HOW SWE u Æ oü LD ACT
THE OLD DAYS IN ROME.
During the Carnival in the Corso It Was
the Duty of Everybody t'o Be Gay.
*
Royal Baking Powder,
made from absolutely pure
Grape Cream of Tartar,
è * I
:
0
$
Imparts that peculiar lightness,
sweetness, and delicious flavor noticed
in the finest bread, cake, biscuit, rolls,
crusts, etc., which expert pastry cooks
declare is unobtainable by the use
of any other leavening agent.
Tobacco Smoke Is a Preservative.
“You have probably never thought of
tobacco smoke as a preservative influ
ence, I’ll venture,” remarked Chatfield
Arthur to several companions in the La
clede. “Of course we all know that
spirits, and especially alcohol, will keep
whole most anything you are of a mind
to commit to its permeating care. I
have found tobacco smoke to be equally
good, with no worse results as regards
odor than alchol, unless you dislike to
bacco. I know that I have put bugs,
worms and various kinds of reptiles in
large bottles and have kept them for
years by simply blowing the bottle full
of strong tobacco smoke and sealing it
properly.
“The perfect forms would remain for
years, in fact just as long as the bottle
remained perfectly sealed. Upon open
ing it the result has invariably been—
that is, in cases of long standing—a com
plete collapse. Still the effect is no worse
than that of alcohol, for one never thinks
of removing a preservative life form from
the alcohol. When one puts a form in
alcohol, it is understood to be merely for
looks and not for examination or han
dling.”—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A Point For Travelers.
The advice, is given by a well known
society woman who travels a great deal
to wear one’s best underclothing while
ofi the cars. “Never mind if it does get
soiled,” she says. “I have known of the
most flagrant cases of neglect during
railroad accidents of people whose un
derwear looked as though they might be
poor. This is a shameful fact, but the
people who pick up the wounded after a
wreck are intensely human. Many of
them do not propose to open their homes
to sufferers unless they are to be paid
for it. They judge of the ability of peo
ple to pay largely by their underwear,
as the outside garb of most well to do
people is more or less the same in these
days.”
The idea of arraying one’s self with a
view to accidents when starting out on
a journey is perhaps likely to suggest
useless forebodings, and this advice is
likely to engender, a pessimism regarding
the character of one’s fellow men, but it
may be worth heeding.—Her Point of
View in New York Times.
Testing Pure Water.
It is one of the easiest things in the
world to tell pure water frQm the im
pure. If you want to test the color of
the water, just fill a colorless glass bottle
with the water and look through it at
some black object, and the distinctive
ness with which you can see'the object
will give you an idea as to the amount of
clay or sand there is in the water. Then
pour out one-half the water, cork the
bottle tightly and set it in a warm place
for about 24 hours. Remove the cork
and smell the air in the bottle. If there
is an offensive odor, even the slightest,
the water is unfit for domestic uses.
Well water, no matter how bright and
sparkling, is, nine times out of ten, pu
trescent. Then, as a matter of course,
decomposition is sure to set in in a day
or two if you put the bottle in a warm
place.—New York Telegram.
Pumps with plungers and pistons were
invented by Morland, an Englishman, in
1674; the double acting pump by De la
Hire, the French academician, some 20
years later.______
ANTI-FERMENTINE
Is a harmless preparation in tablet
form tor preserving all kinds of
fruit without
cooKiNQ. One pack
age preserves fifty pints of fruit or
a barrel of cider, and only eosts 60
cents. Fruits preserved with Anti-
fermentine retain their natural
taste and appearance. Ask your
druggist or grocer tor Anti-fermen-
tine.
'N. P. N. U. No. 503—8. F. N. U. No. F 80
WHERE I
*
<
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0
t
t
4
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4
WOULD BE.
Where buttercaps and daisies nod
Along some mountain stream« *
Where sunlight smiles through dusky
shade
Like faces in a dream;
Where whfc&ring winds their vespers
say
’Mid rustling bough« that droop and
sway.
Where bright leaves wander with the
breeze
And dewy berries grow.
Where modest flowers bloom unseen
And rippling waters glow;
Where smooth worn stones He cold and
gray
And robtns chant a plaintive lay.
Where willow branches gnarled and bent
Do form a tempting seat.
Where banks of cool green mosses spread
A carpet for the feet;
Where forest echoes die away
In a drowsy roundelay.
Where sweet bird songs are mingling with
The brooklet’s mellow tone.
Far away in woodland bowers.
There I would be alone;
Where care and duties never stray
One long, delightful summer day.
—Housekeepers’ Weekly.
Where Embroidery Is Made.
In 1890 St. Gall sent out to the world
near 85,000,000 worth of embroidery. Half
of that came to this country to adorn the
petticoats and so forth of American wom
en. In early times embroidery was made
by hand and it was worth its weight in
gold. The knowledge of the craft spread
through Appenzell, Thurgass and St>Gall,
three cantons of the Alps country. A
great industry grew. The technical skill
and readiness of hand of the Appenzell
women were marvelous, and gradually
the exquisite e£nbroidery made by them
became famous all over the world. Very
many thousands of the people are engaged
whollj’ in the skilled business. Girls were
trained to it from early childhood. Al
that time «11 the beautiful work was done
with the hand and in the people’s homes.
More than half a century ago the hand
machine was introduced, and that rapidly
changed the whole situation. Today pos
sibly not 5 per cent, of the embroideries
are made exclusively by hand, and these
only of special articles, fine and expensive.
The hand machine was soon in the houses
of half the peasants, and factories were
founded, where many machines were col
lected and worked, but still by hand power
only. The character of the work was then
and remains now excellent, but the pro
du^tion was comparatively slow. The prof
its were usually large to the dealers, but
the embroiderer barely made a good living,
as it was always necessary for him to pay
an assistant known as the “threader” to
help work his machine.—Washington Cor.
St. Louis Globe Democrat.
Why People Marvel at Telepathy.
Nothing in nature is really abnormal. It
is most probable that a power to influence
the minds of others, with a susceptibility
to be influenced by other minds, exists in
human beings universally, in a greater or
less degree. To the hypothesis, abstracted
ly considered, that mind can act on mind
directly—that is, not only through no
known medium, but without any medium
whatever—I see no valid objection. The
action of mind on body, and that of body
on mind, is far more mysterious than any
action of mind on mind. For it is com
paratively easy to understand that things
of the same kind can affect one another
directly. Yet to many persons mysteries
with which they are familiar seem to be
no mysteries at all; they wonder only at
that which is unusual, and marvel at tele
pathic phenomena as savages at an eclipse.
—Blackwood’s Magazine.
The Hobbies of Royalty.
In the good old times—and by the good
old times we all of us mean the days that
are past and are no more, the days of our
youth, which we remember with a sad
pleasure, and the joys of which we exag
gerate, perhaps, while the pains we forget
—the carnival in the Corso, which, alas! is
now almost a thing of the past, was a
spectacle and an experience full of delight
On that week of saturnalia the old sights
and sounds,' the old hubbub and gayety
and license was renewed, every folly was
indulged in and a careless gladness ani
mated the world. ' Every
~
window and bal
cony was draped with carpets, tapestries
and flowers; gay faces looked out every-
where and glad laughter
_
filled the air.
There were masks and harlequins and
punchinelli and masquerading and strange
costumes and singing and mock gallantry
and cries of joy on all sides.
It was the duty of every one to be gay.
The God Momus reigned. All the world
flocked in from the country, and the old
dresses and costumes which in every town
in the vicinity of Rome were then worn
daily, were to be seen. Now those cos
tumes have for the most part utterly dis
appeared, and are only to be seen now and
then, or on the persons of the models who
pose for the artists. They were- very gay,
very various, and it was a pleasure to see
them. Now they have given way to the
commonplace and shabby dresses of today.
But in the old carnival they were-every
where to be seen. Improvised balconies
and stagings were erected all along the
Corso, and these were filled with country
girls in their costumes.
Up and down the street, in double files,
slowly aud at snail's puq;:, rlirougs or car
riages followed each other, filled with
flowers which the occupants scattered right
and left, laughing the while they pursued
their slow way through the. .dense crowds
that filled the streets. Flowers and con
fetti showered upon them as they .passed,
and there was a general hubbub of jollity
and confusion and madness, as if old
Rome’s descendants were still alive and
shouting in triumph.—W. W. Story in
Scribner.
A Touch of Human Nature.
It is impossible for one who has. been
“human” to forget that he or she was
“human," and everything tends' to prove
this assertion. A story is being told that
brings out this truth. In a con vent-near
St. Louis there is a nun past middle age.
She is as pure and'devout as it is possible
to be. That is to say, she is entirely un
worldly. Many years ago, when she was a
young girl, her father owned a large plan
tation and numerous slaves in Kentucky.
At that time there was a negro slave who
loved the beautiful young girl. It was not
the .devotion of a faithful servant, but the
adoration of a lover.
Though he never made an open avowal
of his passion, he followed her around and
watched her until his love became a matter
of public notoriety. The girl Was very
devout and finally left her home to enter a
convent. She entered in the bloom of
young womanhood and is now a woman
advanced in life. A few days ago members
of her family from Kentucky visited the
convent, where she now is. Upon seeing
them visions of the old, old days and the
worshiping love of the dusky slave must
have crossed her mind, for her first ques
tion was as to what had become of the
negro lad who had persecuted her with his
adoration.—-St. Louis Republic.
A Zulu Porter.
Among the queer odds and ends of hjl-
manity that have lodged hereabout none
is queerer than a certain Zulu, who may be
seen any morning.at the Court street sta
tion of the Kings County Elevated road,
where he now pursues the peaceful occupa
tion of porter. This gentleman,.may be
recognized from other Africans by a huge
topknot of natural wool, which began to
grow many years ago in his native land.
He also wears a pair of large goggles,
through which his eyes'gaze with- an. ap
pearance of great restfulness.
,The Zulu is put down on the pay rolls of
the company as Thomas Murphy. When
he is at home in Zululand he is called
Quongo Perceriah. Mr. Murphy says he
was born in Gilou in 1850. He came to
this country with Chief Two Strike, and
was exhibited by Barnum for several years
as a native warrior, which he was. He
also whistled.
He says that in his native undress, with
an assegai in hand, He is imposing to see.
In the course of his wanderings he came
upon an American negress, whom he loved
and by whom he was loved with a passion
all too fierce for lasting. They separated,
but not before he had got a good vocabu
lary of English words. Of the nine years
of his living away from Zululand six were
Spent in museums. The last three years
Mr. Murphy has earned his living by the
sweat of his brow.—New York Sun.
Art in Everyday Life.
At the present time" there is a strong
tendency toward the artistic in all things
connected with daily life. It is considered,
and there is wisdom- in the idea, that
beauty added to an object does not detract'
from its usefulness, but rather increases.it.
Articles in.everyday request do not serve
their purpose less truly if they please the
eye; and by grace of form and beauty of
coloring educate the nature to find some
thing of the artist’s pleasure in the or
dinary things which make the setting and
framework of daily life.
This strong artistic impulse has shown
itself in some directions in a reaction in
favor of mediaeval types in articles both
decorative and useful. Old china,, ancient
jewelry, antique furniture are eagerly
sought after; and old lace, after having
been consigned'almost to complete obli vion,
has once more reappeared out of the buried
past to delight an age which dotes on an
tiquity, with its fragile, filmy tissues.—
Chambers’ Journal.
The Prince Regent of Bavaria has a large
collection of beetles—the most complete
tn Germany—and is also a great observer
of the habits of ants, bees, flies, moths,
etc. Of other royal persons King Oscar of
Sweden may be mentioned as a collector of
books of poems with autographs of the
writers.
The Czar Alexander III has preserved
and increased his rich collection of birds'
eggs and postage stamps, begun when a
boy, and the king of Roumania’s ambition
consists in bringing together the largest
number of autographs of all well known
personages throughout the world. The
ex-emperor of Brazil possesses the most
Why the Wedding Was Postponed.
complete collection of butterflies.—London
“Their voices had murmurs of rivulets,
Queen.
__________ _____
their lips had blushings of roses. They
chased butterflies with steps so light that
An Old Expression.
they, too, seemed to fly in the shivering
“Conspicuous by his absence,” an ex grass. They looked at each other and saw
pression of considerable force, came into in their clear eyes the reflections of their
prominence after having been used by souls filled with Paradise.”
Lord John Russell in an address to the ! “And they died at the age of Romeo and
electors of London. He was afterward Juliet?”
candid enough to admit that it was not an
“No, they went to a visible heaven. They
original expression with him, but taken gave, with the money saved for their wed
from one of the historians of antiquity ding, liberty, space, azure and the vast
His confession led to classical research, enchantment of light to the wife and
and the expression was found in the “An children of a workman crushed in the ruins
nals” of Tacitus. From this author we of a fallen building.”—New York Times.
also have “God always favors the heaviest
battalions,” an expression afterward used
In the Waiting Room.'.
by Terence, Voltaire and Sevigne.—Phila
First Patient Waiter—Seems to me that
delphia Ledger
Father Time should be represented with a
cloak and long train, and-----
Lessons of Experience.
Second P. W.—Well?
Newsboy—Extra! Extra!
First P. W.—And the latter should be
Gentleman—How much is it?
made up of a lot .of .-cars of this infernal
Newsboy—Two cents. Have one?
road. The are invariably behind time.—
Gentleman—No.
Pittsburg Bulletin;
Friend—Two cents is the regular price of
that paper. Why don’t you buy?
Gentleman—If there had been anything
The most profitable crop raised by the
in it worth reading the boy would have peasantry, near the famous field of Water
charged five cents.—Good News.
loo is the- crop of bullets and buttons
jnolded in the vicinity, duly planted and
In prosecuting a case at Highgate, in harvested in time to be disposed of to the
which a man was charged with riding gullible travelers -who eagerly buy them
without a ticket, it was stated that in the as relics of that memorable June day in
course of one year 37,000 people were de 1815, when Napoleon’s glory was totally
tected attempting to defraud the Great eclipsed.
Northern Railway company.
The first child born of white parents
“A bee in his bonnet" is no doubt of corn in California was Thomas A. Suther
Scotch origin. “There is a maggot in his land, of Portland, Or., who became a
head” is an equivalent expression in newspaper man and was the editor of a
England. A writer claims that the poet, weekly paper when he was drowned
Herrick, originated the expression in one while endeavoring to catch a ferryboat.
of hie lyrics.
ESSENTIAL NICETiS IN “CULCHAW"
AND “DERWTMENT."
Points That DistinUV’11 a Peculiar Set
in the Metropolis!’'0!” the Recognized
Gentlemen of LePr® and Refinement.
An Interesting Sare-
“By Jove! What cad. See the way he
Carries his stick." j
“Yaas, and noticethe way he holds his
gloves. ”
-'IK3-
“Yaas, and he wa!& like a drayman."*
“Gad, he’s gointo’OW to that gel. Sor-
ray faw the paw gel., Watph him.”
“Ah! ah! What Afwful duffer. If I
couldn’t bow better han that Pd stop at
home.”
“Yaas. So would 1”
“Let’s go to the clib an<i sit down; that
sort of thing makes :ie awfully tired. ”
The man criticisedwas conspicuous, and
it was all because|he hadn’t sufficient
knowledge of ctilchfW and department.
He was faultlessly dissed, but that didn’t
save him. Whether^ take soup from the
side or from the end Qf a spoon is a mat
ter of culture, but whether to carry the
gloves with the fingeis forward or With the
fingers back is a matter of culchaw.
Everybody that isfanybody knows all
about culture and deportment, but cul
chaw and depawtineit include the little
niceties of mannerj&nd conduct about
which many, people have a great deal to
learn. Without culda
^awtment
it is im possi Usto be
> ;
; A s
how many broughams add horses he may
have, and it is no more tifati proper to give
the walk precedence. The walk is an ac
quirement a man gets.iert early in life,
but be never begins to. whlk in the proper
way until he is projfoséd foi membership
in a good club. This is tlie way: Legs
stiff, no elasticity; bddy well! forward, no
elasticity; head well? back, no elasticity,
and steps about two Sud a hall feet long;
Of course there arelyariations. Going to
a funeral the man about townshould walk
briskly and as if hesenjoyed jit; Thereby
he demonstrates his perfect repose of man
ner and shows that it is not influenced by
mere external circumstances. Going to a
wedding he should walk slowly and look
bored and thoroughly convinced that mar
riage is a faijurë.
In entering a ballroom the walk may'be
elaborated to almostüany extent. A man
should wear his evening walk just as he
wears his evening clojjies, for the occasion.
Then there are variations of the walk
aside from those of formality and stiffness.
The most noticeablejjof these is that em
ployed when the expert walker wÀtks with
a “gel." When th'ù's .agreeably employed
he should invariably face her and walk
sideways like a crab. This will at first be
found rather difficulty but practice makes
perfect, and the “gelf who will not put up
with being stepped ’on a few times and
bumped with a pair of unaccustomed knees
a few times has not a proper .appreciation
of culchaw and department. In walking
with the "gel” the student should care
fully avoid keeping step. The step to
gether' is for common soldiers, convicts,
clerks going together to'business arid cads
who disregard culchaw and depawtment.
Gentlemen never walk '.in step. It shows
too much premeditatici and thought, and
is not in keeping withjthe mental idleness
which should characterize a gentlemen.
A New Branch.
People who wish to call attention to
their particular line of business, and hang
out signs for this purpose, usually intend
to make these so explicit as to avoid any
possibility of being misunderstood. They
sometimes signally fail.
An old gentleman from a distant town
in the west was walking about a New Eng
land city celebrated for the number and
variety' of its educational institutions,
when he happened to see the sign: “Stam
mering Institute. A Few Lessons Suffi
cient.”
“My stars!” exclaimed the elderly strang
er, with sincere astonishment-; “I knew
they taught most everything in this extra
ordinary town, but who in land’s name
would want to learn stammerin?”—Youth’s
Companion.
CARRYING STICKS, GLOVES, ETC,
Varying regard for the bowee may be in
dicated by the enthusiasm Shown in hit
ting at the fly. It is well to practice in the
mirror.
Shaking hands is much less a part of
culchaw and depawtment than it once was.
It is too much work. Men don’t do it very
much, and as a rule when an acquaintance
offers to shake bands it is .quite proper not
to see his hand and to merely bow. If it
is an undesirable acquaintance, look at bis
hand -as though .there wasfsome doubt
about its .Cleanliness or as; though his
gloves were hot in good taste; and then de
liver the stony stare and short bow. It is
sometimes necessary to shake hands. For
instance, a prospective- father-inrlaw may
be an old timer an<L.nyA^g^shaking bauds. ;
If he is to be humoréœît should be done
daintily. The hand should be presented
on a level with his upper shirt stud, and
the motion of the shake should be straight
up and down.
Fewer well dressed, and culchawed men
carry walking sticks now than formerly.
If a stick is carried it should not be walked
with. It should be light, but should im
press the people that it is heavy, and that
the man of culchaw is tired qf carrying it.
It should hang head down and back prefer
ably in the left hand.- The gloves should
always be carried with the fingers forward.
The few rudiments of cujchaw and de
pawtment here given may séem trivial to
the uninitiated, but they are in reality im
portant and.wholesome. They have helped
men into society. They have also gbt men
laughed at and disliked, but this is be
lieved only by those'ignorant persons who
are envious because they have no knowl
edge of culchaw sn'l denawtment.-
Suffered Every Minute
Since I came out of the war, with catarrh in my
head, chronic diarrhoea and rheumatism,” says
Mr. J. G. Anderson, Qf
Scottdale, Pa. “I had
pains all over me, my
sight was dim, and there
seemed to be floating
specks befoie iny eyes.
The food I ate seemed
like lead in my stomach;
Hood’s Sarsaparilla and
Hood’s Pills did me more
good than anything else.
All my disagreeable
symptoms have gone.” Mr. J. G. Anderson
HOOD’S
CURES
Hood’s Pills cure Constipation by restori ng
the peristaltic action of the alimentary caual.(
—-WILL FIND A FULL LINE OF-----
TYPE, PRESSES,
Printing Material anil Machinery
Queer Things to Eat.
Just before the Franco-GermSn war a
traveling quack in France employed as his
clown, after the fashion of the day, a man
named Tore, who testified to the excel
lence of his master’s cure for indigestion
by swallowing corks and pebbles. After
leaving the quack he enlisted, and in the
presence of Dr. Lorentz tore open a live
cat, sucked its blood and devoured it. He
also ate. in the same way living snakes,
grinding their beads between his teeth'
During the war he conveyed secret in
formation for the French army by swal
lowing a small box with a written paper
inside it, but lie was at last-detected by
the Prussians find punished as a spy.—
London Tit-Bits.
For sale at lowest prices and most advantageous terms at
PALMER & REY TYPE FOUNDRY,
Corner Front and Alder Streets,
PORTLAND, OR.
Write for prices and terms before buying elsewhere.
Hercules Gas Enginu
An English Poet.
Algernon Swinburne, the poet, is small
of stature, has a small mouth, a weak chin
and a prominent forehead; and is slightly
dcai - Hta^yes,-Sai^r.,lai:ge,. lmnlnQ.us,.A,an<l
-expressivg.an'd'hilVm'anner cblQIal And un
affected. He shares his pleasant bachelor
quarters with Theodore Watt, the painter
and critic, with whom he takes long walks
in the country, taking long strides with his’
eyes fixed on the ground. He never carries
an umbrella, even in the stormiest weather,
and is fond of distributing cakes, and can
dies among the children whom he meets.-
(GAS OR GASOLINE)
N1 ade for Power or Pumping Purpose««
1
Sacks.,
50cts.,and^S
fl.OOper Bottle?
y
One cent a dose.
Lieutenant Peary and Mrs. Peary will spend
T his G reat C ough C ure promptly care«
the summer in the vicinity of the north pole, as where all others fail. Coughs, Croup, Sore
usual.
Throat, Hoarseness, vVhooping Cough and
Asthma. For Consumption it has no rival:
has cured thousands, arid will CURB T0U if
HOITT’S OAK GKOVE SCHOOL.
taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guar
antee. For a Lame Back or Chest, use
Millbrae, San Mateo county, Cal. A first- SHILOH’S BELLADONNA PLASTER^oo.
class home school for boys. Beautiful sur
roundings. Superior instruction. The best
CATARRH
of care. Its graduates for 1893 are admitted
to the State University or Stanford Univer
REMEDY,
sity without examination. ’Number of pu
Have you Catarrh ? This remedy is guaran
pils limited. Fall term commences August teed to cure you. Price, SOcts. Injector free.
1. Send for catalogue, and mention this
paper. Ira G. Hoitt, Ph. D., Master, ex
State Superintendent Public Instruction.
No Carburetor to get out of order.
No Batteries or Electric Spark.
It runs with a Cheaper Grade of Gasoline than any
other Engine.
Quite a number of the collapsed institutions
out West are in the hands of receivers. If the
receiver is as bad as the thief, what's the use of
having one appointed.
BEND FOR CATALOGUE TO
PALMER & REY, M anufacturers ,
DECIDEDLY SHAKY.
A trembling hand, an uncertain step, fidgeti
ness, indicated by restless shifting from one
place or posture to another,Tisjially mental an
noyance at unexpected noises, are among 'the
indications ef extreme nervousness. These
seem trifling, but the health of men and women
in this condition is “ decidedly shaky,” liable
to be overthrown disastrously by causes which
the vigorous might defy. To fortify the ner
vous system general vigor must, through the
medium of reinforced digestion and a renewal
of an impaired power of sleeping at night, be
raised to a healthful standard. A guarantee of
this is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which re
establishes digestion, bile secretion and the
habit of b'ody on a permanently regular
basis, thus renewing that body equilibrium,
which is followed by a gain of strength and
nerve tranquillity. For kidney complaint,
rheumatism, neuralgia, and as a preventive of
the first attack or subsequent return of mala
IMPORTANCE OF THE BOW.
rial disorders, this medicine is without a peer.
Walking having been considered; it is Thrice
daily take a wineglassful.
now necessary to take up standing still
-and sitting down. Tp describe these ac
complishments it is [Srhaps sufficient to
say that in standing the real swell should
look as though he woflld prefer to sit, and
in sitting he should qonvey thé impression
that he would préfer.tagtand,. If he does
this he can
bored.--------- *
"
Now comes the bow, a, most useful ac
complishment, in fact the most useful one
in connection with cuichajiv and depawt
ment.. A man of real culchaw should be
able to insult a man grossly with his bow
upon occasion, arid he should also be able
to bow so that the bowee would not hesi
tate about lending him SKX) without secu
rity. This bow is most difficult.
All bows may be divided into two classes
—the short bow without, raising the hat,
which may be either insulting or pleasing,
and the long Lord Chesterfield bow for
“gels,” which may convey either mere
recognition or the deepest regard. For the
short bow merely snap thé head. If it is
intended to be insulting the person to be
insulted should be looked at With a sort of
“By-Jove-1-don’t-seé-you-and - I-don’t-llke-'
your-looks" stare, and then the head
should be snapped very short.
To please it should be moved slower and
with a smile. This can hardly fail to
please. The long Lord Chesterfield bow is
much more laborious,'but it is also much
more impressive. To accomplish it grasp
the hat firmly by the front of the rim;
imagine a fly about eighteen inches from
the tip of the hose and try- to hit it with
the crown of the hat; then smile as if in
exultation at having hit it, and as the hat
is replaced look at the bowee for approba
tion and appreciation of the dexterity dis
played.
PRINTERS AND PURLISHERS
is not safe to infer from the way that he
spells his name that Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen is
a jay.
TRIBUTE.
While it is over thirty years ago since
A lucock ’ s P orous P lasters were first in
troduced to the medical profession and
public, the marked success and unprece
dented popularity which they met with
not.only continues, but steadily increases.
No other plasters have been produced which
gain so many testimonials of high value as
those continuously accorded to A li . cock b
P orous P lasters , and the only motive for
these exceptional tributes lies in the fact of
their being.a medicinal and pharmaceutical
preparation of superior value. Additional
proof pf the true value of A llcock ’ s P or
ous P lasters lies in the fact that they are
being largely imitated by unscrupulous
persons, who seek to deceive the public by
offering plasters which they claim to be the
“same.” “equal,” “as good,” “better,”
“ best porous plaster,” etc., while it is in
general appearance only that they resem
ble A llcock ’ s . Every one of the so called
porous plasters are imitations of A llcock ’ s
P orous P lasters .
Avoid dealers who attempt to palm off
inferior and worthless plasters that are
purchased by them at low rates for the
purpose of substitution.
406 Sansome Street, San Francisco, Cal
PORTLAND. OREGON.
Polder
Purity and
Leavening PovVer
UHEQOALED.
208-212 Bush St., San Francisco.
GASH PRIZES
To Introduce our Powder, we have de
termined to distribute among the consum
ers a number of CASH PRIZES. To
the person or club returning us the largest
of certificates on or before June 1,
1894, we will give a cash prize of $100. and
to the next largest, numerous other prizes
ranging from $5 to $75 IN CASH.
‘August
Flower”
0
,A. FELDENHEIM-
•ER, 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.
.- M
emirs
Mm
SYRUP
COUGHS»
COLDS
AND CROUP.
GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE.
In raising a family of nine children, my only rem
edy for Coughs, Colds and Croup was onion syrup. It
is just as effective to-day as it was forty years ago.
Now my grandchildren take Dr. Gunn’s Onion Syrup
which is already prepared and more pleasant to the
taste. Sold everywhere. Largo bottles 50 cents.
Take no substitute for it» There’s nothing as good.
BLOOD POISON
A SPECIALTY ■
ary or’Tertiary
Syphilis permanently cured in 15 to 35 clays. You
can be treated at homo for the same price and the
same guarantees; with those who prefer to come
here we will contract to cure them or refund money
and pay expense of coming, railroad fare and hotel
bills, if we fail to cure. If you have taken mer
cury, Iodide potash, and still have aches and
iains, Mucous jE*atches>in mouth, Sore Throat»
*imples, Copper-Colored Spots,Ulcers on any
part of the body, Ma!r or Eyebrows falling:
out, it is this Syphilitic BLOOD POISON
that we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most
obstinate cases and challenge the world for
a case we cannot cure« This disease has always
baffled the skill of the most eminent physi»
clans. ©500,000 capital behind our uncondi
tional guarantee. Absolute proofs sent sealed on
application. Address COOK. BEMED^f CO.»
to 1331 Masonic Temple, Chicago, Ili*
ITCHTWG PILES knoWn by moisture
like perapiratiqn, cause intense itching
when warm. This form. and. BLIND,
BLEEDING- or PBOTBUDING PILEa
YIELD AT ONCE TO
DR. BO-SAN-KO’S PILE REMEDY,
PILES
which acts directly on parta. affected,
absorb^ tumors, allays itching, effecting
a permanent cure. Price 50c. Druggists
or mail. L>r. Eosanko, Philadelphia, Pa.
THIS IS THE TIME TO
order your SUMMER
ROLLERS. You want
the best ; that’s the only
kind we deal in. Then
send your order for the
BEST ROLLERS and
INKS to PALMER A
REY TYPE F’DRY
FRAZER AXLE
TPPO KTZVDS OF WOMEN
need Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescrip Best in ths World!
tion— those who Set the Genuine!
want to be made
strong, and those Sold Everywhere!
who want to be FRANK WOOLSEY, Agent, Portland, Or.
made well. It
builds up, invigor
ates, regulates, and
cures.
HERCULES
It’s for young
girls just entering
womanhood; for
women who have
Bun Witlt Gas or Gasoline. .
reached the critical
Tour Wife can run it. Requires nd licensed
“change of life”; for women expect- engineer.
Makes no smell or dirt. No Batteries
ing to become mothers; for mothers or Electric Spark.'
who are nursing and exhausted; for
PALMER & BEY?
every woman who is run-down, delicate, S an F bancisco , C al .
P ortland , O b .
or overworked.
For all the disorders, diseases, and
weaknesses of women, “Favorite Pre-; BEATS STEAM POWER
scriptiori ” is the only remedy so unfail
ing that it can be guaranteed. If it
doesn’t benefit or cure, in every case,
tiie money will be returned.
ft
GAS ENGINE.
. GIVEN AWAY to those guessing
J nearest the number of Visitors .at
J the World’s Fair. Particulars
our treatise on Prevention— 4.
Cure of private Male and H [J H L
Female diseases all sent’’
Igents wanted. Standard Remedy Co., Seattle.
Home Comforts! Cuisine Unexcelled!
CLOSSET & DEVERS, PORTLAND, Or.
There is more catarrh in this section of the
country than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed io be
incurable. For a great many years doctors pro
nounced it a local disease and prescribed local
remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with
local treatment pronounced it incurable. Sci
ence has proven catarrh to be a constitutional
dis< ase, and therefore requires constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
oy F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the. only
constitutional cure on the market. It is taken
internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoon
ful. It acts directly on the blood and mucou
surfaces of the ystem. They offer one hundred
dollars for any ease it fails to cure. Send for
circulars and testimonials. Address
F. J; CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists; 75 cents.
T ry G ermea for breakfast.
This favorite hotel -is under the management
of CHARLES MONTGOMERY, and is as good if
not the best Family and Business Men’s Hotel
in San Francisco.
First-class service and the highest standard of
respectability guaranteed. Our rooms cannoi be
surpassed /or neatness an* comfort Board and
room per day, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00; board
and room per week, $7 to $12; single rooms 50c
to $1. Free coach-to and from hotel.
Miss C. G. M c C lav H, School
teacher, 753 Park Place, Elmira, N.
Y. ‘ ‘ This Spring while away from
home teaching my first term in a
country school I was perfectly
wretched with that human agony
called dyspepsia. After dieting for
two weeks and getting no better, a
friend wrote me, suggesting that I
take August Flower. The very next
day I purchased a bottle. I am de
lighted to say that August Flower
One of the glorious advantages pf life on the helped me. so that I have quite re
plaisance is that one may wear almost anything covered from my indisposition.”
there and not be shot at.
Use Enameline Stove Polish; no dust, no smell.
Brooklyn Hotel
P ortland , O b .
9
m
S
a
9
. S
Th© Specific A No. !•
Oureq, without fail, all cases of Chmorr-
hceu and Gleet, no matter of how long
standing. Prevents stricture, it being an In-
ternal remedy. Cures when everything els©
has failed. Sold by all Druggists. ,
Manufacturers: The A. Schoenhef ¿Medicine
9
■
■
■
■
MRS.
WINSLOW’S %%Hu'PNG -
FOR CHILDREN TEETHING
-
For sale by all Druggists. S& Cents a bottle.
DON’T BORROW TROUBLE.”
BUY
SAPOLIO
’TIS CHEAPER IN THE END.
Consumptives and people
who have weak tangs or Asth
ma,- should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption: It has cured
thousands. It has not injur
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. 35c.
RHEUMATISM CURED BY THE USE OF
Nloore’s Revealed Remedy.
A storia . O regon , January 10,—I can state with pleasure that by the use of
MOORE’S REVEALED REMEDY my husband was relieved Irom an old case of
RHEUMATISM and my youngest boy cured entirely of INFLAMMATORY RHEU
MATISM when the best doctori could get did him no good. Yours in gratitude.
MBS. N. V. STEELS.
SOI.D BY YOUB DBDGGIST.