1 do just that thing now, having remembered hearing how she lived. When I lost all my money and yot must live, I rented a room 14 by 10 feet, with heat, for $" por month not a very good room and not very well furnished, but comfortable, aud respectable, and there are plenty of them at that price. I bought an outfit as follows: An iron handy lamp, 75 cents; three seamless pint tin cn, 13 tents; ono do. quart, 13 cents; one half gallon tin cup, with cover, 10 cents; three bowls, 15 cents; cup and saucer, 10 cents; gallon glass oil can, 35 cents; oil, 15 cents; spoon, 10 cents; total outfit, $3. Then I bought one month's provisions as fol lows; Half bushel potatoes, U5 cents; ten pounds cornmeal, SO cents; three pounds Graham Hour, 15 cents; one pound ground coffee, 25 cents; eight pounds granulated sugar, i)C cents; one pound lard, 10 cents; coarse salt, 3 cents; total for the month, f 1.40. 1 am a good, hearty eater, and am full fed and live well, and am thankful for it, but 1 cannot eat all of my mouth's provision. There is always a considera ble amount over every month, aud 1 live well too. In the morning 1 light my handy lamp, till my seamless pint tin cup with water, put a tcaspoonful of ground coffee into it, put it over the lamp, and turn another tin cup, bottom 'upward, over it for a cover. In ten Uiinutos there is a pint enp of good, hot coffee. Whilo the coffee is boiling I put a little water into tho half gallon cup, not more than one-eighth full, and then fill the quart tin cup about one-fourth full of cornmeal, add a little salt, then set this cup into the half gallon cup. aud fill np the quart cup full of water and stir up the meal well. Jain in tho han dle of the quart cup so that it will go into the larger cup. As soon as the cof fee comes off set the mush on the lump. Stir it occasionally, and when it thickous aud tills up the cup take it off. 1 buy a loaf of bread for four cents for Sunday, and melt a little lard aud salt for gravy, and I live well and have plenty to eat. Many others in this city, gaunt and half starved, can live well in this way. John Howard in Washington Post Auction Parties. Auction parties are something of a novelty. On entering the guest is pro vided with the means to purchase little hurra filled with beans, every bean tak ing to itself a dollar value. The "lots" are carefully concealed rrom view, anu are being put in boxes and tied np in varicolored tissue paper. It is not safe to trust to bulky apiicarance, as often the most promising parcel reveals an in niimifieant result Some of the pur chases are dainty trifles, many absurdi ties and jokes, r unny catalogues auu to the amusement of an auction party, arhieh is reallv siin. 'y another way to bestow "favors." Uur Point of View in New York Times. Brass In Kiigland In Chaucer's Time. A metal resembling brass, but said to have been superior in quality, was known iu Eiii-'land as "uiasliu" as early as the time of Chaucer, and in the reign of Henry VIII an act or parliament was passed prohibiting the export of brass out of England. Whcthor the earlier monumental brasses still to be fonnd in our churches were made originally in England is not absolutely certain, tne probability, according to some anti quaries, being that they were of French or Belgian workmanship. Chambers' Journal Kever Lift a Grounded Wire. It is always best to avoid danger if possible, therefore there is one rule which ought to be taught in every school in the United Suites, and that is, never lift a wire off the ground. As long as it is on the ground it is harm less, no mutter what pressure may be on it The moment it leaves the ground it may be dangerous. If it is in the way of traffic you can safely pull it across tho street with your fool, then put your foot on it and bold it on the ground and itcannot hurt you, but do uot lift it Never touch a wire tied on a pole. It may not be danger ous, but it is like the unloaded gun, it may kill you. New York Telegrim. Not Truven. First Musician-It's all nonsense to mv "music soothes the savage breast" I played before Buffalo Bill a Indians once, and they got so excited I had to Second Musician Ah, but why didn't you let some one else do the playing. New York Weekly. Should Have Waited. The will of Mrs. Hannah Faxton, of Connecticut cut her nephew William off with a shilling "because be was in the habit of calling out 'raU' nnd chestnuU.' " Ilad the old lady lived i, i,.r:;ntr iriod William would M 1 " V. V- . - not bave come in for red cent le troit Free Preaa. WEATHER OAUGERS. THERMOMETERS ARE MANUFAC TURED WITH GREAT CARE. They A re Made Very Accurately, and. Though UulcMr. Vtut Through Nine teen fair of llauda Tba blfTsreot Processes of the Instruments. The uiuking of a thermometer may be either a delicate scientific operution, or 1 cue of the simplest tasks of the skilled uiechauic, accordiug to the sort of titer-, mouieter made. With the extremely sensitive and minutely accurate bistro-' menu designed for scientific uses great care is taken, and they are kept in stock for months, sometimes for years, to be compared und recompared witli instru ments thut are known to be trustworthy. But so much time cannot be spent over the comparatively cheap thermometers in common use, and tliese are uutde riijv Idly, though always carefully. The method of manufacture has beeu so sys tematized within a few years that the very cheapest thermometer should not vary more than a fraction of a degree from the correct point Whether the thermometer is to be charged with mercury orulcohol; wheth er it is to be mounted iu a frame of wood, pressed tin or brass, the process is substantially the same. Mercury is generally used for scientific instruments, but most makers prefer alcohol, because it is cheaper. The alcohol is colored red with an auiliue dye which does not fudo. The thermometer maker buys his glass tubus iu long strips from the glass fac tories. The glassblowor on the premise, cut. these tubes to tho proper lengths, and with his gits jot and blowpipe makes the bulb on tho lower end. The bulbs are then filled with colored alcohol, and the tulies stand for twenty-four hours. On the following day another work man holds each bulb in turn over a gas jet until the colored fluid, by its expan sion, entirely fills tho tube. It then goes bitck into the hands of the glass blower. He closes tho upper end and turns the tip backward to make the lit tle glass hook which will bolp keep the tube in place in the framo. IUI1KING TIIK Tl'DP.3. The tutes now rest until some hun dreds of them, perhaps thousands, are ready. Then the process of gauging bo- kins. There aro no marks whatever on the tube, aud the first guide mark to be made is the1 freezing point. 8-i (legs. Fahrenheit This is found by plunging the bulbs into melting snow. No other thermometer is needed for a guide, for melting snow gives invariably the exact freezing point This is an unfailing tost for any thermometer whose accuracy may be suspected. But melting snow is not always to be hud, and a little ma chine resembling a sausage grinder is brought into use. This machine shavos a block of ico into particles, which an swer the purpose as well as snow. Whon the bulbs have been long enough in the melting snow a workman takes them one by one from their icy bath, seizing each so that his thumb nail marks the exact spot to which tho fluid bus fallen. Here ho makes a scarcely perceptible mark upon the glass with a tine file, and goes on to the next The tubes, with the freezing point marked on each, now go into the hands of another workman, who plunges thorn, bulb down, into a vessel tilled with witter kept constantly at 84 degs. A standard thermomoter attached to the inside of this vessel shows that the temperature of tho wator is correct Another tiny file scratch is put at 01 Then a third workman plunge, the bulbs into another vessel of wator kept constantly at 1)0. This is marked like the others, aud the tube is now sup plied with these guide marks, each Si degs. from the next A small tab is then attached to each tube, on which its number is written for, owing to un avoidable variations in the bore of the tube, each one varies slightly from the others. MARKINO TUB CASES. With its individuality thus established the tube goes into the hands of a mark er, who fits its bulb and hook into the frame it is to occupy, and makes slight scratches on the framo corresponding to the 33, 01 and 90 degree marks on the tube. The frame hits a number corre sponding with the nuuibor of the tube, and the tube is laid away in a ruck amid thousands. The frame, whether it be wood, tin or brass, goes to the gauging room, where it is laid upon a stooply sloping table, exactly in the position marked for a thermomoter of that size. The 03, 04 and HO degree marks must correspond with the marks upon the table. If they do not, the error in marking is detected and the frame is sent bock for correc tion. A long, straight bar of wood or metal extends diagonally across the table from the lower right hand corner to the upper left hand corner. On the right this works upon a pivot and on the left it rest, in a ratchet, which lets it ascend or descend only one notch at a time. That notch marks the exact distance of i degs. W ith the three scratches already made for a basis the marker could hardly make a mistake in the degrees if be tried. The marks made upon the frame or case are all made by hand with a geo metric pen and India ink if the frame is of wood, and with steel die. if it is of metal The tube bearing the correspond ing number is next attached to the frame, and the thermometer is ready for the market without further testing. Some makers use only two guide marks, but the best makers use three. In tho process of manufacture the ordinary thermometer goes through the hands of nineteen workmen, half of whom are often girls and women. Some of the larger concerns in and near New York produce several hundred thousand instrument, annually, and on every one of them the purchaser may see. if be looks closely, the tiny tile scratch on the ghtss at 82. 64 and M degree marks or somewhere near them, as different mak ers use different point.. -Hew York Sun The Lara-est Ibwklug Stone, Rn.nns Ariwi wins to have the AM. ' . ' . T . " largest rocmng stone j et uiw.uvcn.-u. I. ; .;t,,r.tn.l m, tl,i aloix of the moun tain of Tandil, in the southern part of .. ; I . i M. tin foAl me province, ttnu iiikbuici i"v long by 18 feet broad and 2l feet high. Its bulk is 5,01)0 cubic feet, and it ot laut 9'i intu Nffvprthnless. it is to touchily poised that a sinjjlo person can set It roc King. nen uie trinrl hlnwa from the southeast the stone, which is pyramidal in form, sways to and fro on its foundation like the brancbe of a tree. New I York Telegram. PLEASURES OF MEMORY What a Messed thing i. memory 1 How it brings up the pleasures of the lust, and hides its unpleusautnessesl You recall your childhood days, do yon not, and wish they would return? You remember tho pleasant associations, while the unpleasant ones are forgotten. Perhaps to your uiind comei the face of some friend. It wu. once a pule, sad face. It showed marks of tmin, lines of rare. It seemed to be looking Into the hereafter, tho unknown future. And then you recalled how it brightened, how it recovered iu rosy hue, how it became a picture of happiness anil joy. Do you remember these things? Al'any people do, and gladly tell how the health re turned, how happiness ciiino back, how the world seemed bright. They tell how they were once weak, nerve less, perlia ps in pain, certainly un happy. They tell of sleepless nights, restless days, untouched food, un strung nerves. And then they tell how they became happv, healthy and strong once more. Vou have heard it oiten in tho past, have you not? You have heard peoplo describe how they were cured and keut in health? You certainly can reiueml)er what it if that has so heled people in America, If not, listen to what Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller, who is known universally as the great dress reformer, says: "Six years ago, when su tiering from mental cure ud overwork, I received the most pro nounced iHMietit from tho use of that great medicine, Warner's Safe Cure." Ah! now you remember. Now you re call how many people you have heard ay this same thing. Now you recollect bow much you have heard of this great Cure, Now you are ready to admit that memory is usuully pleusing, that the highest pleasure comes from perfect neultli, ami tliat tins greut remedy bai done nioro to produce and prolong health than any other discovery ever known Iu tne entire history ol the wnoli world. Btie nuts her hand around mj ueck, A slave to heauty's plot , I put my hand lustile uiy vest Aud Rive her all l'v gut. SAFE, HIHK ANU 81 KKDY. No external remedy ever yet devised has so fully and unquestionably met these three prime conditions as successfully a Allcock's Poroi's I'lastkri. They are safe because tliey contain no dtlcterious drugs and are manufactured unon soientlfla prin cipl s of medicine. They are sure because nothing gots into tneni except inyrciitenis which i ro exactly adapted to the purposes for which a pluster is required. They are pmly in their anion because their medic inal qua'ities K" right to their work of re lieving pain aud r. storing the na'tiral and healthy performance of the functions of iiuiH' les, nerves an I skin. Hewaie'of Initiations, and do not I de ceived by misrepreseiiluil n. Ask for Ai.h- rocK's, and let no oiluiiation or explana tion Imbu e you to accept a substitute. Ai.lcoi k'm Cor and Iicnion cfiiiKi.ns tf fo t quick and certain relief. Tosrhcr Ji'hiiuv. v u uiav Ull me what no- llllml woiintiii U-nehis Johnny Nut t.i run a lO.tOuuian tor allot) 111. . If u ces lie I he tuie test of merit, it is asettl.nl fact that "Wruitt'i KruMhinl Tut- rt " have i eiiiul for the p ompt relief of coughs, colds anu iiirout truuuies. A man who ha t ie in uev in to otX for a summer 1 1 u' a ly lo s the timu, ami those who have the time iisti Uy li v . no uiunvy. The proprietors of Kly's Cream Italm do not claim it to be a cure a1!, but a sure rem edy for catarrh ami cold in the head, f .... ill:...-. I ...i.l. I. 1 iidve orcii ttiuicmi euu uaiunu uir twenty years. It became chron'O, and ex tended to in v tliroat. cauniiK hoarseness aii' (trial tliillculty lit sp aking; Indeed, for years l was not sine to speak more man thi'tv tninut-s, and ofien this with treat dillluulty. 1 al o to a great extent lost the sense of heurinir. lly the use of Kly's Cream lltilin ail dropping ol mucus lias ceased, and my voice aud hearing have greatly liupr ved. James W Duvlison, Attornpy-at-lttw, Moiiiuouin, in. Anul v Halm into each nostril. It Is ?uickly absorbed, (fives relief at once, 'rice, 50 cents at dr iggisis' or by mail. I.I.Y IlR ITII KKH, 60 Warren Street, New York. a ooihi place: ron hots. Hoitt's School, near Mlllhrae, Han Mateo county, Cal., In charge of ex-State Buper- iniemient ira u. iiom aim no, is uu- loubtedlv one of the best schools lor lioys on the i'acitio Coast. the Knsmcllne stove Polish; no dust, no smell. Tit Osrmsa for breakfast. WHatHakes Him Look so happy? He Smokes MASTIFF. More solid comfort in one package of Mastiff tobacco than you can get out of any other plu cut in the world. Try a package and be convinced. J. B Pare Tobacco Co., Richmond, Virginia. ay li' y fv.f'm'm.r TOWER'5 y ; IMPROVED Slicker la tha only Absolutely Water Proof Coat 1 Guaranteed Lew,! M(-VT to Peel, Break or Stick. 4KmI lUI toLeakittheSeami. Thrra are two wars r eaa toll Uit I'iiIm lllctf: U ri Hrsndtrsds marl snd Soft Wiw. sa Collsr. Sold sTtrrwhsra, or MM frs tot ansa. A. J. TOWER, rtanulr. Boston, Mass. Osrkhleia Ursa It Drtttr Uisn aa waS asss4easiavs4aassrllM ftaa aaaaa, GONSUnPTIO!!. 1 bass a fwertrte lasted ferine abose disease; hf Ha ess thnnssnrla at eases of the worst king and aMmn (Uofina- has base emd. IieWdsostrnnf laasi (site. ia Its sioeacr. Out le.il ml T vo aoTTLU rasa, eita VALUABLE TBEATIiKaathiadlsMaateanaas. itm who anil sand aw Uiair Kspnaa asd P. a addrsea. f. A. ftlM-eaa. M. C 183 Pemrl Kb. It. V. JU rifr Aaaaror and Analytical Chemist, . II. I Vi V Wsahlnalon rH., Portland, Or. H. F. N. U. No. -. F. H. U. No. 629 S ff I X DEAD SEA FRCITS. They slay multitudes when ther are the prod uct ol tii'iilwlof liirlpleut illsuaae. A "sllKtt" Itilil, a 111 1)1 luillKuatlnll, blllouaueai or collatl IMtlnii, each or aujr ol thrae "minor ailments" silvance In many casts a ith lesKiie dctrtJ)liie; strides" dim hem a swift, early ik-lcat with lliMU'tierasioinath Hitlers and aveitlhe latinur. Aiwrnelhy adtnliilst. led all alarming rrbuke Ui the mall whn Inlorinct hi in that be nail "niilv a co d!" 'Only a o Id " ruxati-d the d' Cmr. "What would lehave-the planne", Ithcuuia tliin and la rlp e are catlli exll nllibl at the stari. M liy thtm allnw ilium to kui up a full head ' sleaiiir I'utou the brakes w Hi the lilt trrs. The neiiUI warmih which this supeib medicine dlltiiH S thniiiKh the evatnin. the im pelua It kIvi-s to theoirculatlmi of the blind, it soothing and stn-iiKlhriiliijr i-AWt u inn tne licrvnui.su clalli recommend It totlevnl'rbled aud sick, 'Tls the great spedllo for lualaila. The man who Is the most awkward at saying like things Is usually the most sluiere. 100 IIKWAKD. S3100. The readers of this paper will be n'esed to learu that there la at least one dreaded disease tnat Mtcni'e h been able to cute In ail lis stages, and that Is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh 1'ii'e Is thiionly poaltlvi cure now known t the med Icai fiatcruliy. Catarrh, being a ronaliltittmisl dlscnae, requires a Coiialltutliuial tiealmei t. Mad s Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, si tint; illrecl'y upon the bld and minima suriap-s ol the sysiein, thereby destroying the (ouiiilntlmi ol the illacaS'i slid giving the patient strength by bulldlkg up the rouatttntlnii and asahtlng nature In did ig Its work The proprietors have so much tilth Iu lis curative powers mat tliey niter 1100 tor any ease that It falls to cuie. Heud for list ol testimonials. A'drraa K. J. CIIKSKY ACO., Toledo, 0. tW Bold by druggists; 75 cents. COPYRIGHT 191 Hard to tale tho big, oU-fusliioned pill. It'i pretty hard to hove to take it, too. Vou wouldn't, if you realized fully how it shocks and weakens the lystem. Luckily, you iW have to tako it. Dr. lVrce'i Tleasant Pellets nre better. They're sensible. They do, mildly nnd gently, more than the ordinary pill, with all il disturb' anco. They regulate tho liver, stomach ami bowels, as well as thoroughly clcanso them. They're tho original Little T.lvi r Tills, purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, the smallest and the easiest to tako. Ono littlo Pellet for a gentle laxa tive three for a cathartic Sick Ileadacho, Bilious Headache, Con stipation, Indigestion, Bilious At tacks, and all derangements of tho Liver, Stomach and Dowels are promptly and permanently cured. They're the cheapest, too, for thoy'ro guaranteed to give satisfac tion, or your money is returned. Vou pay only for tho good you got. sfuiA Ish ewe. This GRHAT COUCH CURE, this success lul CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by drug cliti on a positive guarantee, a test that no othet Cure can stand succeaafully. If V"U have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LACRlPrE.lt wilt cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it onirkly and relief is sure. If you fear CON SUM ITU N, don't wait until your case is hope. 1cm, but take this Cure at once aud receive im. mediale help. Ijtrge bottles, 50c. and Hl.oo, Travelerr convenient pocket size 25c. Ask your druggist for SHILOH'S CURE. If youi lungs are sore or back lame, use ShUoh's Por ous Plasters. Price, 2jc. SURE. YSf.iVST TRY California Diamond DR.ETOBT'8 r A T A T? D TT Rem kdy. It is VAlAIiUIl Tho Croat Curo. Ho one so bad srlirre Ufa axlala but may ba hsIpaS by Ibl. crest run, SO eta. by dric-Wior oiaU. 4. T. IVCII t C8 , 1C9 9mitea Ei, . T Ct7 Pianos and Organs. WINTER & HARPER, 71 Morrlaon 8tret, Portland, Or. una nun. Aa Simonds Crescent - -tJIIUI And All Kinds of MILL SAWS. Alao Saw Repairing. SIMONDS SAW CO.. 75 Front Srramt. Portland. Or. -mi LQy ELL DIAMOND CYCLES For Laaiaa and Cents. KIs atslna ' In Pnaumatlo Diamond Frsmo, mbo. earns la lorao of linos, Skysls f aaslssas rata. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.,Mfra.,K7 Wasblogtas St, BOSTON, MASS- UNLOAD don't feel like work. The ft I I O trouble is your liver is tor pid. You are full of bile. I w II Get rid of it without delay. Three dses of loora'l Eeiealcd Remedy will do it and make I I C D you feel like a new person. For sale by all drucpeta. la I V Ell H. a Sana. lHOamas, M AHU' ACTUS. OfaUM IN AND LASOSST OlSTRIBUTIRS Of general Family Supplies at uusaa on smau lot. Direct to Contumer$ at the very Lowest rrieet, ASK FOB OCR PRICK LIST. Boa Tain for Tala. K Cbarayo) for Carta;. Mo C barf a for ataaimaj. "H. t ss OX15 iSXJOYft Both the method and results when Svrun of Fiira ia taken: it is uleiuaut nnd refreshing to tho taste, ami acta cjently yet promptly on the Kidneys, uiver ana uoweis, cleanses ttie sys tem effectually, dispels colds, heal iches and fevers ami cure a haliti:.il constipation permanently. Fr sale ' rrt laai .., 1,11 . io uw ana ei Dotuc uy ail uruggixu. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SA fHAHOISIA). CtL. touisviut. nr. sf sv ton r. DROP IT If 1 1 any tmsinctk not f.ii I uir yot drop It ai d buy an Im Iinivcd 1'eialuma ucubator. K0HE MONET ran ! made In rais in :l hli keus Ihsn In !''k aim utlier b"tnea ''3 lnfth'T-ipltal Invest- SVAvents fur Minn's B"ne Cntter, Neces sity Clover .Cutter, and tiyr-'Vthlna: In quired If uoulur raisers. PETAlllhU INCUBATOR CO., Petaluma, Cal. Season lor tot Opens Iprll hi. If Too Ara In Nard nt Trout riles, 6at tba Htat. '( if i fi.it Rlandard nnallly. I In hnnka. per dns SU St OreKiin Tnillt Kllea, 4 In 8 hiHika, lHr dns AO Pin Itavprard Wlna: 1'lles. 4 Ins hnnka. ier 1I11S I.H0 Any of a ovaiinallliea ae-1 by niailmi reivlpl of priea. Also a full line of lto!M, IU.KI.M, l.lNKrl. etc., at Hudson's Cun Store, 93 FIRST ST.. PURTLSND, OR. f Hrnd for Illustrated rataloiiiis. Dynamite 1 POWDER CO., II CALIFORNIA ST., AN FRANCISCO. If you want I'OWDKK for Minlna, Railroad Work, Stump hlsitinK or Tret Planting, semi for I'rir l.iat. pUjiTAIIi BUDS TEA A blend from the formula 01 an old EnKllsh Tea Men bant. Best Tea in the World for the Price. MJ cents r lb. at your dealer's or matld from the sole Importers, CLOSSET A DEVERS, Portland, Or. J. McCRAKEN & CO., -UKALKKw IN -Roche Harbor Una, Portland Csmsrrt, act ion Sato and Utss Plaster, Hslr, Flro Brick ana Fir Cur. . LAND PLASIEI. 00 North Front Straws, Cor. D, PORTLAND, OR. METALLIC SKYLIGHTS Iron Cornices, CORRUGATED IRON ROOFING. J. C. BUYER, Portland, Or. INSTITUTE, SELECT SCHOOL ICR GIRLS. Next BPtHlon will beichi Angimt 1, 1W?; itx tPHiilh year; etKhlet'ii lmcht'm. Kr lllUKtrated mtnloKiie nddra a Hiv. E. B. Church, A. M.( lriuoilt m VtleucU bt., tku Frniitlw, Ui. I Hli? fi In lhRrknrtwlMta iHnrllni rami'fly fnr All Ihi onnaturftl drwhirrai d IprtvfttvtlliwaVUHiof m!! A CrUln run for lb di-bilN Utllif WttkUMI pMUllAt to frnmpB. WrdssuW W I riVMrihallfinrl fnal M A. A. A i 8T0NFR, It 0 ,0fnTua.v. JWl hold hy ItraaaUla. Ground Cross Cuts. Cushion and Solid Tires. btssl Droo Forrlnrs. SImI Ltd. A b aiiiiiiiuy li-li'.-lriiied Intu inir'io of liictitmrnra. Ilrnod e"iniid all llmla "f Chlrken Fixing' FRE UDS IRVIMG iTiiSllAYaV I ii.a,.aM4 aia la t'J ssaM SUWMfa. Omen TratkNaawLS TubHnf .Adjuil.bl.B til Qtanngi to all runninf parti, Including Psdslt. &uipsniion Stddlo. Strictly man GRADE ia Every Partioula. stamp rnr oar lOO-naa lllualrslfd ealavl Itlllns, Barolrera, Hporllaa; tloodSjjte. I Do you feci bad? Do you have a headache? Does your back ache? You can't eat and Baaci.it J. batisu 416-418 FEOHT ST, 15-13 CEDAR ST, S. F.