Imparts iiealthftilness to the Food Royal Baking Powder possesses peculiar quali ties not found in other leavening agents, which arise from the superior fitness, purity and health ful ness of its ingredients. Royal Baking Powder leavens the food perfectly by its own inherent power without changing or impairing any of the elements of the flour. Thus the hot-breads, hot-rolls and muffins, and the delicious hot griddle-cakes raised by the Royal Baking Powder arc wholesome and digestible, and may be eaten without distress, even by persons of delicate digestion. Alum baking powders are low priced, as nliim cosfs but two cents a ikmimI ; but alum is a corrosive poison and it renders the baking powder dangerous to uso in food. ROYAL PAKINO POWDCR CO., NEW YORK. A Mnilrrn Inataurx. lite wonderful ndvnnco nmdo in tho ace of farming during tbu luM few ill ono of tho 1m t examples of xrican pro;rrwKlveHet(K. A little in- st recounted by tho AMhtnhulu 4k) Sentinel in cliiinictcTixtie. Otiu fsinf, a kliort tlmo ago, 11 society in Seruu needed u gallon of crenm. icommitteo called up by telephone proprietors of n in Ilk farm two I north of tho towu, mid nuked if r could furniah it. Tho roply wan t they could as noon uh milking was In 30 ininutOH from tho timu tho iM made, tho cream wan dcliv- Tho milk had been drawn from cow, put into u eoimrator, tho i extracted and sent to town bv a on a bicyclo. A few ycarH ago icommittco would hnvo had to wnd oy in tho aftomoon. "yesterday's V would have had to bo Hkimmod. iif tho bov bad not treed too many ppmnnckit on tho way, bo might m got back in tinio for tho festival. When Klnovoh and llabylon wore in rpiemior of tboir might men in i wrro nredictiiiL' oclitwos miikimr iloguw and giving names to tho . Hut Ninovob and llabylon wero mounds of earth and rubbihh jlea China was groat, and to thlH dato e civilization and life of tbn munim fllie wonder of tho world. Home demand absorbs almost all tho t Cars OUT lllliblnru i-fiM tirn mit ( -u.d.U.U frU... Pftatthe export trado in this Himlmn 'temporarily abandoned. Ono or export houses in Now York, how- haVO llCCIl dolntf n HviOv liiiHm.u piecond hand borso earn, n largo num- "Pmg to Mexico. Slinillil Women Hliiokr fte Swedes art) nmlmblv flio tnllnuf JPle in KuroiK), and hnvo, on tho erect, handsome figures. To extent this ndvantago is duo to Weal oxorciso, for Ling's Swedish mnajtics nro compulsory in tho olo tttary bcIiooIh, and much usod in schools and collogcs. lie Unitivl crmnn Typography No. 0, Clove- i to the union soourlg tho largest aber of cash subscribers for tho mien was won i..r t,n. n,.u n,,-. f onion. ortlinanco hna been passed in 'Nt Palm T?l 1.1- . . b.. l lu"u'ti loroicuung lomnios !!2jaloons. T hnvo no earthly objection to women flunking; only, if they do smoke, they chonld Kinoku cerioucly. Most of tliom juht fool a little with a cigarette. Now, that warcely amouutH to smoking at all. If they really mean it, let them take to cigars and pieH. I know a dignified obi lady, a Polish countc-SB ' what is her name? oh, well, Thing amojisky it ends in "isky," anyhow t and I reiect that woman. She gen uinely smokes, and no mistake about it. Thero is no playing there. She looks on it as a sacred duty. Sho biis a long pi with a wooden stem and the bark on, and a fine big bowl a regular man's pijK). When she was visiting me, she just loaded up and smoked, and loaded up and smoked, and loaded up and smoked again. Sho meant business. I know another lady who has a long Turkish pipe, and sho, too, means business. If women are ever to be genuine smokers, that is tho way thov must go to work. Mark Twain. ' i In Germany tho capital for carrying ' on tho pawnshops by tho municipal au thorities is derived either from tho city treasury or tho city savings name, , which is usually oierated in connec tion with tho pawnshops. Tho articlos offered in pawn aro valued by sworn appraisers. I Thoro aro still four widows of revo lutionary soldiers on tho pension rolls ' of tho government at Washington. At this rato tho United States will be pay ing pensions to soldiers of tho civil 1 war or their widows well on in the last quarter of the coming century and to soldiers or tboir widows of tho Span ! ish-Amorican war nearly to tho oloso of I tho first quarter of tho twenty-first cen tury. Tho quoen of Saxony possesses four sapphires oqual in size and beauty to tho ono that glows in tho crown of England. Tho favorite wives of the shah of Porsia and sultan of Turkey wear turquoises tho liko of which no western 'queen can boast Only commercial houses that have paid taxes for tho privileges can do business through agents in Russia. Traveling mon aro also obliged to pay individual taxes for permission to soli goods as representatives of tboso houses, whether thoy aro domestic or foreign ontorpriBOS. Twin Clllckeim. Twenty-fivo dollars tor a pair of spring chickens is a liberal price, yet a Massachusetts farmer rejected it. His pair of chickens, ho thinks, aro quite unique, for they aro twins, fivo weeks old, and it is said that two chickens lorn from a single egg have never before been proved to live beyond eight days. Tho buff brahma hen laid rather a large egg, but no ono thought much about it until ono morning tho farmer saw two bills instead of one trying to break out of the shell. Ho quickly removed the egg to tho kitchen, extricated tho twin chicks, 'wrapped thorn in cotton batting and placed them in tho oven. For three weeks the chickens wero kept in doors on n diet of malted milk and brandy dropped down thoir throats with a medicine dropper. The twins are now hale and hearty and run about tho yard as vig orously as any of their comrades. Ono peculiarity, however, distinguishes them from their mates. Thoy are ex clusive littlo aristocrats and neither of them will associate with any other chicken oxcopt his twin. tho EARLY WINTER. Yukon nnd Upper Itlvir Cloned Sooner Tlum Itminl Thin Year Hcown In Danger. HEAVY WOOL MOVEMENT. Condition In London Prompt Specula tive lIuyliiR. It. G. Dnn & Co.'s weekly reviow of trado says: British disasters in South Africa hnvo brought to view something bo sides tho steady self-reliance nf t.hn Reports from tho interior indicate that winter h fays to make a record dato for closing ' J''nKllsn Pplo, and that thoy hold not navigation on the Yukon and miner muny A,nerican securities to be dis- rivcrs, says tho Alaskan. Tho weather 10"Keu m ttny time of alarm, but aro from Lo ISargo northward has been nninclInetl to take raoro stocks, and much below zero for a week past, and 'noney looks for 'e investment. A fiinco then telegraph information was to !ittl0 ,lecline of c in wheat and 1 Jo the effect that the thermometer was 18 , Jcorndoes no hinder exports, though degrees bolow zero at Hootalinqua, which is about UO miles below lower Lo liargo, and 22 degrees below at Dawson. Great quantities of ico aro coming out of tributary rivers, and it would not be surprising if the Yukon should block with ico won after tho 27 inst. To all appearanco a moderation of the it is some evidence that growers think they have ample supplies. Atlantic exports of wheat for fivo weeks have been, flour included, 15, 080,500 "bushels, against 18,182,031 bushels last year, and Pacific exports 2,718,551 bushels, against 3,017,434 bushels last year. Western receipts of wheat have continued heavv. bnfc ij1'1' iimuuiiuiuu Ul lilt: i ill, - ' weather is the only tiling in human ma- navo not "vailed last year's extraordin i v uuttnjuimu. iLiimuiiLiiiir rsi nn v (on to prevent tho river from closing a iuu week earlier than It did last year. A gentleman who is pretty well ex perienced in Klondike navigation sayt that tho chances are very good for catching fully 100 scows in tho ice when tho Yukon closes. This is a high estimate. It is well known that a number oJ scows left Bennett wh the expecta tion of wintering this side of Dawson, and sorno scows will yet leave Bennett with tho intention of waiting for spring at Lower Lo Bargo. k Thero wero six men on tho two scowa wrecked in White Horse rapids lately, I but four of them wero rescued. Mr. J Kobinson had life in his body when brought to shore, and J. T. Bethunei triedevcry means to resuscitate him, I but his efforts were in vain, and the cold water or internal injuries proved fatal to him. It turns out that tho steamboat Lindeman may not be a total loss. At Windy Arm tho owners of the Lindcrrinn saved tho cargo of a Dawson Ite's wrecked scow, for which they will get .$3,000 salvage, bo they aro ahead on disasters, as the total cost to them of tho Lindeman was only $1,000, although sho originally cost .$0,000. Frovcd a ISooinerang. Hon. C. W. D. Clifford is satisfied with tho Atlin ountry as a mining dis trict, but he asys it is not a great pro ducer. He thinks valuable quatrz will soon bo discovered, but pronounces tho country on the whole no poor-man camp. He says further to the Alaskan: "From what I can learn of tho banks of Atlin the output in placer this year will bo from $750,000 to $1,000,000. "Tho Anaconda group of quartz claims, purchased not long ago by Lord Hamilton, are being developed by a small crew. A day and night shift is at work, and already the men have tnnneled 30 to 40 feet and the prospects got better tho farther they go. "The alien exclusion law .discouraged tho investment of capital in Atlin this year, but I look for hydraulics to take the lead in the development of the placers. Tho exgltfsion law .has proved a boomerang. I'linvo been opjiosed to it and shall stand for its repeal." Todd LeeB, on route from Atlin to Vancouver, says that ho haB reliable information that up till October 15, 35,958,087 bushels in five weeks, against 40,040,701 bushels last year. The enormous sales of wool at Boston, 21,557,500 poundd reported, making 25,308,700 pounds at tho three chief markets for the week, are extremely important. That not all is for con sumption, as the trade is naturally tempted to believe, may be true.and yet actual purchases by the mills of half that quantity would imply extraordin ary encouragement respecting the de mand for woolen goods. The prices have been generally advanced to an average scarcely below that of May, 1892, and for Ohio washed, light and dark unwashed and pulled wool slightly higher. Expectation of higher prices at London prompts much speculative buying, but the demand for woolen goods is also undeniably encouraging. Cotton manufacturers have also been In great demand, with prices constantly rising. PACIFIC COAST TRADE. Seattle Mnrketi. Onions, now, $1.00 1.25 per sack. Totatoes, new, .$10 18. Beets, per sack, 85c. Turnips, per sack, C5c. Carrots, per sack, 75c. Parsnips, per sack, 90c. Cauliflower, 75c per dozen. Cabbage, native and California, $1 1.25 per 100 pounds. Peaches, 65 80c. Apples, $1.251.50 per box. Pears, $1.00 1.25 per box. Prunes, 60c per box. Watermelons, $1.50. Nutmegs, 50 75c. Butter Creamery, 28o per pound; dairy, 17 22c; ranch, 20c per pound. Eggs Firm, 30c. Cheese Native, IS 14c. Poultry ll12Kc; dressed, 13c. Hay Puget Sound timothy, $12.00; choice Eastern Washington timothy, $17.00. Corn Whole, $23.00; cracked, $23; feed meal, $23. Barley Rolled or ground, per ton, $21; whole, $22. Flpur Patent, per barrel, $3.65; blended straights, $3.25; California, $3.25; buckwheat flour, $3.50; gra ham, per barrel, $2.90; whole wheat flour, $3.00; rye flour, $3.76. Millstuffs Bran, per ton, $15.00; Aid. Chase approves a suggestion re cently made by Comptroller Wolf for a solution of tho problem of tho rato of faro to bo charged by tho Milwaukeo lilectrio Railway and Light Company. Mr. Wolf suggested that a 4-cent faro bo charged for a single trip without transfer privileges, and that a 5-cent faro be charged when tho passenger do sired a t-ausfor. This plan has been adopted u Clovoland. putfort'he seaeon amounted to $410, BhTtX 000, and it was estimated in pllicial circles that the output will be more than a million. I General mining along tho creaks will I continue three weeks moro, fcays Mr. I Lees, and after that drifting will be- i j i j. i. J done to some extent on somo of the creeks through tho winter. He esti F6ed Chopped feed, $20.50 per ton; middlings, per ton, $22; oil cake meal, per ton, .$35.00. PortlHiid Market. Wheat Walla Walla, 54o; Vsller. 55c: Bluestem. 50o nor busX '. 'V fiiotir Boat grades', $3.25; grahaV creens inrougn tno wmter. no esu- tw.erfiiie, $2.15 per barrel. .- mates 500 people will remain in tho iSW whitei 3480c; choice aBo. 8AMPLE BOTTLE mo. FOR NEXT THIRTY DAYS. s&xsrr. RHEUMATIS How Long Have You Read Moot "5 Drops 11 Without Taking Them? Da you not think you have wasted precious tlmo nnd Buffered enouBhT your allllctlnna. "dDropi" is a frfl,'f, KidneS 1) "ii"o". llHiu, NeurnlKln, Holui 'ten, T.umbuiro (UniobacW K Idiiey ,'"BJ1,"t Anth.i.H, llnv river, Iyiieil. W'"'"1' ,' 1 1 l,k, t WeuklieM J.a Grl,.W. flenduefie fnomrai and w A --"joho lenaiiiB 10 conn to ray or the mailing. abbu NfiON RHEUMATIC CURE CO.. 100-104 E. LAKE ST.. CHICAC" Tho assessors of Montreal are having no littlo discussion with tho street rail way company, tho Bell Telephone Com pany and othor large companies, as to tho machinery tax. The street railway company has now, through its lawyer, informed tho assessors, that it does not consider any tax can bo legally placod upon its poles, rails, etc. A gorgeous bicyclo has recently been sont from Franco to an Indian rajah.' Tho parts whioh on an ordinary ma chine aro nickel plated aro in this bicy olo of gold. Even tho spokes aro casod with gold. Tho gold-cased rims aro studdod alternately with turquoises and rubies. A scarlet cloth held down with jowols covors tho saddlo. Thoro Ib a walnut tree 1,200 years old in tho Baidor valloy, noar Balak Tt bolomrs to fivo Tartar families. and still ylolds nearly 100,000 nuts an nually, which aro divided equally bo- twoou tho fivo ownors. Tho board of charities' tabulated sta tistics show that out of n population of 010,840 in Porto Rico, thero aro 291,- 080 indigent and 11,858 sick. Tho uumbor of doaths as n result of tho ro cent hurricano was 2,010. Tho California state board of health urgos a strict quarantine against con Bumptivos, as being much moro danger ous than 'thoso nfllictod with smallpox or yellow fovor. Wood enrvors are in domnnd in Now York and tho trado is booming. Mem bers of tho craft aro coming from Lon don to secure work. Are Salmon Trout Trout? Tills is tho closed seson for trout un dor tho new law. Thero is somo dis agreement as to whether the fish popu larlv known as tho salmon trout should be called a trout, says tho Portland Telegram. Many porsons, particularly those who liko to fish for them in the winter time, insist that tho salmon trout is a young steolhead, and that nshermen aro oppoeod to thorn because thoy eat eggs which chinook salmon have deposited. It will bo loft for tho courts to decide this mooted question, over which learned doctors disagree, nnd most people beliovo that they will decide it in tho matter of fact way and call tho salmon trout a trout. This species is tho only kind of trout that will bito in tho winter time, and manv Portland sportsmen have been accustomed to fishing for them all wintor long. Thoy aro grf&oy, and tho moat is of oxcollont flavor, and tne fish form a good chango of diot during tho wintor time. Improving Juneau TVlinrf. The city wharf nt Junoau has un dergone wondorful changes during the past 10 days, and tho Pacific Coast Pnmnanv. which owns a not work of wharves along tho water front, has now started in oarnost to construct its mam moth bunkers with a capacity of 2,000 tons of coal. This is a $10,000 im provomont. Tho old warehouse has boon out in two, nnd ono-half now pro sents n brondsido to tho incoming steamers, leaving a largo dookyard be tween it and tho othor section. Tho now bunkers will bo dirootly to tho eouth and tho piledriver crow is now atj work putting in torrodo-proof piles, Barley Feed barley, $!S4G.00; brewing, $18.5020.00 per ton. Millstuffs Bran, $17 per ton; mid dlings, $22; shorts, $18; chop, $16 per ton. Hay Timothy, $9 11; clover, $7 8; Oregon wild hay, $07 per ton. Butter' Fancy creamery, 50 55c; eeconds, 42)45c; dairy, 8740o; Store, 2535o. Eggs 2527Ko perdozen. Cheeso Oregon full cream, 13c; Young America, 14c; new cheese lOo per pound. Poultry Chickens, mixed, $3.00' 4.00 per dozen; hens, $4.50; springs, $2.008.50; geese, $5.500.00 forold;, $4.500.50 for young; ducks, $4.50 per dozea; turkeys, live, 1314o per pound. Potatoes 60 65o por sack; sweets, Z2Ho per pound. Yegeta' les Boots, $1; turnips, 90o; per sack; garlic, 7o per pound; cauli flower, 75o per dozen; parsnips, $1; beans, 50o' per pound; celery, 70 75o por dozen; cuoumbors, 60o per box; peas, 84oper pound; tomatoes, 7fio per box; green corn, 12j 15o per dozen. Hops 7 10c; 1898 crop, 56o. AVool Valloy, 1213o por pound; Eastern Orogon, 814o; mohair, 27 80o por pound. Mutton Gross, best shcop, wethers nnd owoa, 8o; dressed mutton, 0 , 7o por pound; Jnmbs, 7o per pound. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $5.00; light nnd feedors, $4.50; dressed. $G.000.50 por 100 pounds. Beof Gross, top steers, $3.5004.00; cows, $38.50; dressed boof, 0S ilia per pound. Yenl Lnrgo, 07X; small, 8 8 YiQ per pound.