Hood's Sarsaparilla Leads all other medicines in the cure of all spring ailments humors, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, paleness and nervousness. Take it. Get it today In usual liquid form or (ablets called Sarsatabs. 100 Doses H IN LATE WINTER AND EARLY SPRING We seldom feel JUST RIGHT At such a time KASFARILL is the best and fest Blood Purifier, the most successful prescription for spring humors and such disorders of the blood as boils, pimples, pustu4es, blotches, sores and cutaneous eruptions. Kasparilla is admitted to bt the best remedy for that lack of energj and the peculiar debility so prevalent during the close of winter and the opening of spring. For derangements of the di gestive organs it is a natural corrective, operating directly upon the liver and ali mentary canal, gently but persistentlj stimulating a healthy activity. It! beneficial influence extends, however, tc every portion of the system, aiding in th processes of digestion and assimilation ol food, promoting a wholesome, natural appetitet correcting sour stomach, bad breath, irregularities of the bowels, con stipation and the long list of trouble! directly traceable to those unwholesome conditions. Kasparilla dispels drowsi ness, Oeauacue, uadtacue auu uesjjuuu ency due to inactivity of the liver, kidneys fcnd digestive tract. It is a strengthening tonic of the highest value. THE BEST SPRING MEDICINE HOYT Chsmicai, Co. Portland, Oregor A Week in BELGIUM Love Letters Burled With Her. A maiden lady of Hanley (Staffs) who died at the age of more than ninety years asked shortly before her death that her love letters should be burled with her. Her relatives found several letters, dating back ome of them to the 'SOs, with the ink almost faded. Her last request was compiled with. London Evening Standard. Miniature Specialization. A young medical student was being quizzed by one or his teachers: "In what will you specialize?" he was asked. "Disease of the nostril," replied the student. "Good," said the profes sor, enthusiastically. "Which nos trli?" Mothers win find Mrs. Wlnilow's Bonthlnt, syrup tiie but remedv to use foi their cLlldroj luring iht teothing period. New r .v.. ...uicnoe. As long as the present process of extracting radium from pitchblende Is bo enormously expensive It avails lit tle that new pitchblende fields have been found In the south seas. How ever, It Is of scientific Interest if not of commercial advantage. Certainly the radium manufacturers are not us ing all the pitchblende available at thr oresent tit-" dance Backward. Flchte once said: "The day that opens for us another year Is best used In beginning that year aright; but ono wastes no time, In spite of this, by a backward look or two, not only to balance his own books, as It were, but also to take due note of what memorable men and women have ac complished In the years that were theirs. So shall he at once Inform his mind and raise examples to his future effort." And the sentences might well at. -mil text to what has here been written. The Chicago tire could have been pre vented with one pail of water, but the Water was not handy. Keep a bo tb' ol Hamlin Wizard Oif handy nnd prevent the licry pains of inll mmat on. i rutn ooiore am. Herodotus tells us, In the first book of his history, that from the age of five to that of twenty, the ancients In structed their children only on three things, namely: to manage a horse, to hoot dexterously with their bows, and to speak the truth. The study of truth Is perpetually Joined with vir tue; there Is no virtue which does not derive Its original from truth, Just as ihere Is no vice which does not spring from a He. Judicial Distinction. A man whose trousers were stolen from a Pullman car has been awarded damages In the sum of $439.50, which Is doubtless all the trousers were rorth, but sets a ridiculously low es timate on the amount of "mental anguish." LAZY LIVER "I find Cascarets so good that I would not be without them. I was troubled a sreat deal with torpid liver and headache. Sow since taking Cascarets Candy Cathar tic I feel very much better. I shall cer tainly recommend them to my friends as the best medicine I have ever seen." Ahm Bazinet, -Otborn Mill Nc. a, Pall River, Maw Plaaaanc Palatabla. PoCanL Tut Good. Do Good. Nmr Slakan. Waakan or Grip 10c Sc. Ma. Navar aold ta bulk. TV. aan. rina tablat atampM C C C Qaarantaaito baa. ALONG stretch of great white buildings looming at you through the haze is your first Introduction to Ostend. As une steamer approaches near er auu uea.1 iu lunuiug mage, lue outlines of column and gable, tower and minaret, balcony r.nd arch, and the sound of distant music come to you; and then, as the buttresses of the pier absorb your view, you are greeted with a babel of French and Flemish, and all the bustle of a for eign port. You begin to realize the delights of having arrived at the most beautiful summer city in the world Ostend. For the moment you may be be wildered with all that you see. Your dinner is being served to you In a vast chamber filled with exquisitely gown- Hotel de VI lie. Bruges. ed women and men, mosUy in evening dress. Through the open French win dows a great crowd Is passing along the Digue, the magnificent roadway which stretches along the sea to the right and left of Ostend, to France on one side, to Holland on the other. You hear every language, and you oon notice every type of nationality, but always the best of that national ity. Ostend Is the congress ground of the aristocrat from everywhere. Every body, laughing and happy, everybody living for the moment, forgetful of the before, and careless of the afterwards. Only Ostend, Relne des Plages, can produce such a scene; nowhere In all the world Is it equalled. Then, off to the station, for you are going to see as much of Belgium as you can in your week's holiday. In half an hour you are In Bruges, the old, old City of Flanders, "The Venice of the North," as she once proudly called herself, when she could boast of 200,000 Inhabitants, of a sov ereign's brilliant court, and of mas- KITCHENS IN OLDEN TIMES Size of Culinary Department Was More Important Than Its Fur nishings Long Ago. In olden days the size of the kitchen seems to have been of more import ance than Its fitments In detail. At Hurstmonceux, for Instance, there was a kitchen 28 feet high, with three huge fireplaces, and a bakehouse with an oven 14 feet In diameter; then there Is an old Welsh kitchen at Penrhyn Old Hall, near Llandudno, dating from the Fifteenth Century, which has many primitive culinary contrivances, now obsolete or super seded by more modern devices; a meatjack with a flywheel, a steel toasting stand, and a fan bellows. A wonderful old kitchen Is at Battle Abbey, and that at St. Mary's Hall, Coventry, Is remarkable for the fa mous "knave's post," to which possi bly recalcitrant scullions were tem porarily attached. There Is a medieval kitchen it Westminster Abbey, al though nowadays little remains Whereby to identify it ave the rubble sive walls and a powerful army able to defy an emperor's wrath. Now Bruges has nothing but her thrilling romantic past and the inestimable treasures of art which even her con- In Ghent you must see the cathedral with Its world-famous altar-piece "The Adoration of the Lamb," by the broth ers Van Eyck, and the tombs of for mer bishops, wonders In carved mar ble. Nor -must you fall to pause a few minutes before the town hall, where you will view the stone pulpit from which Jacques Van Artevelde, "dear gossip and ally" of Edward III, ad dressed his turbulent fellow-burghers The belfry, with its "Roland" bell, is close to the town hall and a few steps further is the Castle of the Counts, former palace of the sovereigns of Flanders. It Is now a partially re stored ruin of great extent, with a torture chamber beneath the Donjon, and other uncanny evidences of how they did things in the good old days After dinner you had better catch your train for Brussels, for you will arrive at the capital long before mid night, and you will have ample Unit to see something of night life in "Lit tle Paris" before you go to bed. Brussels Is more or less familiar ground to everybody who has been on the continent, even if the rest of Bel glum is not so well known. Having breakfasted, you will start early on your sight-seeing, and If you have not been to the Belgian capital before you will begin with the town hall' This remarkable Gothic building dates from the fourteenth century, and wit nessed the execution of Counts Ek mont and De Horae by Alva. You must do the cathedral and picture galleries before you lunch, and you will find an excellent restaurant in one of the many arcades, where you may also be tempted into buying some lace. After lunch, drive through new Brussels with its splendid boulevards to the great Palace of Justice, which crowns the upper city. Antwerp is only half an hour's train from Brussels, and you should give It a full day, at any rate; so arrive as early as you can from Brussels, and begin with the cathedral, If only to see the Rubens masterpieces. There are one or two more churches almost of equal interest, one of which con tains the family mausoleum of Rubens Then there Is the Plantln Museum of Printing, with the residence of the great Antwerp citizen Just as he used to Inhabit It, and several picture gal leries crammed with treasures. But Antwerp is the city of pictures, and you must watch your time. You should walk along the splendid docks there are raised stone terraces for promenading and in the midst of the bustle of mighty commerce there is flooring, the buttery hatch and an ad joining cellar now or lately the dining-room of the resident canon. Hamp ton Court Palace, too, has Its "great kitchen," with a vast vaulted roof and sets of antlers on the walls. Our ancestors fully recognized the advantages of having a large kitchen. An order, dated April 19, 1106. com mands Hugh de Nevill to have the king's kitchen at Clarendon roofed with shingles, and to eause two new kitchens to be erected, one at Marl borotfgh and the other at Ludger hall. to dress the royal dinners In; "and it is particularly directed that each kitchen shall be provided with a furnace sufflcienUy large to rout two or three oxen. Arizona Dates, I am on my way to Arizona, where I go to inspect the African date which I brought to this country through the aid of the agricultural department of Washington In 1889. The dates were obtained In Arabia, Egypt and coun tries along the Mediterranean, i have not seen these date trees since they ware planted la 1890. They wer On old Steen Castle to be explored, the former fortress of the port and palace of the Marquesses of Antwerp. Here is a collection of all manner of mediaeval marvels, musical Instru ments, beds, torture-machines, and a variety of horrible dungeons in the depths below the basement. Prom Antwerp go to LUge, about an hour and a half's Journey, but the views from the train will repay you The old city of the prince-bishops and the birthplace of Charlemagne is sin gularly free from smoke and noxious vapors and other outward signs of Its commercial activity, thanks to its sit uation. It Is built In a sort of basin between the hills around It; on the slopes of the hills are the factories, and all the unpleasantness blows over the city. The Palace of the Bishops, the unl versity and the citadel can be done by you, with lunch between, and In the later afternoon you can catch a train for Spa and arrive at the cele brated city of springs In time to make yourself presentable for dinner. At Spa you are again In the midst of the best continental society, with the usual sprlnkline at AmeHm'n mil. Uonalres and English "milords;" and it Is Wednesday evening In your week's holiday. You will nnd Spa full of amusement, for It Is the sports center of Belgium. You can now takt the railway to Coo, where there Is a waterfall of wondrous beauty, and yov. find yourself amid the wild scenery of the Ambleve river, and on the bor ders of Belgium's' miniature Switzer land, tt" T f "vinous nnrsrilaa nf tho Ardei r -v F c n Coo you can take a drive to ' r Iiamps, a little town shio f-.4: g rhi Ambleve rapids and lyir j in tfce n l ist of scenery of 'extra ordinary beauty. However, your week Is coming to a close, ar.d so you had best take a train from Remouchamps to Jemelle, on the main line again of the state railways, and manage to reach Namur, traveling the while through one of the most picturesque districts, not only In OTTUMWA WOMAN CURED By Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound Ottumwa, Iowa. "For vears I was almost a constant sufferer from female trouhle in all its dreadful forms; shooting pains all over my body, sick headache, spinal weakness, dizziness, depression, and everything that was horrid. I tried many doctors in different parts of the Uniteul States, but Lvdia E. NjPinkham's Vegeta. Jble ComDnnnd ha done more for me than all the doctors. I feel it my duty to tell you theso facts. My heart is full of gratitude to you for my cure." Mrs. Harriet E. Wampler. 624 8. Hansom Street Ottumwa, Iowa. Consider This Advice. Kn woman ulw.i.1,1 o,,l,..,;f ....4 " . - ..... .. OUUUU, IA. a DU1K1- Cal ODeration. which mav mpan Hnafh until she has given Lvdia E. Pinkham'a v egetaDie compound a tair tnah This famous medicine, made only from roots and herbs, has for thirty years proved to be the most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost! every city and town in the United States bear willing testimony to the" wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Pinkham, at L,ynn, Mass., Invites all sick women to write her for advice. Iter advice is free, confidential, and always lielpf nL Guild Houses, Antwerp. Belgium, but in all Europe. Namur la the ancient fortress which has fig ured in the wars of history for more than six centuries. Namur, Indeed, is encompassed with the fairest charms that nature can re veal. The lovely valleys and hills of the Meuse, the Lesse and the Ourthe rivers, the grottoes of Han and Roche fort, and many other romantic attrac tions In the way of feudal ruins, pic turesque cascades, fairy glens, and noble forests can be made a menu of daily sight-seeing, to be prolonged or curtailed as your holiday permits. The fortress of Namur, with the ramparts and earthworks, which were so formid able In the days when William of Orange besieged It, are now portion of the public pleasure ground. During your week of rapid sight-seeing you will have discovered that Bel glum Is not only the country that seems to have been the center place of the world's history ever since his tory began, but that every Inch of Its territory Is romantic and Instructive. Its natural beauties and perfect acces sibility from end to end make it the most enjoyable tourist and holiday land In all Europe. Originality. People are always talking about originality; but what do they meanT As soon aa we are born, the world begins to work upon us, and this goes on to the end. And after all, what can we call our own, except energy, strength and will. If I could rtv. an. account of all that I owe to great pre decessors and contemporaries there would be but small balance in my favor. Goethe. INDIGESTION "T CAN BE RELIEVED AND HOS TETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS is the medicine you can rely on to do the work It is a real digestive help. Try it today. Refuse all Substitutes rooted suckers and every year the planters down there send me a box or two of each year's product as a sample. The orchards having date trees ' are becoming more numerous every year, and It will not be long be fore we have all the dates that we can consume and will do away with the present ImportaUon. The date is suitable to Arizona. Professor Van Dusen, in Sunday Oregonian. -Mm f M i a, To Protect Plumblnq. Paper, being a non-conductor ot heat, makes the best possible cover for kitchen or laundry pipes that are apt to freeze. Wind around tightly, fastening into place with a string. True Charity. "It is no great matter to live loving ly with humble and meek persons, but he that can do so with the peevish and perverse he hath true charity.". Jeremy Taylor. An Illuminating Remark. "Is Belle a girl who lights up wall!" "No. but keep it dark," j lUr r LEV ; TEA SPICES BAKING POWDER EXTRACTS JUST RIGHT mm v"Hhe name ."o- to remember jm. trm you need a remedy )g f.r coucVig ,nd cokps