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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1893)
THE RED TENEMENT. 4 The New Bread 4 As endorsed and recommended by the New-York Health Authorities. Royal Unfermented Bread is peptic, palatable, most healthful, and may be eaten warm and fresh without discomfort even by those of delicate digestion, which is not true of bread made in any other way. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 To make One Loaf of Royal Unfermented Bread : l quart flou r, I teaspoonful salt, h alf a teaspoonful sugar, 3 heaping teaspoonfuls R oy al B aking P o w d e r ,’ cold boiled potato about the si/e o f large h e n 's eg g, and w ate r. Sift together thoroughly flour, salt, sugar, and baking powder; rub in the potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly and rapidly into a stiff batter, about as soft as for pound-cake; about a pint of water to a quart of flour will be required— more or less, according to the brand and quality of the flour used Do not make a stiff dough, lik<- yeast bread. Pour the batter into a greased pan, 4 # by 8 inches, and 4 inches deep, filling about half full. The loaf will rise to fill the pan w hen baked. Bake in very hot oven 45 minutes, placing paper over first 15 minutes' baking, to prevent crusting too soon on top. Bake immediately after mixing. Do not mix with milk. 4 4 4 * Perf<ct success c,m be ha.I only with the Royal Baking Powder, because it is the onlypowder in which the ingredients are prepared so as to give that continuous action necessary to raise the larger bread loaf 4 4 •Ar 4 4 is 4r T h e best baking powder made is, as shown by analy sis, the ‘ ‘ R oyal.” Its leavening strength has been found superior to o th e r baking powders, and, as far as I know, it is the only powder which will raise large bread perfectly 4 4 4 4 4 4 Cyrus Eiison, M. D. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 C o m ’r of H ealth, N e w -Y o r k C ity. Breadmakers using this receipt who will write the result of their experience will receive, free, the most practical cook book published, containing 1000 receipts for all kinds of cooking. Address ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. 4 APO STRO PH E OF TIME. Illuod 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 i 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 i> 4 4 4 4 I \ e s« eI s o f I I I « Ky e. Purkinje discovered a very simple and highly entertaining ex fieri mt*ut by means 0 spirit Hti-ni of time. In thy unceasing flight., How fall tin* works and monument* of cartlilj of which tin* retina, with all its vein» and blood vessels st and in i'ou t in relief against might! it, can be thrown info the air before one’s ’Neath thy tude hand all pleimureH fleo awuy And happy yesterday turns dull today! eyes. It is called flu* a I »orescent figure, to The sweetest Joy becomes the saddest sorrow its likeness to a many branched tree, anti In contemplation of the stern tomorrow. is produced in the follow ing manner: In it Oh, stay awhile and help mo banish worry. dark room at night move a candle b;ick In other words, don’ t tie in such a hurry. ward and forward before t lie eyes. A fte r An Instant linger—tarry, ploasel You won’ t? Well, then, go chase yourselfl Bcgonel a few seconds the air will assume a reddish appearance, and running over it in all di Avaunt! rections may be seen the veins and blood —Albert E. Hunt In Philadelphia Ledger. vessels in bold relief, while toward the cen ter of the figure there rises up a dark THE $ 7 ,6 0 0 trunk, from which the veins branch out on H m Not Keen I'ald to M r. F ello w s o f all sides. The trunk is visible where the optic ItiiltM lo -lt Cost Him •3 0 to Heml His T ic k e t to Kansas t Itjr —L a w yer Stone nerve enters the eye, anil this experiment is chiefly interest in « to the student as prov o f »t. Paul VI III T ry ami (le t the Money for IIIm — Hcihroetler. tlie Man W ho Ing that the parts of tin* retina which No 111 the T ick et to F ello w s, Is India- j actually receive and produce the sensation of light must lie behind the blood vessels, nnnt. “ Not a cent,” said Joseph B. Fellows of Pros since these must their shadow on to it and pect avenue, when asked by a Times represents- ] c a d he seen »is clearly as any other object tive whether he had received the $7,50U w -n by externally.— New York Telegram. him last May (nun a lottery concern run by h. Fox At Co. of Kansas City, called the Little Lou An liiMiirnnce Curiosity. isiana lottery, but which has hoc nneetion a 1th I the Louisiana State Lottery pro|>er. ” \\ hen they “ Did you ever atop to consider." asked saw I wax persistent and after the puhlteation of the Time* article giving the particulars of Lemuel Hunter, “ why it is that when a my holding a winning ticket and their failure man is burned out he always overesti to pay, they telegraphed me that they were en joined from pas log by ill court. Since then 1 mates his loss about 200 per cent? This have heard nothing from them " is more particularly the case with fires “ Of course you expect to,” said iho Time* man. “ Well, l don’t know.” replied Mr. Fellows. in frame building towns, where the loss “ l here is a lawyer at St. Pan. who wrote) me to the building is generally assessed at that he represented a man who had won a $1. 000 prise and named condition« under which tie between throe and four times what it wouiu undertake to get my $ ,60u at the same cost to erect it. I raised this question time. 1 told Jiiin to go ahead, hut 1 rcem to t>c an lar away now as 1 was hefoie. It cost in* $.(() not long since with a man who was to send my ticket to Kansas ( 'ity, and I ihink burned out. Ho said the loss to his build they might at .east return that amount to me, ing was ffi.OOO, but he proposed to re as i litin to pay it to tut* express company.” “ What doe> .-*» hro. der, tne man from w hom build at an expenditure of 11.200 ant you bought the ticket, mink ».f It?” have a better building W hen I ques “ He was as hadl.v taken in as I w a.” “ Do s he sell tickets for mem still 7” tioned the logic of his calculation, he *‘ No, Indeed; mey had the audacity to Rend him some and request that he go oh and do promptly corrected me by pointing out bu lness lor them as before.” that the real estate on which the build Seumeder is a iniroer oil Niagara street, and knew untiling oi me character of the eon ern ing stood w as worth fully $2.000, and al which lie r. p.euntcd. When he learned it though he didn’t pretend to argue that through the Times and his expt rleiico in the Ke lows mailer lie dropped them qul k,and as the site had been burned up he seemed warned all mo. e who loruierly pure limed lick to think himself perfectly justified in in eis oi him n.-t in no uuy more business with cluding the value of the20 feet frontage in them or iitvir representatives. Mr. Follows is an honest, industrious citizen, his estimate of loss. N o one was injured by who has a iight io b lieve that lie slio. ld it- ceive what they acknowledged was bis. There the calculation, and the good man was aio tiio e, However, w ho are oi the opinion that, perfectly justified in making it if he de us Hits i> me same company that sw indled the sired. but if Ins idea is a general one it is late Julius Han-mil of a like amount, Mr. Kcl- iow ■ sianus a very small cuaiico oi ever getting not surprising that losses generally are a penny iroiu it. great ly overestimated.*’ St. Louis Globe- Just what success Lawyer Stone will have for hix cILni Mr. ti-dows,« f course, cannot tell, Democrat but he lio|a*s for me best. People who have been investing their money in this concern are W h e n t l i e W o r m F i i II m t o Piec es. 01 tlie opinion iliat, if mis company is the fraud The leading English scientists, Jones. it seems to be, they «nould be exposed In ail sections of the country. I heir game, like that Hilton, et al., are figuring on the proba of tiie green-goods man and tlie bunco man, is bilities of the earth finally collapsing as one of fraud in tlie urst account of the fraud practiced on a result of the modern craze for tapping Mr heilowH H was shown Hint in St. Paul and nature’s great gas retorts. They argue other cities Hie same game had been played on the unsuspecting. Some pe *, le think there that the earth is a lingo balloon held up. may lie a compromise through Liwyer Sio hm those who have read au.i heard more of in part at least, by heat and internal tins emu ern than mey, say that he (Keliowa) is gases, and that when nature's great gas oul the II he paid Sctirocuvr t u the ticket, out main is eventually exhausted the earth’s of the fib i.o paid to send it to Kansas City and out $7,, no, whicu ins ticket called for as a hall crust may break in and fall into mil winner of a capital prsc. lions of fragments! Ugh! The very There are l.dierics which are said to pay, and pay promptly, hut it is plain to tie seen iliat this thought of such a calamity is startling. the hii tie Louisiana .o called run by K. Fox They argue t hat the steady belching At t*o., Kansas City, is not one of them. HuffaU forth of millions of feet of gas every (.V. 1 ) Times, Scpi. hour of the day and night is surely caus To preserve health is a moral urn! re ing a great vacuum somewhere not far UgiouH .Inly. fur lu'.ilili ik tlie liaafa of a'l beneath the surface, and that sooner or aiK'ial virtu«* W r . an no longer I k - tmt> later the thin archway of earth crust ful wlicn not well. —Johnson will give way. Then will occur the grand climax of all earthly calamities.— A Maine farm er 1» making a g.Kxl In St. Louis Republic. come by breeding swans, the market rates for which range from (-10 to $70 a W o u l d A b o l i s h th o T e n ( 'o ni u in m lm ct iti i. pair Once, when being heckled during an friendly is Repaid never on tertainerl i>\ the children modi ‘ \vx A C 7 i" r 1 1 ) A I tastes h.id This explain* the popular ity among little ones of II a preparation of cod-liver oil almost as palatable a* milk Many mothers have grateful knowledge of its benefits to weak, sickly children. U M \ § P ITCHTIffl r a n know t hr mrlstwf* flA t IF F ’ 4 YOU fS rp T f»| / / In»«* vmr»i':r*:i.j|t,piin»e m t e ic w fi.n . T 1 « form «m l B L IN D . B L U S H IN G or F U O l HU D IN O F I L L J TIVLl' A r OXi K TO Of!. B0-SAN K0 S PILE RLMFOY, W*U. * • " « d irectly on part* AfTccWd a bal - . ttetyn*,«"? / l/ f r Q »; f fL fc tf » •riu a.L Dr. HaMOko. Ib ila U elp h i*, F a Piso** U,nutty f.«r Catarrh fa the IVnt, Kastrat to Ts«, and ( hrapsst. C A T A R R M Bold by Dnurglsts or arnt by mall, k*c. J£ T. lituo« tino. War ran. Pa. election, it man suddenly shouted from the gallery, "W h a t is Mr. Merry's opin ion of the decalogue?" Tlie candidate, turning to his agent, whom he always kept handy at such times, asked. "W h a t on earth doe* the fellow mean by the decalogue?" The agent explained that the man probably meant something about Sunday train* nnd Sunday travel ing. upon which the candidate replied to hi* questioner a* follow*: "1 beg to in form my friend in the gallery that *o far as I am concerned I would abolish the decalogue altogether."— Leeds (Knglandt Mercury A l l o n m In H t ir k I n gin« tit Pa l a c e . One’s respect for the accommodations at Buckingham palace is considerably enhanced to read that over 200 women waiting to be presented to the queen were gathered in the apartment adjoin tag the thronerootn on the last drawing room W hen it is recalled that each of these women was accompanied bv her court train, or rather that each accoiu- pstiied her court tram, it is teen how noble must In» the dimensions of a room to accommodate 200 women and 200 court train». — Exchange. The denuding of the mountains of Prance of their covering of trees has caused destructive torrent» to sweep over the neighboring plain», laying waste rich tgrieultural lauds and producing im tnense losses On retiring let the air into the room ny pulling down the window a short dis tance from the top and raising it equally from the tvottom. This penults that free circulation ino»t buaeliuial to health 1 think the person in whom was centered my greatest interest for a number of | months, although 1 knew nothing of him except his name, was Simon Webber. 1 be came interested tlie first time 1 saw him and my interest never waned for the next fifty tw o weeks. There was a rustic seat on the corner o f the street just opposite to where 1 lived, and on this be was seated the first time I saw him. By his side was a dark huired, brown eyed child—the only person whom he looked at the second time and tlie only thing that seemed to have any attraction for him, except something in the direction of my house. He sat there for al>out three hours, then, takiug the child’s hand in his, walked away and I did not see him again for tw o weeks. It was on Sunday morning, as it was be fore, ami near the same hour when he seat ed himself in the same place, and divided his attention between the child and what 1 thought to i»e my house. He staid there for about two hours, then went away as he di<l before. A fte r he had turned the cor ner I stepped out or; the banquette and sur veyed mv premises to see if I could discover wherein lay the attraction for the man, hut 1 failed, si) went indoors no wiser than when 1 came out. 1 pondered over it for sometime, and just as I concluded to give it no more thought 1 saw Simon again in his usual place and as much occupied as ever in house gazing. Anil there be came with the child always ou Sunday—twice a month for tlie next ten months. He hod a good looking, though a very serious face, and the child was quite pretty. Many a woman sinihsl at the little one and threw a second glance at him. M y housemaid, a girl of sixteen, became very ahsentminded, and my powder box and pinching irons were far more frequent ly in her room than in mine. This made me think of something else, nnd after no ticing her more closely I saw her sitting at the window, considerably bedecked and adorned, coquetting with or at Simon VV ebber. I thought at once that she was the mag net which had such a drawing effect upon the man, hut in this I was mistaken, as I afterward found out, for not once did he nod his heml to her, and long after she left be continued to com eat regular Intervals. And 1 continually wondered what his bust- ness was—i f my house wjih haunted and he on the lookout for the ghost. This was not a very soothing thought, so I determined to put the question to him and rest easily or uneasily, according to h i» answer. When I did he looked at me calm ly for a moment, then replied: “ Your house haunt ed? N ot that I know o f,” and without say ing another word he turned the corner, leading the child, and I went hack wonder ing if he was altogether righ t in his mind, and this 1 continued to think over until one day several months later. There had been a severe storm the night before, particularly damaging to the elec tric wires. M any of the poles were split from end to end, others bent, nnd most of them lying fiat on the ground. Wires were kinked, twisted in knots nnd scat tered all over the streets. Betimes the next morning men were busily engaged in mating new poles and putting the fixtures into proper condition. A s I glanced down the long line o f men working like so many bee» my eyes fell on the fam iliar Dice of Simon Webber, whom 1 hail not seen for several weeks, and his little companion. The little one sat on the lower step o f a cottage, swinging her feet and seemingly perfectly contented with herself and the world logeneral. It w astooeold, I thought, for a child o f such tender years to he so long wit hout fire, so permission to bring her indoors was granted nie reluctantly by Simon. When the work hud reached completion, he stood at my door waiting for the child, but at my earnest solicitation he came in and partook with groat zest a cup o f steam ing coffee. As he returned to me the cup, ho said gravely: “ You some time ago asked me a question which I answered rather un civilly. I was very unhappy that morn ing. Knowing this, I hope you w ill pardon me. “ A fte r I replied he dropped his eyes to the floor, and allow ing them to follow the out lines of a figure in the carpet, he in his slow, measured tone went on. “ I think you must have seen me many times on this street, looking intently at something which you no doubt for a time imagined to he this hoti.se, hut it was not. The red tenement sits one block liack of there. To avoid the publicity that would have beeu t he consequence o f going oil the street on which it was built I came here, where a pretty fair view o f it is to lie had by looking ls*t ween 475and 477. a little west ward, which gave you tlie impression that I was watching your house. Three years ago I was a lineman and had lieen since 1 was quite a youth. One evening just about dusk, I went up to a |>ole that hadn’t lH*en in order for quite awhile. W hile I was e x amining some of the wires a voice asked me, almost in a whisper, to come down a minute. Of course my first impulse liefore moving an inch was to look for the person, and I saw a young woman standing at the base o f the pole. “ In one moment 1 was beside her, look ing into her pretty face and wondering who she was and what her business could lie with a lineman. She looked around a little nervously, then said. ‘ W on’t you please lend me your spurs for one nu> ment? 1 stayed out a little late so I dare not clim b the stairs, and there’s hut one other way to reach my room—by clim bing the pole. I must hurry or he’ ll see me Please don’t refuse.’ “ I was so astonished at the request that I took no time to ask m yself whether she was risking her life or not, hut went Ixack up the pole as fast »is I could, marking with chalk where she should put her hands, and quicker than it takes to tell it, I strap|H‘d my spurs around her feet and watched her ascend that pole almost as well as I could. “ When she reached the top she gave a spring, and clinging to the window for one moment to regain her breath she made a ■winging motion and landed safely in her room. She disappeared for a few seconds, then tossed into my hands my spurs wrapped in a thick towel, together with a slip of paper on which was written: ‘ Don't think strangely o f roe. I will explain first opportunity I thank you a thousand times.’ "T h at pole was on the right hand corner o f the red tenement looking north. 1 had been there many times, but had never seen her before, hut that may have I h * cii attrib Uted to the fact o f my never looking to the right or left, or ever having paid any at tent ion to anybody's windows, or even any one on the street. I walked a few blocks up and returned just in time to see a rough looking fellow dart in a back alley just ,-is an old man climbed the steps and entered the room in which the young woman had gone. " I turned my steps toward my lodging quarters, hut I was thinking all the time of that girlish face, the gray old man and the rough looking chap, and wondering who they were. I never went near the redtese ment after that without glancing up at her window, an act I had never been gu ilty oi before, and was usually awarded with a •mile. 1 saw her. I think, a half dozen times in as many weeks, but only from the street, while she seemed always busy in her room with her household duttg* pne morning while 1 was on duty she attracted my attention by rapping sharply on the window pane with her thimble. “ As I looked up she said just loud enough for me to hear. If you’ve time, come through the back alley, up the step* at left entrance at tl o’clock this morning.' “ At the Appointed hour I was sitting in an entry leading to the stairway, and she w is with me ' A s you may know.' s h e bo gan. ‘there s a dreaatul m ixture of people iu this house, with whom T have nothing to do, and they in turn hate me for it^Jnc* under this roof is an unpleasant lo S in g man, whom my father wishes me to marry on account of his business prospects, and 1 suppose, his attachment for me. He has annoyed me so with his attentions that 1 almost bate him, and he knows it. He is jealous and has a very mean disposition. J dare not go out at any time without his know ing it and speaking of the fact in such a way that my father, who is dread fu lly strict, hears him and gives me a lec ture. If he sees me walking home with a young man, or sees me get a letter or hand one to the postman, he tells it; then, of course, father wants to know all about it. “ ‘The rest of these delightful people are forever spying too. The consequence is 1 am forever in hot water. N ow on Lehigh street, 58fi, there’s a man whom I like very much. Robert Baring is his name. He knows you quite well by sight. I will thank you exceedingly if you will g iv e him this note and stop there when you’ re on your way here, so if he has any message for me he w ill give it to you. You see, father doesn’t allow him to visit me, so we don’t see each other very often—only when I can slip out for un hour or so, when he joins me and we take a walk. If you’ ll be our letter carrier we’ ll get along much better. Then by being a little careful George Birch w ill he so nicely outwitted. When he has no more tales to tell I won der what he w ill do. W ell, I suppose you are w illin g to he our mutual friend, aren’t you?’ “ She was standing there and had laid her hand in mine. 1 promised to serve her, then left her by the way I ’d come. In the mouths that followed 1 saw her many times and carried to and fro many mes sages between the sweethearts. I had been their mail carrier for six months and had given her a start up the pole almost as many times, when her father died. Of course her lover went to see her then as often as he liked, so there was no more need o f me. One morning about two months after her fath er’s death she ran down stairs »mil overtook me as I turned the corner. She told me she was to be mar ried that night at the minister’s residence and that she and Robert wanted me to be one of the witnesses. “ I consented, though wondered if she didn’t know what a hard request she’d made of me. I stood up there bravely, though it took all m y power to do so, anil saw K atie Allen give herself to Robert Bar ing, and I wondered if he did then or ever would love her as devotedly a31 did. Short ly afterward I doubted it very much. He was not overly kind to her, staid out at clubs late and was not as considerate for her feelings as he should have been. I saw her just often enough to know she wits very unhappy, though only a bride of ten months. “ George Birch became very sullen. He never spoke to Baring except to tantalize, and when he’d been married one year Birch so grossly insulted him that there was an altercation in which both were wounded. Baring died within twenty-four hours, but Birch lived to suffer awhile. “ He had a lingering spell, then improved, only to get worse later. Katie had been a widow for a year, when she sent for me to tell me that George was dying and wanted to see her. She was very nervous and mis erable; she dreaded going, yet had no wish to refuse. I advised her to go and went also, at least as far as the steps. I wouldn’t go iu the room. When she came out then* were tears in her eyes and she looked pale | and frightened. She told me in a low voice, | almost in a whisper, that he was dead. I j walked with her to her door, then le ft Iter I alone with her unhappy thoughts. Her ' husband left her but little wealth, so she j went hack to the northwest room o f tlie j red tenement, the one in which I ’d first ; seen her, which she rented quite cheaply | and managed very well, with her baby g irl for company and a small hired girl I for htflp. “ I visited her only occasionally until she left off her garb of mourning, then I went there more frequently. In time she prom ised to lie my wife, hut three years went by without her setting our wedding day. She told me that George Birch had said that if she married me or any one else he’d give her no peace, hut haunt her day and night. She did not want to believe that he could, but weeks before the day set for our niar riage she was in a terribly nervous state, and declared she’d seen George in her door every night for a month. “ The evening before we were to In? mar ried I was sitting in the room holding her child on my knee and thinking of the bright morrow when the hack door opened sud denly and she screamed: ‘ I*ook at George Birch! It is not his ghost, but him, him self. See how he looks at me! M y God I I can’ t stand it! 1 can’t marry you, Sim on— I can’t— I can’t. Save my child; don’ t let her see that face!’ She moaned, wrung her hands and looked mad. “ I went tw o blocks for a physician, hut when I returned K atie was gone. I looked for her, and others, too, hut we never found her or heard any tidings hearing on the subject. The general opinion was that in her frigh t and excitement she had destroy ed herself. But how, without there being some evidence afterward, I am puzzled to know. “ I sold my new home, or the place that was to have lieen our home, and taking her child 1 took up my abode in my same old lodging house and there I ’ve lived ever since for this child, who w ill he a second K atie A llen in beauty. God grant her a happier life. “ I gave up my position as a lineman. I could not clim b a pole without thinking of her. Since then I’ ve been knocking around, doing anything that came to my hand, until today, when I was called into service through necessity. “ The red tenement is sold and is to lie taken down. Hearing this I ’ve been com ing here now ami then, each time think ing *twas the last, to look at the house where I first met and loved my bcauti fu l” ---- Simon passed, looked fondly at little Katie, then gathered her in his arms, tucked her feet within the front of his coat, bowed silently, crossed the street and walked slowly, with eyes full to the brim and quivering lips, to the room in which he lived with every crevice of his heart open to admit the ligh t from baby eyes and the music o f childish prattle, hoping it would in tim e overcome the somber dreams of blasted hope.—V irgin ia Payne Hen rich» in Philadelphia Times. N e ig h b o r ly M a in e Folk«. They are neighborly in Bucksport. A capitalist having given an industrious citi , ren an old house if he would m ove it from the lot, the folks turned out with 1 1 pairs o f horses, 7 yokes of oxen and 200 boys and had a m oving picnic, pulling the structure in the old fashioned way on shoes, by sheer strength. The poor but honest citizen got a home for nothing, w hile the town hail a taste of excitement at slight expense.— . Lewiston Journal. — U o u e »t A G ra tefu l Tribu te. W in g —Poor Fu tlites is ileati, but in his time he was a leading actor in many uiov ing seeire*. Flie?—Yes, lie was the best scene shifter I ever m et.—New York Epoch. T I f K F O U N T A I N II K A l l O F S T R E N G T H When we recollect thnt the stomach is the grind laboratory in which food is transformed into the secretions which furnish vigor to the system after entering and enriching the blood: that it is in short the fountain hern! of «tren^th, it is essential to keep this important supplying machine in order and to restore it to activity ■when it becomes inactive. Thii Hostetler's Stomach Bitter«* does most effectually, season ably, regulating and reinforcing digestion, pro mo ing tine action of the liver and bowels. Strength and quietude of the nerves depend in great measure upon thorough digestion. There [■ no nervine tonie more B iih n esteemed b? the medical fraternity than the Bitters. Physi cians also strongly commend it fo? chills and fever, rheumatism, kidney and bladder trouble, sick headache and want of appetite and sleep. 1 ako a wineflassfu t:. T*% 11 DM ■ a day. INS P I K B W h en in Portland be sure to take in the greatest novelty at the Kx[iosition. W e shall bake biscuits and cake every afternoon and evening on our pretty Jewel Gas Stove. Everybody cordially invited to have a biscuit with us and see the wonderful merits of Golden West Baking Powder proved by actual work. THE B E S T K ID N E Y A N D LIV ER M E D IC IN E . HUNT’S REMEDY Cures Bright's Disease, Retention or Non-re tention of Urine, Pains in the Back, Loins or j bide. U T S > T O N C t: on the K ldai«-«-*, I I r e l and K o u r h , re-toring them to a nealthy ac tion, and C lllt E N when all other medicines fail. Hundreds have been saved who have been given up to die by friends and physicians. NOI.D HY A 1 .I. D IM G4.1 S T «. D O C TO R C LO SS E T& D E V E R S , Ü, THE GREAT CURE P O R T L A N D , OK. —FOR— “German INDIGESTION Syrup” C O N S T I P A T I O N . —AND— CUKFH Justice of the Peace, George W il kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co., Minn., makes a deposition concern ing» severe cold. Listen to it. ‘ ‘In the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Boschee’s German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left me In a good, healthy condition. I can give German Syrup my most earnest commendation." • By local application«, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in- tiamed condition of the mucous lining of the eustachian tube. When this tube is inflamed vOn have * rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed fotever; nine cases out of ten arc caused by catarrh, which i« nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, o. Sold by druggists; 75 cents. Use Enameline Stove Polish; no dust, no smell. FREE JO N ES’ CASH Buyers’ Guide S T O R E . T ry G ermka for breakfast. —THE— The Testimonials W e publish are not purchased, nor written up in our otlice, nor are th ey from our employes. T h e y are facts, provin g that H o op ’ s Sarsaparilla C u rls . —A— Regulator of the Liverand Kidneys —A SPECIFIC FOR— Scrofula, Rheumatism, Sait Rheum, Neuralgia Aud All Otber Blood and Skin Diseases. It is ft positive cure for all those painful, deli cate complaints nnd complicated troubles and weaknesses common among our wives, mothers and daughters. The effect is immediate nnd lasting. Two or three doses of D r . P ardee ’ s R emedy taken daily keeps the blood eool, the liver and kidneys act ive, and will entirely eradicate from the system all traces of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, or any other form of blood disease. No medicine ever introduced in this country has met with such ready sale, nor given suen universal satisfaction whenever used as that of D r . P a r d e e ’ s R e m e d y . This remedy has been used in the hospitals throughout the old world for the past twenty- live years as a specific for the above diseases, each month. It is issued in tno interest of all and it has and will cure when all other so-called T h r e e E n e m ie s consumers. It gives the lowest cash quotations remedies fail. Send for pamphlet of testimonials from those “ F o r o v e r tw e n ty on everything in tin- grocery line. It will save years I have suffered you money to consult it. Mailed free to anv who have been cured by its use. Druggists bell address on application. Don’t be without it. it it at |1.00 per bottle. Try It and be convinced. with neuralgia, rheuma costs you nothing to get it. It quotes wholesale For sale by tis m a u d dyspepsia. prices direct to the consumer. Mention this Many times I could not | paper. Address M ACK & C O ., J ONES’ CASH STOR E. turn In bed. Several j - P ortlan d . Or. 9 a n d II Fro n t St., S a n F r a n c is c o . physicians have treated i 130 F ro n t Street, T h e B itters ’ G u ide is published the first of me and 1 have tried dif- ferent remedies, but all . Mrs. Burt. failed. Five years ago I began to take Hood's j Harsaparilla and it has done me avast amount j Hood’s si>Cures of good. I am 72 years old and enjoy good health, which I attribute to Hood's Sarsapa rilla.” M rs . E. M. B urt , W. Kendall, N. Y. TORS on I nstallments . Best makes. ,owest prices. Send for catalogue. 7 . C . H i: U I I , Itlp o ia , <’ a l . INCUBA',. MRS. WINSLOW'S - S os ° ytrhu ' p n g : FOR CHILDREN TEETHINC F o r u l e b j t i l l> ru g f 1*U. - 5 i . a bottle. , Brooklyn Hotel 208-212 Bush S t., San Francisco. This favorite hotel is under tho management O F T H E of CHARLES MONTGOMERY, and is as good if whereabouts not the best Family and Business Men’s Hotel Hood’s P il!s < ‘urc all Liver Ills, Biliousness, of QIACOMO in San Francisco. Jaundice, Indigestion, Sick Headache. 25c. FRANCI, a citizen of the Canton T- ssin, Switz erland. When last heard from he was mining iu Oregon. Franc! will hear of something to his advantage f he reports to the First-class service and the highest standard of SWISS CONSULATE, respectability guaranteed. Our rooms cannot be likj First street. surpassed for neatness and comfort. Board and Portland, Or. room per day, 91.25, ft.50, $1.75 and $2.00; board Portland, Or., October 2,1893. and room per week, $7 to $12; single rooms 50c to $1. Free coach to and from hotel. I NFORMATION WANTED Home Comforts! Cuisine Unexcelled! M A S Q U E R A D E S , PARADES, r*cts^ GOcts., and $1.00 per Bott Uue ceut a dose. Tnrg G r e at C o ro n C m « promptly cures where all others fail. Coughs, Croup. Sore Throat, Hoarseness, w hooping Cough and Asthma. For Consumption It nns no rival: hAA cured thousands, and will runs You ir taken in time. Sold oy Druggists on a guar antee*. For a Lain© Hack or ChonC u»e SH ILO H 'S B E LLA D O N N A PLASTERJ&c. CURE CATARRH REMEDY. Have you Catarrh ? This remedy is guaran teed to cure you. Trice, 50 cts. Injector fres. Iw l A «1 T I ' I ' K T H F . A T K I C t l . K . Everything in the above line. Costumes, Wigs, Beards, Properties, Opera and Play Books, etc., furnished at greatly reduced rates and in supe rior quality by the oldest, largest, best renowned and therefore only reliable Theatrical Supply House on the Pacific Coast. Correspondence so licited. G oldstein A Co., 26, 28 ami 30 O’Farrell street, also 800 Market street, San Francisco. We l supply all Theaters on the Coast, to whom we re spectfully refer. SOCIETY BAD6ES. Hercules fias Engine (O A 9 O B O A 9 0 U V E ) > for Pow.f or Pumpln* PurpoaM. Tbs Chsappst Reliable Gas Englas on the Markst» O ut of K noink amo A. FBLDENHEIM- KR, Leading Jew eler of the Pacific Northwest, keeps a large stock of All SECRET SOCIETY BADGES on hand. Best goods at low est figures. Badges made to order. P um p . EOCENE. Is a Spécial brnnd ot BurningOll, which we manufacture expressly for FAMILY’ USE. I T I** A P F . K F K C T E R A D IC A T E S B L O O D P O I S O N AND B L O O D T A I N T . S.S.S. I I . M M IN IT O K . is H K .ii i- i k b r r s r . i r IS OF V f l l t o f e f l «Il A I.l T Y. We guarantee it to be the higheft powibi . f . GRADE OF ILLUMINATING OIL. Ask for it. it S T A N D A R D O IL C O M P A N Y . bottles of Swift’s Specific (S.S.S.) ^ entirely cleansed my system of contagious blood poison of the very worst t- re. \Y m . S. L oomis , Shreveport, La. C eve r a l DR. GUNN'S IMPROVED BEBI T had C U R E S SCROFULA EY'EN IN I T S W O R S T F O R M S . UVER P IL L S scR O F V i * in T’^ l , and c’r . n w d nv 1 system entirely from it by t kin; sewn bottles of S. S. S. 1 have not n.al '*•*.>• symp* toms since. c. W . Wit » \. Spaitanburg, S. C. S.S.S. I HAS CURED HUNDREDS OF I CASES OF SKIN CANCER. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed ire*\ S w if t S p e c if ic C o ., Atlanta, Go. “ This isn't my flannel suit,” said Harkins to the pawnbroker. "T h is is n half dozen sizes smaller than mine.’ ’ “ You are mistaken,” said the pawn broker. "T h at is your suit, but it has been in soak so longthAt it has shrunk.” —Truth. A MILO PHrSIC A m ovem ent A DOSE. * y y is necfw t ry fo rc r c f the bowels each d a neceeaary system la U cks health. Tb.*se pills s u p p ly w hat the ■ystem cl t _ They cure _________ Headache, lache, brighten brighten the make it _ regular. ‘om p lexlon better than Byes and clear the Cc _______ They a ether pills do. T o convince you of their mertte we w ill mail sararíes free, or a nui full box_for 28 w cents. sararí** rree, pox tor no m * Sol** r e e ry w h e re , fcoeau*o M ed. P h ila d elp h ia . I wr S im p licity I t B ests the W o rld * It o ils It s e lf fro m a R es ervo ir, l í o C arbu retor to g e t ou t o f ord er. N o B atteries o r K lec trio Spark. ran* with a Cheaper Grade o f Gasoline than an y other Lugine. SBWD rom c a t *Loor* to PALMER Ml REY, M a n u f a c t u f m A, Stmt, hi Fruma. UL -A X D - l ’ O R T I.A U t*. n u ,;<(<>> FRAZER AXLE Best in the W o rld lp D F " i 0 T Get the G e n u i n e ! » ! K r f l \ r Sold E ve ryw h e re !* "! I L f t l / L F R A N K W O O L A IT .A ven t, P ortlan d . Or. ‘ W H E R E D IB T G A T H E R S , W A S T E R U L E S .” G R E A T S A V IN G R E S U L T S FR O M T H E U S E O F An A fterth ou gh t. What ru n te d IVim. Sydney (on his first introduction to a centipede, and io wonder at its numerous leg»F-An d what doe» he say after right sod left leg mother?—London Truth. B a k in g P o n d e r Some men would not mind being shot acci dentally if they could be insured that the reck less gunner took them for lions instead of hares. It K HUNT’S REMEDY Cures Biliousness. Headache, Jaundice, Sour Stomach, Dyspepj-ia, Constipation and Piles. C O l'K A G K . CANNOT Bladder, Urinary and Liver Diseases, Dropsy Gravel and Diabetes are cured by HUNT’S REMEDY (p ld & h I HUNT’S REMEDY y m s t HUNT’S REMEDY For more than th irty years A llcock ’ h P orous P lasters have been doing their be neficent work, relieving pain, inspiring men, women and children with new hope and new courage. Pain is a great discourager. When all the muscles are sore, it is hard to keep up hope. A lloock '» POROUS P i a s t e r s and pain have p o affin ity for (Roll other, one or tlie other must yield, and pain is the one to he defeated. Placed high up between the shoulder- blades and on the chest, they are a sure cure for coughs; on the pit of the stomach they relieve in digestion ; over the muscles they relieve strains and stiffness. W h er ever there is soreness, they soothe and cure. B r a . nd r e t ii ' s P il l s do not injure the system. D E A FN F fiS KIDNEY, Cures Intemperance, Nervous Diseases, General Debility, Female Weakness and Excesses. “ George, father has failed.” “ That’s just like him! l told yon a*I along, darling, that he was going to do ail be could to keep us from marry ing.” T h o s e F l a n n e l Suits. “ Our taychersay» that ivery man should tLry to get to the top,” said little Mu k e j Did »n. ‘ 'Th roe for thetaycher,” responded Mick e>'s father, “ onless ye* happen to be start in to d ig a well.” —W ashington ^ tar. A B O V E E V E R V T H 1 S O ELSE, Dr. Pierce' j Golden Medical Discovery purifier the blood. By thi* means, it reachee, build» up, and invigorates every part of the system. For every blood-taint and disorder, and for every dis ease that comes from un inac tive liver or impure blood, it is the only remedy so sure and effective that it can be guaranteed. I f it fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. These diseases are many. They're different in form, but they’re like in treatment. Rouse up the torpid liver into healthful action, thoroughly purify and enrich the blood, and there’s a positive cure. The “ Discovery ” does this, as nothing else can. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness; all Bronchial, Throat, and Lung Affections ; every form o f Scrofula, even Consumption (o r Lung-scrofula) in its ear lier stages; and the rpost stubborn Skin and Scalp Diseases, are completely cured by it. ____ _______ P r a is e . A n honest compliment was that paid to M. de Ycodoiutf. who. whilr comniMMiiQg the French army in Italy, dispatched a you uk nobleman to announce to his master the victory which he had gained at Su7. zara. The latter, while attem pting to de scribe the battle, became several time* much confused ill hi* narrative, when, al though the king preserved hi* gravity, the Duchess o f Burgundy, who was present, l a u g h e d *o heartily that at last the young gentlemen »«id , "Sire, it is easier for M. de Veudome to win a battle than for me to de scribe i t . " —IgJU'lou Standard. fJSH TM i T-vt, V «r* ti on thr hr« W A T E R P In R the O O World F COAT ! Til rated Cat*. ««Sue Free. A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. » . P. » . Ü. No. •!« - « . r . » . U. No. Ml S A P O L IO R H E U M A T IS M C U R ED BY T H E USE OF Moore’s Revealed Remedy. A ftori *. Omason, January 10 - I can state with pleasure that by the use of MOORE ? REVEALED REM tl Y my husband n * relieved mra an old oase & RHEUMATISM and my youngest boy cm red entirely of INFLAMMATORY RHET MAT LEM when the beat doctor I ooi.d get did him no good. T w in rrmtumda K U ». V «T U L A •O L D B T ÎU U B D B O M U f