Pay the Price of the Royal for Royal only. Actual tests show the Royal Baking Powder to be 27 per cent, stronger than - any other brand on the market. If an? other baking powder is forced upon you by the grocer, see that you are charged the rrespondingly lower price. The water supplied to the great American cities would be of better quality if water-drlnk-era would occasionally take a hand in politics. Why continue the use of remedies that only relieve when Ely's Cream Balm, pleasant of application and a sure cure for catarrh and cold in head, can be had. I had a severe attack of catarrh, and be came so deaf I could not hear common conversation. I suffered terribly fromroar ' ing in my head. I procured a bottle of lily's Cream Balm, and in three weeks could hear as well as ever, and bow I can say to all who are afflict 3d with the worst of diseases, catarrh, take Ely's Cream Balm and be cured. It is worth $1,000 to any man, woman or child suffering from catarrh. A. E. Newman, Grayling, Mich. Apply Balm into each nostril. It is quickly absorbed. Gives relief at once. Price, 50 cents at druggists' or hy mail. Ely IUothkrs, 56 Warren street, Xew York. The fool never ha an idea that is too large to slip out of hla mouth. cPaip. ail mo 1 Alt ft 'ftugust " I have been afflicted with bilious ness and constipation for fifteen years and first one and then another prep aration was suggested to me and tried, bat to no purpose. A friend recommended August Flower and words cannot describe the admira tion in which I hold it It has given me a new lease of life, which before wasa burden. Its good qualities and wonderful merits should be made known to everyone suffering with dyspepsia and biliousness." Jessk Bajucbk, Printer, Humboldt, Kas. Thli Trade Hark U on the beat WATERPROOF COAT In the World I :. A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASS.' v. We think we value health ; but are all the time making sacrifices, not for it, but of it. We do to-day what we must or like ; we do what is good for us when we have to. .- We could live in full health, do more work, have more pleasure, amount to more, by being a little careful. . Careful living is the thing to put first; let us send you a book on it ; free. Scott Bownb, Chemists, 13 South 5th Avenue, New York. Your druggist keep Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil til druggists everywhere do. i, To feuts ri Rii$m A. F. ROUSE & CO., Portraits and Frames, 1S6 Market it., . F., Cal. Bend for catalogue and price list Remedy "AGR6S Flower liuiubllug the Haughty Janitor. A little girl whose parents recently cams from the country to live In a big New York flat house was watully disappointed to learn that her pet dog Fido had been left behind with a neighbor because the haugh ty janitor would not allow dogs to be kept in his castle by any of his wretched sub jects. Unlike the other children in the flat house, she never learned to humble herself before the awful dignity of this magnate, but always stuck her tongue out at him to how that she was just as "high toned" as he. . Consequently the janitor meditated on revenge. So one day when she came to him meek ly and told him that an uncle had given her a dear little pug dog and begged that he might be allowed to keep it in her flat he fairly roared with righteous indigna tion and demanded its instant ejection. She assured him that it would not disturb anybody, that it would not be allowed to wander in the halls, and that it would bite no one in the flat. He was inexorable, and glad of the chance to be so. - The child began to cry, and all the othei children in the flat house gathered around to hear the result. "Well, you'll have to take him away yourself then," she sobbed. "I never could do it." The man was only too willing, and up t he stairs he started in pompous haste, followed by all theothet children, awestruck at the retribution that had fallen on the only child that had ever dared to "cheek" the janitor. Thf tearful child opened the door of her father1 sitting room, and there on a mat by the fireplace lay the dearest little pug dog, asleep, with a bright little ribbon around his throat. The little owner threw herself in a paroxysm of tears on a sofa, the heart less janitor advanced upon thedog, and the other children watched from the hall. Quick as a flash the great man swooped en the little dog and raised it from the floor. A squeal of laughter came from the sofa, a chorus of whoops and yells from the hall and the big fellow folded his ears and slunk away. The dog was terra cotta, and as natural as life. New York Tribune. Different Kinds of Frogs. "The eggs of the bullfrog are laid late in Hay, while those of the common frog are hatched in March or April. Much, how ever, depends on the weather. At that time you can hear them croak. You can always tell the male by the sound of his voice. As you approach you will hear his familiar r-r-rum, r-rum. The female voice is not nearly so strong as that of her mate. Their faculties of hearing are acute. They discern the sound of approaching footsteps at a great distance, and after giving the alarm remain silent. . They lay their eggs near the edge of the pond, if possible among the grasses that line it.. The eggs rise immediately to the surface. The frogs separate then, and U the weather is genial the eggs are hatched in the course of about fourteen days. They first appear like a pin with a large head.' .Tadpoles have no legs, the body ta pers into a tall, giving it a fishlike form. The mouth is a horny beak which fall oft when it becomes a frog. The hind legs grow first, aud afterward the fore legs be gin to appear, the tail being gradually ab sorbed. They live exclusively in the water, but the mature frog visits the pond only occasionally, although capable of. remain ing long immersed, but always preferring moist places. On each side of the neck of the male is a delicate membrane, which when the croak becomes inflated with air. Thf greater proportionate length and strength of the hind legs enables them to leap a dis tance wonderful for creatures of their size. The bullfrogs of this country are superioi to all others in the world. In Rio Janerio they have a species called the blacksmith frog, which croaks so sonorously .that the noise is like the clanging of a hammer on an anvil. The intermingling voices 01 other kinds resemble the lowing of cattl at a distance. The frog in Peru has ao quired the name of the sugarmiller, be cause its voice has a grating sound likt that produced by a sugar mill. Interview in New York World. . , A Pretty Phrase. The Italians have a pretty phrase to ex press that fins kind of tact which is inde pendent of education. They call it "the intellect of love," and they have crystallized in those four words one of the most ethe real, but also one of the most potent, char acteristics of human nature. Not the most liberal education gives this intellect of kvc where the materials have been denied by nature; not the most restricted range ol knowledge destroys it where it is there b) the constitution of things. People who have this intellect of lovt are as slow to take offense as to give it. They have none of that prickly heat Ol temperament which flushes out into a moral eruption at the least contrariety of circumstances. They make allowances f 01 weather, health, disappointments, annoy ances, misunderstandings, and they give the benefit of the doubt on the charitable side whenever it is possible to frame a doubt at all. They never quarrel. , Even if things go badly, as by reason of malice and misrepresentation they do sometimes with the best in the world, they suffer quietly and do not make bad worse. New York Ledger. Joaquin Miller's Lonely Home. All alone, with himself as his only com pany, up among the high cliffs just outside the town of Oakland, Cal., Joaquin Miller, tbe poet of the bierras, is passing his days. "What is there to attract one here?" he re cently wrote to a friend who wanted to travel 2,000 miles to visit him. "Nothing, absolutely nothing but centipedes, scor pions and the tarantula, and they're not the best company for a city bred man, for whatever they put their feet on they poi son. But I like it. I just turn tbe rocks up here over, then I plant a tree or build a fence, and once in a great while I write. Keep away from me; stay where yoit are, and when I want you and the rest of the world I'll send." Philadelphia Press. ' INSANE MILLION AIRES. SPECULATION ON WALL ' STREET HAS TURNED THEIR STRAINS. Insanity Caused by Mental Strain and Heavy Losses Jay Gould's Partner Who Have Gone to Asylum A Lunatic Broker Operate Among Other Patient. "Enough Wall street men to fill an Insane asylum have gone crazy because of the ter rible strain upon them," said a veteran stock broker to a reporter yesterday. A retrospect of a few years showed that the remark was true. More than in any ether kind of-business the slaves of specu lation are liable to lose their reason. ' Attention was called to the subject by the case of Broker DedrickH. Middendorf, who was found wandering in the streets of this city a few days ago. Middendorf was a speculator in a small way, and when he made a few thousand dollars by the rise in sugar trust certifi cates it is supposed his good luck proved too much for him. When found he had (5,000 in his pockets. He was dangerously insane, and bit and struck the officers who removed him to Bellevue hospital, where he now is, A few years ago William Van Schaick was one of the best known and most pop ular members of the New York Stock Ex change. He was a daring speculator, who had acquired a large fortune in a few years. Mr. Van Schaick lived in Orange, N. J. j One evening he went home wild eyedt and crying. His wife was -shocked at his ap pearance. "We are paupers!" he cried. "All that I j had has been lost in Wall street!" - ; His wife was unnerved at her husband's words and believed them true. Next day Van Schaick's safe was opened by his rela tives, and in it were found $100,000 in gov ernment bonds. At the time his mind gave way he was worth close on to 500,000, but be imagined that he was a pauper. Mr. Van Schaick was put away in a re treat. It is said that he has almost recov ered, and may put in annppearaucein Wall street again in a short time. . . "GET READY TO DIE." The case of Charles Prentiss is still talk ed of by members of the Stock Exchange, although it occurred several years ago. Prentiss was a shrewd and successful trad er, who had made a fortune by constant application to the business of speculation. One day be rushed upon the floor of the Stock Exchange and mounted the rostrum. "You have made your last eighth! " he shouted to his astonished fellow brokers. "Get ready to die, for tbe Lord is about to visit you all with destruction." Mr. Prentiss was taken to his home in New Jersey by his family and has drifted out of sight. It is believed that he never recovered from his sudden attack of in sanity. A memorable case was that of dashing, handsome Charlie Johnes. He was the life of the board, always ready with jest and story and the leader in all sorts of fun. He was a young man, too, and no one In the entire city seemed to have a brighter prospect before him. Johnes was the rec ognized leader of fashion on the Stock Ex change, and his mind was particularly bright and brilliant. All at once he collapsed because of a constant strain, and became a mere child. His pitying friends had him removed to a private hospital, where he still remains. It is said that he will never recover his reason. Occasionally Johnes imagines that he is again a figure upon the floor of the Stock Exchange. ' "I'll sell 1,000 sugar trust at 90!" he shouts, while he jumps around and cre ates consternation among the other pa tients by bis agile antics. Johnes had a fortune of (100,000 when be became insane. He had started a few years previously as a clerk for Charles F. 'Woeris hoffer, the most daring and successful bear operator that Wall street has ever had. Jay uould's first partner, Charles M. Leupp, lost a fortune in Wall street. He took the profits from his tannery business and sunk them in stock speculation. Then he became insane, and cut bis throat while lying in a bath tub. Another acquaintance of Jay Gould is now confined in an asylum in this state. This is "Col." Wells, who was for years a noted speculator. He lost his fortune, and conceived the idea that his ill luck was due to the machinations of Jay Oould, with whom he had some business dealings. Wells became irmane upon the subject, and kept seuding letters to Mr. Gould threatening the life of the little magnate. Mr. Gould became frightened at the threats and called in tbe services of Inspector Byrnes. The inspector watched tbe mail boxes, and caught Col. Wells in the act of de positing a threatening letter addressed to Mr. Gould. W ells was tried and found In sane, and is still confined in an institution. IXTO THE RIVER. John Piatt was a prominent Wall street man ten years ago. He was the American representative of important German bank ing houses, and frequently swung a line of 30,000 shares of stock. i The excitement told on him and he went mad. Piatt went down to the foot of Wall street one afternoon, after the close of the market, and jumped off the dock. His body was never recovered, and is supposed to have drifted out to sea. Amasa F. Stone used to be a prominent figure on the Stock Exchange until he went crazy. Ex-Surrogate Robert Hutchings Is an in mate of a Jersey asylum. He was unlucky in Wall street, and the disappointment broke him down.' At one time he was one of the largest operators in the market. Tbe friends of Douglas Green, who ran off with Mrs. Snell-McCrae, believe that be is insane. He was a hard worker and took little exercise, and it is said that his queer actions on the exchange bad attracted at tention long before he indulged in his final crazy action. Washington Quinlan, the young plunger who mysteriously disappeared recently and has never been beard from, is believed by his fellows to have become insane. They say he had been conducting himself in an erratic manner owing to his heavy losses in speculation. Post, the aged broker, who used to eat sandwiches and pie at a buffet counter and skip out without paying for his lunch, was crazy according to his friends. So was William H. Guion, who had been a speculator for many years, and whose losses are said to have unbalanced bis mind. : . There are men in Wall street who assert 'that for a week or two after the Marine bank failure Russell Sage was insane. There is no doubt that he was mad. He lost (5,000,000 by the decline in the market, and it is said that he was, removed to Quogue, L. I., where Dr. Munn attended him, ,That was how Dr. Munn became tbe private physician of Jay Gould, Hla work with Mr. Sage was so efficacious that Uncle Russell recommended him to Mr. Gould, in whose employ he has ever since beeav fct. Paul Globe. DAVID C. COOK. Tit Pioneer Publisher or Literature for Sunday School, . David C. Cook, the Chicago Sunday school publisher, was born in East Wor cester, New York, in 1850, a son of Rev. E. S. Cook, a Methodist minister, a cul tured and scholarly man. Since earliest childhood he has been devoted to the Sunday-school. In boyhood he Joined the church, and be gan teaching In the Sunday school at the age of seventeen l n.. r . iv. .:! (r S of Chicago, and for four years following ii. .taught most of the time in two or three schools each Sabbath. DAVID C. COOK. The fire of 1871 was the beginning of his mission and Sunday-school work on the North Bide. His field was one of the roughest and poorest of the burnt district. Here, in a German theater and beer-hall, he organised "Every body's Mission," afterwards removed to a building of its own. With an attend ance of 350 to 45J, he sustained the school for five years without the aid of church or society. 'Besides this, he has since organized and superintended North Avenue Mis sion, Lake View Mission, Lake View Union Sunday-schools in Chicago, and tbe Sunday-school connected with Grace Church in Elgin,' 111., besides several mailer schools. Ilia first publications were issued for his own Sunday-schools alone. Neigh boring Sunday-schools, appreciating the value of these helps, became his first subscribers. Soon Mr. Cook discovered that his were not the only schools that needed more and better literature than they could afford to buy at the prices then existing, and resolved to make it his life work to place in the hands of tbe Sunday-school children of the land an abundance of the very best literature at the lowest possible prices. He was met at the very outset with almost insurmountable obstacles and lively opposition ; but the obstacles and opposition only furnished zest, for he is a man of purpose, and it has been well said of him. "his indomitable energy demands insurmountable ob stacles." That his purpose was gocd and wise is proved by the way he has been supported. It is seventeen years since he issued his first publication, and there is now scarcely a village or hamlet in the land where they are not known and need. He employs regularly six associate edi tors and some sixtv writers, represent ing some of the ablest Sunday-school talent in the land. Among those who know him person ally he is always recognized as a man of strong Christian character, a practical worker in the church, Sunday-school and temperance cause, and a warm friend of missions, both home and for eign. ' ' Steamboats ascending the Yamhill river is expected to be a welcome sight again during the winter. Obstructions in the river In Oregon are being rapidly removed. ' Jewelry, Wntche and Diamond. For a first-class article i 1 Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds, etc., Bend to A. Kel denheimer, leading Jeweler, F.rst and Mor rison, Portland, Or. ' CATAKttH CAN'T II B CI KEI With U)CALAPPUCAT10N.-,athe. csn't reach the seat of the disease. Ca'arrh is a blrod cr constitutional iIIx'hw, and in nler to cure t Sou have to tike intern! remedies. Hull's C irrh Cure i taken internally, and acta dlrectlr ou the blood and mucous surface. Hall' Ca tarrh Cure Ih no quack medicine. It waa pr ciibed by one of the bust physician In this country for yean, and I a r gu ar prescription. It I composed cf the beat t ni' known, com bine 1 with the best blotd puriflera, autlug di rectly on the mucou mrUce. The perfect 1 orabinatton of the two ingredient 1 what pro duce such wonderful remit In curing catarrh, rend for tetlmo"iHl free. F. J. CHENEY Se CO., Prop., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggiata; price, 75 ceu . Txt Otiutu for breakfast.. Die Enamellne Stove Polish; no dust, no smell. Holiday Present. Holiday presents in Jewelry for every body. Send to A. Feldenheiiner. leading Jeweler, First and Morrison, Portland, Or. COPYRIGHT Hiere's a wide difference between the help that's talked of and the help that's guaranteed. : Which do you want, when you're buying medicine? If you're satisfied with words, you get them with-, every blood-punfier but one. That one is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. With that, you get a guarantee. If it doesn't help' you, you have your money back. On this plan, a medi cine that promises help is pretty sure to give it. But it's because the medicine is different, that it's sold differently. It's not like the sarsaparillas, which are said to be1 good for the blood in March, April, and May. At all seasons and in all cases, it cures permanently, as1 nothing else can, all the diseases arising from a tor pid liver or from impure blood. . It's the beet blood -purifier, and it's the cheapest, no matter how many doses are offered for a dollar. With this, youj pay only for the good you get. Can you ask more? . , - YOU NEED NOT FEAIt thatpeoplo will know your hair I dyed if yoa une tuut perfect imitation of nature, lull's Hair Dye It Impart a bIomv color and frmh life to th ba.tr. J'rice, 1. Oflicn, I'ui-k I'Ibcb, H, X, VILE AJTP CWWORTHT Of Oonaldratton ar noatmma of wldnh It ! a. lerkii-Hind there are many auch-tht they cure Immediately bodily ailment of Ions nUndinK. There cr non lacb. that oan. Chrouio ditorder cannot be lniuntancounly removed. Continuity in me una 01 a genuine medicine, f U' n a no tetter' Stomach Bitter, will eradicate chronic Hiyilcal evil. Not the least of then lot In tht 'orua Of It onnoittinn to medicine U culmina tion, to the removal of which, 11 penlntid In, the kitten in particularly adapted. Constriction of the Bowel i a complaint which should be dealt with early and yUimatloally. Ho are It uaual attendant, liver oouiplalut and dy epalt. For tfaee, for malaria, rhvmnatlam, kidney trouble, and more recentlv " la urimm." thin hlirhlr and Srofcuionally cotumeuded medicine I an un oubted peclflo. NolhiiiK can exreed it, more over, a a mean of Imparting treiifth to th wooiti sua nervou. In time of trial nothlni brim more comfort to a muu than an acquittal. OO MOT BK DECEIVED. Persons with weak lungs those who are constantly catching cold should wear an Ai.lcoi k's Porous Plaster over the client and another between the shoulder blades during oold weather. t Remember they al ways strengthen and never weaken the part to which thev are aunlled. Do not be de ceived by imagining any other plaster like ineni tuey are not may iook 11, nut looss deoelve. Insist always on having All cock's, the only reliable plaster ever pro duced. The bunno man In not fuatiiltmia. Ha Hvm nn the Rlmuletit tbl g he can flud. Bronchitis. For hoarseness and sore throat "Brown' 1 Bronchial Trocfuu" are specific j A mean man generally feel better when he meets a man who 1 more cf a rogue than he 1. BVfTVKI AND FILES OCKED. We ptxltlvely care rupture, pile and all rec tal disease without pain or detention from bull ae, No euro, no pay. Alio all Privatt dn eaaea. Addreaa for pamphlet Dra. Porterflald Loaey, m Market Ireel, Bau FrancUoo. Perfection li made up of trifle, but It la no trifling matter to attain perfection. A. Feldenlielmer. Most reliable and largest Jewelry House in Portland is A. Feldenhelmer's. leading Jeweler, First and Morrison, Portland, Or. OPTO 152NTJOYO Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; It is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and xctt zently yet promptly on the Kidneys. Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head tches and fevers and cures habitual constipation permanently. For sale in 60c and $1 bottles by all druggists. CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO. - HAHCJIICO. 0L UHtWIU,Kr. HEW fOHK, M.f. SHILOHS CURE. Cure Connnmptlon, Cough, Croup, Bore Throhi. So'd by all Drurx'" on a Ouaranua. For a Lame Side, back or Cheat Shlloh'a Porous Plaater will gir great rathfactionv- cnta 8HILOH'3 VITALIZE!. Mrs. T. 8. Hawkins, Clinttnnoogn. Turin., sayst "ShifoV Vttaliser'HAVUli MY LIVE? I canUlerttthebcstrcmelufralcbUUatedmitew I evtr rued." l ot Dycpcnelo, liver or Kidney trouble it oxcob. FrkxOScta. s HI LO H'Sl.CATA R R H REMEDY. Have you Catarrh? Try this Remedy. Itwlll relieve and Cure you. Price 60 eta This Jn Jector f or wmiw-fwfdltrtmetit la furnished free. Sblloh's Kerned If are sold by US on k guarantee to give saUafaotioo, jr.'::'f-v 'ffiswoomb Fly-Skullls ep.i:?si np. forest 'lAitf m STB I I I EaUULlJ Weave no rani day. Catalogue Irua. i B. U. MFWRflMa 382 W.SWXxranpgrmewa. DR. PARK KIl'S HUHK COUGH CUKE. One done will (top a cough. It never fall. Try it. Price, 28 cent a hot le. For ale by all aruKsun- racinc urn agem, GEO. OAHLBENDEft A CO., Druggim, 9lt Kearny Street, San ' FrancUoo, Cal. we 1U forward you out Illustrated catalogue and price list of Hilvcrware, Lamp, Crockery, tilauware and House Furtilhlng tioodi, Free. Olds dt Summers, 189-191 FIRST ST.. PORTLAND, OR. t;f! ft-t Jirff sj ANY WEAK MAN Who 1 differing, cither In hi mind or iHHly, from th injurious or weukentiif i offsets of his own Ignorant oil lei, slnito 1 ana nxoessBs can be quioaiy ana nenua ' mmtly cured. Paper froe ('alwfl. DR. COLE 4 CO.. pK: These old Doctors tiara had 30 nin' experience In curing FrlTate, Blood, Ner- vmi And Hkln Tll.fujuffl. Writ ta-dav Reliable Btmtdle lent privately lo ny sddren. Onillf 1 Morphine Habit Cured In 10 Pllil 1 to SO day. No pay till cured, rilltsi DR. STEPHENS, Lbanon,OhiOt Old Oold and SUre Booghti son your old OoM sod SUrar hy mall to sh old and reliable bouse of A. Oalemao, 1 Tblrd street, Baa Vraactseo; I will lead be retttra mall tbe cash, aoeordnif to !; If tbe aauval I not aatuifaatoiy will retain (old. VoUg'h CufirlV V. it- 51 J 1 1-. 1 j--..'; "JM i, Mr A. A William l.vnn. Mum. For the Good of Others 'Rev. Mr. William$ Heart II J? (lortictt 1IohV Sareaparitla Rev. A. A. . Williams, o! the BiHulx street Christian Church, Lynn, Mass. i " I o no naoo why a clomvman, more than alavman, who knnwawhurvol !ici-aU,hguld ht'sl'tsto to approve an Article of Merit and worth, from whloh he or hi faintly bars Ihm ii atKiially brneflU'd.alid whoso rommenil. tlon may serve to extoml thow bvni-fltstn other i ny uirrvaoitiK mmr ooiui-h-ihd. mj wm for many year bevu a siinYrer from vt!re Nervous Headache for which he found lit le help. Hhe hn trld many thlnit" tlist prmnlnwl wtill btir performed llttl-. Ijint 'all a frlviid itave hr a t.tt! of Hood's Burraparilla. It wr-in nrprlltii what Implv one bottltt could ami lld di for hr. The atlaok of headache di-crca"! In liumlM-r and wt-ru less violent lu thnlr Intensity, while Iter general health lina been improved, iler. appu! Ito has also bevu bettor. From our eip.r leuee with , ' Hood's Sarsaparilla I have no hrsllatUm In cli'lnrKlnir. Ha merit." A. A. Wiu.usm. HOOD'S PILLS are tl bent fnmi y cathartlo, gvntie ai.d eileel.va, fry a bo, l'rloe !Kie. a a J0'WH'ITI LI yrWCSrtRrlrt., I . wniiYiE, TrxtrroN,cAur. imiiMmmiiiWKtimiiwM A CASH BARGAIN A an eiample, showing what cash does, we offer ELECTRIC LUSTER , STARCH la P.'kK only, at 5c This la about 6c. per lb. In Bulk, and It la .ae fineat LauMiav, (iun or I'umkiiimo Htabch 4 In the u. 8. Try a Be. Packag titd so. Ha alway sold at ivc. and uc. SMITH'S CASH STORE 51 414, 414, 4IS Irani at., a. W. 44 pac A mcc CATALOOUC 4t PACKINa AND rncc - v CAftTAac jji 1 iir.L wl11 Dry or Orera it BonB,Meat,OrirtloandlL A Al (ir,'en Cut BONEd will f II 11 double the nnmU-rol ei-K f "I y 1 will make them more lor- HHT-.III Vmitj U9 U.ll. safely through th molting period and put theia lu condition to lay when efgs command thehlfcheatprive and will dovelotie your chicks faster than any other food. feed 8reen Bone and nae ('rteaesene to kill the lice, and yoti will make fifty par eertf more proUk fiend for Catalogue and prices. PETAUJIl HCOBATM COIPT, rTfAtOIA, CAU Guno for Everybody. Just received a (iiu line oi Parker, Smith, Remington, Ithl.a, Lefever, U. M. C, Etc. The mot complete tock in the Northwest. Hend 6 ceuu In (tamp for 112-iwgo illtiitratod catalogue. - ; , H. T. HUDSON, 93 Flrt Street. . PORTLAND, OR. YOUNG MEN! The Speolflo A No. I. . Car, without fall, all ease of Unaorr. hesn and !, no matter of how long SUuifl Ing. Prevents stricture, It helna an In. frnJ,,,.r jml!y. P,lrt? w,", evorythuig else has fulled. Hold by all DriiKitlsts, ' " : Manufacturer: th A, Hrhoenhel.Medlome rrlro. Sa.oa. Oo.,8au Jose.Cal. Biff lath eca-nowieof . , leadln remedy for ail in- . an natural dlscbars aU.J private diaease of me. A I artalaeora fortbedehl'u Utln( weak a tea peuu.Ua pv wviara. IprsorlbltandfMlf fra. In recommeadlna it M an aunarar. M D., Digitus, In, Is raaar !. I 1 iS.V J Till uo4 Use I I J 1 , 'ntima. Hold hr rt.e.l..r j up wuiitm auwm m unaut m aaase m m Hrwt i KUaaftMSsaw. K iTKlTSll " - VflS m s ..jyaw "9 . .. r r JrQnt InV 1 jaiAYft.J I aaanakM BM k a I f eseas aarleiete. I I THtYAS(ailWirtt smoiaaaTi.g.K NT v.e.A. JV trNSX H. P. N. U. No. 467-8, f, N, r;,No