THEATRICAL KNIGHT. ""'. IU on Title. air Augustus Harris K t of tho Covent Garden twTM TnaT is the first theatrical ' Lmlon' whom has becn cK?T Upon knighthood in i Tt t" 01 Covcnt Garden Theatre since l:o where lie produced a larRe number of successful pantomimes in a man ner t hat tins made him the idol of half the clnldt en of the Ihijrlish metropolis. He has, also written, in collaboration Meritt. "1'lie World," 'Youth '-llu-man Nature," ''A Hun o; Luck," Pleasure, rhe Avmade." "The Uoyiil Oak1' and "A Mil ion of Money " Mr. Harris is in the Strand division of the London county council, was elected one of the shcritl's of London forlMU. is a popular man amonir men and is familiarly known as "Gus" Harris all over London. FOR TENNIS PLAYERS. A Few I'oinlN lor Thorn 1 llfl lVn tin- Kmlu't. A good racket costs about ..". If you respect it don't tie it up witli a bow. r About your dress 11 vim are going to wear stays you had better stay oil" the teams Held. You don't want to be inside a whalebone fence with steel gate-posts when you are trying for a good delivery, and when the si.e of your waist will be of no e msequenee as compared with the style of vour playing. Put on a plain round skirt, full enough to allow you to take a siable stride. It should not quite reach the instep. (Jet a ilaimelette shirt waist with a pocket, a cap with a visor and regulation rubber shoes. Having ar rayed yourself in this garb stra.ght way forget you have it on, else you won't piny decently. An obliging friend can cause you to understand th.! more important tennis rules in lifteen minutes' time. This does not mean Unit :n fifteen minutes you can become a p ayer. Fired with ambition, you will ptobably play three or four sets that lust day, and the next morning your uprising will bo with mourning and your downsitting with lamentation. Hut in a week's time you will find yourself ossified. There will never I e a time, However, when, if you forget to put on a blazer while resting between sets, you won't be in danger of catching a glorious and well-deserved cold. There M'e three points to remember: "Keep your feet on the ground and your eyes on ti:e ball; play with some one wtio can beat you; never play for the spectators." The whole art of tennis is in these rules. Norman JIiiiii'o'm .onvood. Norman L. Munro, the publisher, re cently tested the speed of his new steam launch, Norwood, in a run from the Narrows to the dock at .Sandy Hooki The Norwood met the Monmouth, of the Sandy Hook line, oil' the Narrows, and the intention was to beat her two miles in the run down. Itoth boats at the start were running at the full rate of speed. It was exactly 4:10 o'clock when the boats were opposite to each other. Then the .Norwood started ahead by blowing her whistle, and made out fi m Fort Hamilton. At 4:18 the launch was oil' Coney Island Point, und at 4:4 she passed the dock at Sandy tlook seven minutes ahead and two "miles ahead in advance of the Monmouth. The run was twelve miles, and was made in ;t'Jm. The Norwood is tilift, overall, 'lit. Gin. beam and thirty-six inch draught, with a triple expulsion engine, coil boiler built in he Thornycroft style. All of her pipes are made of twisted gun barrel melal. The hull is of mahogany with oak frame and steel girders. The Norwood was built a year ago by C. 1), Mcslur, the designer, at Amesbury port, Mass. At the trial trip she was not a success, and she was taken to Urooklyn where her boilers were over hauled by the firm of Keiley A Crowley, and her hull by Capt. W. A. Seaman, of Heaehport, N. .1. The -Norwood carried 1 n pound steam pressure to the 6-iuare inch. 150 YurilH l iulcr Water. Tom Forrest, the all-around athlete of Sheepshead Hay, hist week swam 150 yards under water for a wager of 825. The challenge was made byom McKeou, an expert swimmer, of the fcame place. The tlilllou iw complUbed lifter two utt mi U. -lirbt t!mo Komt "trucU liU beau Ufulnst tmolil anchor. A MUSEUM OF DEATH. PLACE THAT IS FULL OF SATIONAL HORROR. SEN- "' r SlclljU CiipUal IMctorlal TraR,.,,., n tile AllU Uooiu Skele- ' oii In l ull VImv-T1,c Demi standing In Nlclie. I.lko .Matu. I The capital of Sicily- Pnlcrmo-which ' claims nearly a quarter million people, is not, upon the whole, a very interesting citv, nl-' thousli what we in America call avery( smart" one. It is slowly drawing the Ufa Wood from Medina, on the other end of tua north coast. It has the average number of churches, with their costly spiritual furni- ' tine: it has handosmo views from the hills that nearly surround it: it hits a museum i containing soine of the stone, fragments of an- ! cient Greece and Home; but bv far its great- , est and nut unique curiosity "is its Museum 1 of Death. It is situated near one of tho edses of the town, and h. called tho Capu chin catacombs. I said that catacombs "ere generally dull affairs; but this is a most startling exception. I do not believe there is any one place in tho world that is so full . of sensational horror. i r . PICTOKIAL TRAGEDIES. Yon enter a plain hall hung with n multi tude of small paintings. These are pictorial I tragedies, telling tho form in which death j came to those within. One pictures a duel; j another the frightful stampede, of a horse the victim crushed under his heels; another the poor victim's fall from a housetop; 1 another tho fatal bito of a sernent: still ' another portrays a death in tho shock of bat tle. Many are pictured dying quietly in thpir IkxIs; sotno are floating away from themselves into tho regions of eternal bliss. I used to wonder at the Italian in America who came to the stonecutter and wanted him to engrave upon his little Ixiy's tombstone a picture of the load of hay from which ho fell to his death, but hero was the same thing, only it was Sicilian hay, and done in oil in stead of marble. Hut this was only tho anteroom to the great assembly room of death. A mild, innocent looking barefooted monk led us into a long corridor, with strong shelves iwn each side arranged not unlike the berths of a J steamer, only there were five or six of them j in a tier. Upon these shelves lay in full view I the skeletons of the departed many of them I clothed as if they wero still living. Some of I them had white kid gloves upon their hands; I ono woman was dressed in pink satin, and tho poor grinning skull wore a white lace cap. surrounded by a wreath of pink arti ficial roses. Two brothers embraced in death; sometimes a whole family wero thus reunited Often there were susHnded near tho bodies their photographs while living. There never could be given to mankind a plainer lesson concerning the vanity of all earthly objects. The beauty of womanhood smiled within a few inches of the shrunken bones that formed its doleful wreckage. Handsome and intel lectual man faces apologized for tho poor, idiotic looking remains that lay behind them. A lovely girl of IS and a grand faced old lady of M) wero among tho lifo and death contrasts. THEIH OWN GKlM STATUES. Many of tho dead stood upright in niches their own grim statues. Some bowed their blighted heads as if in deep rellection; others were kneeling as if in prayer. Sometimes a group of cronies sat together, as if talking over old times. Nono but could easily be found by inquiring friends, for each and every ono Ixiro a tablet containing tho name and the date of death. Cardinals in their faded ml robes wero there; bishops by the score, lords and ladies by tho hundred, and a king and queen were not wanting to rule over this silent and peaceful colony of the grave. Through not only one but many of these awful corridors our bright faced monk led us for there are S.,000 guests in tho solemn hos telry. In tho middle of the lloors were great piles of eotlins, heaied up like luggage at a railway station. Some of them wero win dowed with glass and showed plainly their ghastly occupants; others charitably sealed their contents from tho eye. This commu nity of the dead years is not without its little ones; in many places lio tho skeletons of children dressed in dainty baby clothes. In fact, there is no lesson in the great text book of mortality that this unique cemetery does not teach. As 1 emerged onco more into tho blessed air and saw live sunbeams dancing nround mo it was with an effort that I adjudged my self sti'" it the living. I felt for a while like an est 1 skeleton, and after pounding and pinching myself to bo sure that I was all there I walked away, thanking God that tho soul and body nre two different institutions. Will Cnrleton's Sicily Letter in New York Star. Matthew Arnold's Strert Courtesy. Matthew Arnold was not quite in harmony with our American ideas of ordinary behav ior, or what, at least, used to bo our Ameri can ideas. His standard of courtesy was European, Tho story was told by a Boston lady at tho time of his first visit that, beiug bound for Tremont temple to hear Mr. Ar nold lecture, she got into a street car that passed down Tremont street, and found the seats all occupied, She hnpieued to find her self, ns she stood grasping a strap, exactly in front of a rather tall foreign gentleman of a somewhat to her uncouth upenranco. She had stood there some little time when the foreign gentleman leaned forward and asked her whether tho ear went past Tremont tem ple. "It does, sir," sho said. "Ah, thanks said he. "And how shall I know, please," ho went on, "when wo have reached Tremont templeP "I am going there," tho lady said, "and 1 will let you know when we arrive." "Ah, thanks," he wild again, and settled back into his seat. Tho lady hung to her strap until the car l Tremont temnlo. Sho beckoned the w,,bietflr to gton. unit then said to the for-! eign gentleman! "This is Tremont temple," "Ah, thanks." said he. They got off to gether, and the lady soon discovered, upou the lecturers apienra!ico at the desk, what sho bad already sunni-ed, that tho gentleman who had miestionod her was Alattbew Arnold himself. She thought it a little odd that, having ventured on the inquiry, ha should not havo returned tho favor of her re sponse by offering her his seat; but tho thought probably never entered Ids head, And tho usage In this matter in Boston is as similating so completely to tle Euroiean standard that the ludy, for that matter, might fare just tho same today with an out and out Yankee lecturer. -Boston Tranicript. An i:l-"l" rolblllty. Chicago Lady-John Vabah,you went to bed last night with your hooU ou. Chiwigo Hu.lKind-Kr-dld If Cuieugu Udy-Yt. you er-dld. AUat would you 1" H 1 ww,t ,0 w,tU boow onl . , ,. , , . , Two Hiwch. A New Yrk phyin w h U con tirtually irpr-l by Uw hwruw of wdtu .ml iMjWL-r uiuwe tlw ' - ENORMOUS OIL GEYSERS. ItttMlHii Well Tlmt Produce Mnro Than n Wh i American I'lelU. Statistics of t'to oil business in Russia have just reached tin-eouutry, and American oil men are studyin ? them with a great deal of anxiety. The atput of many of the Rus sian wells is prodigious, and far eclivcw any thing ever heard of in this country. There is no better way to bring this fact to them li.an by a fow-couivuisons. Taken well at Baku called the "Wet Nurse." It has been yielding oil for twelve years, and in that tinio has im raged :t!,000 gallons a day. These figures are amazing to nn American oil producer. They mean that the well has produced 140,(XK).(KK) gallons of oil, or over .l,OlK),000 Iwrivls. These figures are ."tnrtling to the people of this country when they turn to the statistics of their own Industry and find that this one well lias produced three times ns much as Pithole in a year of its wonderful business. It lacks less than 400, 000 barrels of producing as much as the fa Mous Oil Creek district produrod in l$W, its lost prolific year. Tho Washington district, among the richest ever discovered in Amer ica, in lfSST, its banner vear, produced but 8..VK).tKH) barrels. This is but .VXl.OOO barrels more than the output of this one well in Russia. The wonderful Thorn Creek pool, in Biuler count v, pnduced in Us best twelve mouths lint V.tl'vOOO barrels more than this ono llu-ninn gusher The "Mirzoeff No. A," also at Baku, has for six years produced 40,000 gallons a day 1 bis is above -.000 barrels, and the production of Cogley, Tarkill and Red Valley, three yrolilie Venango county ixx)ls. produced but l,'.'tt" barrels in 1SS0, their best year. The reeo-d is given of a well driven by tho Nobel Brothers, called the "Droojba well." It cost jw.MKl to drill. The record of the well is thus stated: "This well spouted for 11.1 days, tho yield being :t,400 tons a day for forty-three days, 000 tons for thirty and 000 tons for eleven days. The well was then plugged and the supply kept under ground for further wants. The total amount ot oil snouted by this well, according to the lowest estimate, was 22,000 tons, or .Vi,(HH),(KXI gallons: according to the highest estimate, oOO.lWO tons, or rj.1,000,000 gallons." The spray from one of these geysers was blown through the air for eight miles. Five hundred wells have Imh-ii sunk in tho Baku districts. L'(M) of which, irresH'ctivo of tho enormous fountains, are now producing 500, KK),000 gallons of oil every year. It is tho opinion of American okrators now in that field that this "llou could ho increased ten fold or a hundredfold." Titusviile (Pa.) Cor. Globe-Democrat. Mitch Ado About n Cflll. The Binalk'ht deposit ever inadu in this city was that of Postmaster Jewett, who recently placed one cent to a special ac count ol a Comanche county postmaster in the Wichita National bank, who in his quarterly settlement la.st fall was found tiliot t this amount. Tho depart ment will be duly notified of the credit made. The second assistant postmaster gonural will notify the auditor of tho treasury, and in turn will demand a re ceipt from the treasurer of tho United States at New York, who will send this receipt in triplicate to the postmaster general, the treasurer of the United States and the Comanche county post master. Great is tlio circumlocution office! Wichita Eagle. In France a new "magic mirror" has lately been introduced. It consists es sentially of a glass plate coat bit with a film of platinum so thin as to bo trans parent to light coining through from bo- hind, while being a true mirror or re flector to light impinging on it from tho front. The mare Sunol cost Robert Bonner fll.000 when ho bought her from Gov ernor Stanford. The price Mr. Bonner paid Mr. Vanderbilt lor Maud S was $10,000. Maud S's record is 2:08$: Sunol's i2:10J. Tho Hawaiian race has been steadily dwindling in numbers d uring tho pres ent century, and the latest census gives it a population of but 40,000, or a de crease of one-half within a half century. l'ltOVKI) TO I IK TIIK 1IKST. Tested and proved by over thirty years' use in all parts of the world, Amxock'h Pouous Pi.ASTK.ns have tho indorsement of the highest medical and chemical authori ties, and millions of grateful patients, who have been cured of distressing ailments, voluntarily testify to their merits. Am.cock's Pouous Pj.astkiis are purely vegetable. They are mild but effective, sure aud quick in their action and abso lutely harmless. Beware of imitations, and do not be de ceived by misrepresentation Ask for Am. cock's, and let no solicitation or explana tion Induce you to accept a substitute. An old sad sea doir ocean greyhound. is probably a dismantled For an irritated throat, cough or cold "Jlrttwn't llrunchitil Troches" are offered with the fullest confidence in their ellicacy. HuM ii nl; in Uoxrs, If iKiiorance Is bliss, the wonder Is why mi many eole complain of belu laherable. fiVfl5TJFrWfa!Q There is always a best even among a score of good things, and every pipe smoker who has tried the Mastiff brand acknowl edges it to be the sweetest, cool est smoking tobacco made, It does not bite the tongue, and is positively free from any foreign mixture. J. Jl I'mx loltuii, Co., HwhiiMiid, irginu WiHTED Kti KNKIlllhTIr MAN. Willi (uti luriiUb uuudftrfvllMllMMi, l"Ii. ragout u in ILU uuuulrv Adilrw I wHTlKKNTAl. IlfTUlIKi, A Mi lilAN AtmlM A' III.S, u m MulltKUIIIBH Hit, I, breaks tjf rec;oTc j A .MYSTKltY. How the huiniiu system over recovers from the timt ellects of the nauseous medicines often literally loured Into It for the siiositlvo re lief of djsu'l-dii, liver complaint, constljxi tion, rhcumatlMii aud other ailments l a mystery. The mischief done by luul medicines Is scarcely less than that caused by dlcae. If they w ho are w eal, bilious, d)s(eitle, constipated or rhetiiin tie would oft ener te uulded by the cierIenco oi Invalid' w ho have thoroughly tested llostetter's stomach Hit ters, the would In eery Instance obtain the seodiet alii derivable from rational medication. '1 his medicine Is a searching and at the same lime a OinrouKhU side remedy, derived from vegetable sources and iossessiiig. in consequence of Its basis of pun- spirits, properties as a medic inal stimulant not to be found In the Hery local bitters and stimulants often resorted to by the debilitated, djspeptlc and languid. The farmer w ho hlde his light under n bushel Incurs the risk of nccdlUK a new barn. IIKDRKU AltOUT II V A lMtOSCHir T1VK TAHOO. I am not aiming to convince mental tmblcs, as Indeed that would tie fruitless w Ithout the nec essary cultured Intellect that makes logic appli cable. Korce, brilliancy and originality even are no w capons to attack a slave with. Cor many centuries tho medical art was hedged about by a prescriptive taboo w hich it, as et, has not sur vived. The brand for inimlering truth Is the IH'iially of Imbecilltj tauicd Uvn the menial caliber of the average Individual-In relation to medicine and medicine num. The sun of the nineteenth century has not yet dawned umh his intellectual horlrou. He, together with his Ideal medicine man, still hibernated in the good old dajs of the dark ages, when It was bud form to be Inquisitive, lie still "Wlleves" in bleeding, blistering, vomiting, purging and sw eating, lie loes copious doses of horse medicine. He de lights In ussafii'tlda and calomel and carbolic acid. They are considered Indispensable no well-regulated family, with pigmy Intellects: mid alslomldal development, considers Itself safu w Ithout those family lares. These I do not w lsli to convert; they are the Hip Van Winkles that w 111 continue to slumber through this and proh' ably through the next century. They play no role in the world' hlstorv. TUey live; they die. No monument marks their forgotten sepulcher Humanity was not enriched by their entranco; it has lost nothing by their exit. They are drift wood on the shores of time, and limit w ith the ebb aud tide of opinions they hae Inherited from their aiithnqHimorphie ancestry. No.lt Is not to these 1 w tub. to address myself, but to the thinking ones, w horn a thought does not throw Into an epileptic paroxysm; who lovoknowiedgo for Its own sake; w ho are w tiling to Investigate the truth or falsity of any proosition. and, once convinced, will stand by'it through all the grim aces of a chattering anil delayed civilization. To these- not the chatterers, but the thinkers I commend the lllstogcnetlc System for Investiga tion, and will elucidate w Ith'pleiiburo any ques tion pot sutliclenlly clear In book, which will be scat free to any address. Dr. Jordan's office is at the residence of ex- Mayor Yeslor, Third and James. Consultations and prescriptions absolute ly free. bend for free book explaining the Histo genetic svstem. Caotio'n. -The lllstoginetic Medicines are sold in but ono agency in each town. The label around the bottle bears tho fol lowing inscription "Dr. J. Eugene Jor dan, Ilistogenetic, Medicine." Every other device is a fraud. TIIK IIOI.TO.V IIOl'SI!, lMHtn.ANn.OK. Centrally located; American it Kurooanplan; Hot class; reasonable rates, C, W. Itoby, prop. Mmti'HANT HoTKii, Third and D streets, Portland, Or. First-class accommodations. Hates, $1 to$l.M)perday. Jacob llass, prop. Uso Enamellno Stove rollhh; no dust, no smell. Try Qkkmka for breakfast. JbU M il Of all kinds and In any quantity whole sale and retail at bedrock prices, E. J. BOWEN, 65 Front Street, Portland, Or. Send for catalogue. 1 FIELD SEMINARY Oakland, Cal. Twentieth year IS Professors and Teachers, Comprises Primary, Intermediate, Academic aud CoIIcko Preparatory Pcpnrtiiicnts. BEST METHODS OF INSTRUCTION EMPLOYED. TUOKOUIIII S( IIOI.UISIIII' KXACTKII, HiilldiiiKs luvltiiiK and comfortable, (irounds u m 1 le and at tractive. MKS. W. 1). IIYDK, Principal. LEARN TELEGRAPHY AND HKt'l'UK positions. Op erators always in de in n ml. Address. Portland J. f. 8KYMOUII, Oregon. lOi's, WushliiKtou Ht., KTTHE COST IS PATENT ill fcluiMilifc THE HARTMAN PATENT STEEL PICKET FENCE ('lists no more than an ordinary clumsy wood picket affair that obstructs the view and will rnt or fall apait In a short time Tlie " llartiiian " Keiice Is artistic In ileslKii, protects tlie (iroumlH wltliout con ecallni; tlieui anil Is practically kvkkijmitino. II.I.l'HTHATKl) I'ATAUHil'K WITH PltK'US AND I i:STIM().N'IAI.8 MAII.KI) KKKH. HARTMAN MFC. CO., f Always iiientlon tills PISO'S KEMEDY FOIt CATA HHII. Best. Eafll est to use. ChcapcHt. Itcliitf is immcdiato. A cure is certain. For Cold in tho Head it linn no oi,ual. It is an Ointment, of which n small jiarticlti is applied to the nostrils. Price 60c. Soli' lry druggists or sent by mail. Address: E. T. I' zhi,tink, Warren, I'o. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH, THE OfUQINlL AND dCNUINt. Af, uk Urucrlat for VkUhnt'$ win maims witb bint ribboo. i Mfce no TuLn mu 4e, lo MAiapi for ptrtlalri, UmUmouUlt, Jill iliu la pMUboara bom, piu wrtppri, tr c Hold h? nil Lm1 liruMUU. Buy Your Own Goods if your ADVANCE THRESHERS. THE BEST IN AMERICA. Oienleal Dre Knglnea and Eitlurnliliers. It re Iloaa and DenarUneotHnpnllea, Malluerr. IMmwcil all klmlt. Hraaa Ooodi. Hi and Ktttlnri. Ilaneuek Iini.lmtoi Hfltinc aud llrwe, Wnmebea, Nil.rtcntliif Oils, Ctiurcti, rk'l.ool and Karw tlll, diaciawiui iiniia aua ronrea, uifua, mirrtM, Bi.rliiK ana KiprtaM wavoui, lb M vuu in rofUatML iMaMot, writ kr uIml rat (unbar luferaaueu eall ua or addrtaai 1 1 WUUT, M if Umm ttml HiMl ML 1 Statk of Ohio, citv or Toi.kio, ' l.ccis Cor sty. 1 " Kiu.nk J. Chf.nky makes oalh that he Is the senior partner of Ihe firm of K. J, CIIE.sky 'A Co., doing biHncM In the citv of Toledo, county and State nforr'nld. Mi l that said firm will pay the um of ON'K III'NDHKI) 1)1)1.1. A Its for each and every cae of cataiikii tlmt cannot bo cured by the use of II ais catakhii cum HiASK J. CHKNKV Sworn to before me and subscribed In mv pres , ence this f.th day ol December. A 1). Isx-,. ' (sew. I A. W. Hl.KAMl.N, . .Votary I'ublit. 1 HaM's Catarrh Cure Is taken lnteraallv, and , acts directly on the blood ana mucous surface' I of thesistem. Send for tpitlmoulals. free. K. J. Clir.NKY .1 CO.. Toledo. O. 1 Sold by DrucKists; T.V. Ixxiklng for llowers without thorn is one of the liest ways in the world of fooling utur time i away. ' I POINTS or I TKK I1ST Tor tlin Conlderiit Ion lVonlc. iil Ituptureil Our knowledge, experience and financial standing enable us to give a bond in all cases taken lor treatment. We arc not op erating w ith knife or syringe, nor selling trusses, but arc curing rupture. We fur nish over TtH) successful results in men women, children, and even infants, in the past live years. Vc invite personal corres pondence, in which we will be able to de cide whet Iter or not you can be permanently cured. Tin: t)H. Mn.i.Kii Comtvny. " Corner Fifth and Washington streets, Portland, Or. A Pore Cream of Tartar Powder. Superior to every other known. Used in Millions of Homes to Years the Standard. Delicious Cake and Pastry, Light Flaky Biscuit, Griddle Cakes, Palatable and Wholesome. No other baking powder docs such work. BltOOKI.YlM IIO I'I'.I., 1Iuf.1i St., Wt. Mont gouu-ry &. HmiBotmi, H, K ; eomluctiMl oil lioth tUt Kiunils'un Hiul American plan. TIiIa Hotel in umloi tho lnamutPnieut ot Clnirlos Montvotnery, Mill l thr Infit Katnlly unit ltualiu'iu Men's Hotel In Hun Fran claco. Mimic comfort, culoliie uncici'lled, llrat-chu nervlco, hthefit Rtaiularxt ot reftpoctalitllty KUaranUHHl Hoard ami room ht ilay, $1.25 to ?i (XI; iiiiikIh room, 50 cent to 1.00 lx'T nltiht. Krou coach to anil from thi lloU.l, HAY FEVER CUrtED 10 STAY CURED. We want the name ami ail- drcssof every sulTcrcr ill the &A CTUIUI A U. S.and Canada. Address, HO I fllllfi P.niroldHje.,M.D,BoIiJo,N.T, WE WANT to BUY rou Ol It CI.IHNTS G OUNTRY RANCHE 5 FARMS, ETC. Send us list of your ptoH'rty w ith la'st tcriiis, TEVIStt FISHER, Roal Estnto Agts. I t rust Street, San rriiiielhi'ii. liKFKHKNCKS (ieor(?e ('. Perkins of (ioodall, Perkins ,V Co., Win. Alvord of Hank of California, 1.. (iotth; of (ieruiau SavltiKs and Uian Society, uiveii wane oi m. i', MivuiKS i nioii, irvuiK .u Scott of I iilnii Iron Works, I,. V IIIkcIou' otSav iiiL's aud IOau Society. Hubert J. Toblu of Illher nla SavliiKS and Uian Society, l.lnyd Tevis of wens, I'lirKo ,v uo,, J. ii, iiukkiu, v I- uoau, YOU WANT IT! OUR NEW CATALOGUE MAILED FREE TO ANY ADDRESS. SEND FOR ONE. WILL i FINK, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL THE SAME. jf MS?, PICKET Boavor Falls, Pa. paier In wrlllnu. I RED CROSS W. DIAMOND BRAND Tb onl lre, ft nrr nvt rtliahU 1111 for ). UngtUk JHamotui Jtrami Id Jted o4 Quid meUHU Baking! Powder! oilier If II ttlhv LI ad. KtfuM thtbitllutLnA mnd Imitation. nd ''lidflcf for Ladle, in tttur.hj return Mall lailllAUKU'HlA, 1A- Dealer Dots Not Carry Them. PARRY CARTS AUD ROAD WAGOIS, est and Cheapest In the Werld. Carts, SIB Us. Wajois, SSI Ui, tttatm Ijiapdrf Marine wort KnxtnM aud HolUn, V . vitik wrfctitttfi. ftn danirroui MUMtarft-lfa. It Iro1iti. or unfl t CURES PERMANENTLY rtrk - IT X w- IT IS THE fiESTI. '.TJ.U.H I Ik 1 1 f 1 1 iii THE VT 1SST am Flea A Vhirl:r l.itf lilllft: Ak your denier for it, or u nd (or Free CircnUr to retalum.i Incubator Co., I'ctaluma, CaL HUNTERS EQUIPMENTS (ft I'IiIhk Tackle. Kt . ureat Variety. Low l'rlcr-v OIiKl ntti. n In trade. f-Vml fur Catalogue. Jli()v . hllltKt K, 325 Kearny Kt. , Snu Kmiiclsco. l'nitlniiil, Ori'Kon A P Arimtronir, I'rhi. Ilraiicli Schmil ( Ai'iri, lies. Coi.i.HiK, .Niii'iii, OiTgnit. Milan rauw of utility, siiine ruti- if tuition H ii s hies s, Short luunl, Tyfitnritmg, l'tniiishif',iHi kngluti liffdttmrmtt et)"ln kcimIoii tliiiiiislioiil tlip.M-ar Stiiilrnls fulmlt titl at any time Cutnlomii' fimn elllicr kIkhiI, fire. Season Opens for Trout April 1st. rTACKLE: 31 O D 0 H. T. HUDSON, 98 Fir it Btreet, Portland, Or.. DKALIll IK ARMS, REVOLVERS & SPORTSMEN'S GOOD! Bend (or new llluitikted catalogue, FRAZER AXLE Best in the World! Get the Genuine! Sold Everywhere! GREASE J. MoCRAKEN c CO., DKALKI18 IN Roche Harbor Lime, Portland Cement, 0o) den Oale and Ulah Plaster. Hair. Fire Brick and Fire Clay. LAND PLASTER. 00 North front Btreet, Cor. D, I'llltTLANU, UK. PIANOS ORGANS. WINTER & HARPER, 71 Morrison Stroot, Portland, Or. IIOX H()J. JOHNSTON &. LAWRENCE, -WIIIII.KNAI.K AMI UKTAII Plumbers' and Engineers' Supplies, Hand and Steam Pumps, Iron Pipe, Rams, Pipe Covering, Lubricators, Water Motors, Fans, and Ventilators, Cash Registers, Elc. Write, for jirlceii. 232 FIRST ST., PORTLAND, OR. t'ontriiL'tors on IiciiiIhk itiul ventllutlnK llllllllllIKH, KlItllllUtl'H fiiriilHliisI, HOYT & CO. Want mi ii Kent In every town 1 Iilitlio to tell In Oregon, Wash IliKtoll nni PIANOS and ORGANS On roiainlMlon, No htoi'k or ruiiltul ueiiletl. Mimld teiielierH nrvferred Heeliil ruti'H on nil KoodH. Write lor piirtleulum. I'DltTI.AMI, lilt STEIN WAY. Gabler and Pease Pliaei Mraatnf the IIkmt I'iano Made, mi it the frorito obeatwr l'uuiot; H Muclcal liutrumwiU; lluidiUup. plied; Urjra ilock ot Htivot Mujlo. Htkimway Ualu Sut ana SUJ Vo Btreet; Maituias Okay Cki. OaB aait im our nnw mnma Mid nr iUiok, CRAGIN.MLEOTRD. aid M aj i m -mm iiiin www A u I i 1 1 a la . HI'KCIAJjA'ITKNTION (UVKNT1MANI).MIK 1N(J AII JNIHAN UKPUKDATION OLAIMB- "THE SPECIFIC A NO. I." ri'S al 1 u n n itt u ral it iKharKM of m n, no umlti rof liuw lone Rtaiiulnic. i'rw YOUNG MEN! veuii) Diriciuru, it neiritf an internal riiiiiolv. L'urt-i, lion (ivurvtliliin (lino litMfallnt. 1'rlrr. M3.0O. CtrcnUaou lupjilli ullon. Hold by PrugKlataorMeut Kin no Ipt of iirlcu liy Tlie A. Hctioeu- lieu jmiiiiciiiu uu., can jose, mi. Illr n la tha aeknowledMal leadlnr remedy tor alltti unoatural dlacbar(a aad IirlvatadUeaaeadtDieu. A rnirM In 'ITil)AVH( lllwilM certain cure ror tur utuiu' tatlnc weakncea to wrimn. tieonuar irlrkr . JrrtacrlbatUndfealeale THlEasCHtMiftCa. In recommeudtng llle Ciacmiu .b bhb -. L. VtB. BBA,l,tlunti,pu.iinuimiU( ta MEN 0 UiSKAl aad KKKTUUa i wuiiui or moij aaa '1 liiv Xttu 'UtfTMUt, luur.H inwil, H N, 1', N, U, No, F, N, U, Na, m .1 VffT KTirK l in i m una NLY! RJfaJalfffl him, nfl a. . .Y A i