Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1894)
By Authority of Congress. Baking Powder ; The report of the analyses of Baking Powders, made , by the U. S. Government (Chemical Division, Ag'l Dep't), shows the Royal superior to all other powders, and gives its leaveningstrength and thestrength of each . of the other cream of tartar powders tested as follows : ; ROYAL, Absolutely Pure, The OTHER POWDERS TESTED are reported to con tain both lime and sulphuric , acid, and to be of the follow ins strengths respectively, These tests, made in the Gov't Laboratory, by impartial and unprejudiced official chemists, furnish the highest evidence that the " Royal " is the best baking powder. " ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. THE SYBARITE. A bed of roses where the sunlight fans; A glimpse of purple grapes on southward walls, " And far, white Thurli through the leaves of trees. . A sense of rest where yet no duty calls. A single wave that laps the Idle beach; A shining lizard darting out of reach; A breath of wind through odorous banks of flowers; A thought of peace, and yet too slow for speech. A dln.1 wIiafr the nnlntAti Rlin.dow nreenfl From hour to hour ot ease; a day that keeps Its beauty through the night; a night that oomes ' With dew and starsa hush world that sleeps. ,!,.,;, Detroit Free PresH. - Ta11 Will ftA nn & rnmt.f What do you think of the idea of hell, the future abode of the wicked, being situated in the nucleus of some gigantic comet? This opinion, odd as it may seem .to those who have given comets and the future state of the dead but little atten tion, has been entertained by many really eminent 5 scientists and - philosophers, among them the learned Dr..Whiston, the friend and sometime adviser of the great Sir Isaac Newton. ' v" -,; In answer to the inquiries of a friend, whoVroteto ask. the doct6r for some tangible proof on the subject, the follow ing unique theories were advanced: "Ac cording to my calculations and deduc tions, this theory which you rightly say 'must belong to me and me alone,' does locate hell, the awful prison house of the damned, in the fiery nucleus of some (perhaps yet undiscovered) comet of un thinkable 6ize. ' ''."".' ' "In this wide circling chariot of fire they will be whirled in the twinkling of an eye from the intolerable heat of the surface of the sun bock into space hun dreds and hundreds of millions of miles from the great torch bearer of our sys tem. Thus instantly the wretched ten ants will be given two unbearable ex- ' tremes one of cold and the other of heat-r-this to continue through the end less ages of eternity, while the Almighty is dispensing the severities of justice.". : Did mortal man ever harbor a more horrible idea than this? St. Louis Re public. ' ' '" Literary Chances In New York. The actual chances for literary success in New York are in no respect different from those which any greater city pre sents over those of a smaller community. If a literary man or woman can go to New York with a certainty offered in the wav of a f airlv Bavins Dosition. then I say, Dy an means go, ana 11 ne nas any talent in him it will come out and win quick success. But if he has only ordi nary gifts then let him stay where he is, even with a certainty offered him. New York holds out nothing to such a man except a poor livelihood. Or, if a writer has established a fair reputation, is known by editors and publishers through letters, and he feels that there is some thing in him which only the activity' of a great city will bring out, then let him go to Dusy uotnam. But let him be careful that he does not confuse ambition with talent. New York is full of ambitious writers, and they will always remain ambitious, al ways reaching out to eat the literary oats which hang suspended just a little out of their reach. Ambition is a splendid quality, but the talent must be there to back it up. And the latter is what is lacking in so many of the ambitious lit erary spirits in New York today. It is all ambition. E. W. Bok in Ladies' Home Journal. ... Disappearance of a Famous Picture. The story of the disappearance of Gains borough's portrait of the beautiful Duchess of Devonshire belongs to the romance of art. The history of the vicissitudes of art treasures contains nothing more startling than the theft of this canvas. It was brought to the hammer of Christie's, in King street, on May 6, 1876. ' The bidding for the picture was very spirited and closed at 10,000 guineas, when it came into the possession of . Mr. Agnew. :' ' ' It was stolen from his premises in Old Bond street Jon the night of the 25th of the same month. Nothing has been heard since of this famous picture. The one of her grace at Chatsworth is by the same painter, and was exhibited at the Royal academy in 1783. Gainsborough was so dissatisfied with one of his pictures of the duchess that he would not send it to Chatsworth. He drew his wet brush across the exquisite mouth, exclaiming, "Her grace is too diffi cult for me." Sala's Journal. LEAVEN INO OAS. Paroent. Oubio In. peros. I3.06 J . . 160.6 ia.58 . ; . 151. 1 , , II. 13 . . 133.6 110.26 . . 133.3 9-53 .IM. ) 9.29 . . 111.6 .8.03 . . . 96.5 . L ,7.28 .. . 87.4 , The Mechanism of an Oyster. Every oyster has a mouth, a heart, a liver, a Btomach, besides many curiously devised little intestines and other organs neces sary organs, such as would be handy to n living, moving, intelligent creature. The mouth is at the end of the shell, near the hinge and adjoining the toothed portion of the oyster's pearly covering. This tiny little apology of a mouth is oval in shape, and although hardly visible to one unused to making such anatomical examinations can be easily discovered by gently pushing a bodkin or a piece pf blunt, smooth wire tlong the surface of the locality mentioned. ' When the mouth is at last located you can thrust your instrument through be tween the delicate lips and a considerable distance toward the Btomach without caus ing the oyster the least pain whatever. From this mouth there is of course a miniature ' canal leading to the stomach. Food passes from this canal to the stomach, and from the latter organ into the intes tines just as readily as though the little bivalve were as large as an elephant or a rhinoceros. Remove the shell (this operation is rather rough on the oyster, but can be done in a comparatively painless manner by an ex pert) and you will see the crescent, which lies just over the so called heart. This half moon space is the oyster a perioardmm. Within is the true heart, the pulsations of which can be readily seen without the aid of a glass. The heart is very humanlike, made of two parts, one of which receives the blood from the gills through a network" of real blood vessels; the other portion con tracts and drives the blood out through the body. The other organs of an oyster's anat omy are all . in the proper places and per forming their several functions. St, Louis Republic. .1 ... -One Fine Morning. It was not quite so white a world as showed itself one August morning years ago. The sun had risen its finest, and the tourist crowd had gone bock to its beds in the big hotel just off the Kulm and left it to three well wrapped mortals too en. thralled to feel- that they could ever sleep again. The green of the mountain rose like an island from a wide sea of billowy, silky, white clouds. Only the distant mountain peaks companioned it, and the sky made a blue dome over all. After a time clear peals of heavy bells came up through the fleecy substance that hid church and village, and we could hear the tinkle of the cow and goat bells as herds and flocks went to the pastures. Then as the sun rose higher there were rifts in the clouds, and hamlets, forests and blue lakes appeared and disappeared as the sea shifted its billows. The rifts opened wider and wider as the hours went on, till it was all open, and the lake of the four forest cantons lay clear, far below, with the Bernese Alps -piling up their snows and glaciers and precipices on the farther side, and lakelets and towns and farms. and miles of pastoral Switzerland could be studied as on a map. ; , : The gravity railways have since that day brought higher and better situated moun tain tops within the reach of the three travelers, and they are content to sail up Laka Lucerne without stopping, but with a feeling that the unsurpassed morning for them was that one when tho Rigi did its best. Newport News. :. A Photographic Diary. Of the many uses to which photography has been put probably that of using it as a means of forming an illustrated diary is the most novel. 1 It is said that a certain millionaire is always accompanied by a quiet looking man who carries a small, square case and hovers around in a seem ingly suspicious way. But he is a most important individual and receives a hand some salary for his services. It is his duty to take a series of instantaneous photo graphs, showing how his employer has passed the day. There is no posing or any thing of the sort and the photographer has to use his own judgment in choosing which moments to represent. ' ' ' We need hardly point out what possibili ties this opens up, and really a most inter esting and instructive history of a man's life could thus be formed. It is true not all of us can afford to employ a photog rapher, to take us about a dozen times a day, but if we ourselves carried always a hand camera and shot off at things and places of interest which we come across in every day life, we could make aa interest ing record which in years to come would be of value if only to remind us more vivid ly of the past. Outing.' ' ; Four thousand new postoffices were established last year, and 557,640 an mailable letters poured into the boxes, 83,612 of them wholly without any out side sign.-symbol or address. - . A married woman was' found intoxi cated in the streets of London with $5,000 in her pocket. She said she carried the money about because she was afraid of burglars. , Iff Unconventional Goings On Re ported at Rideau Hall. QUEER CONDUCT OF THE SERYiNTS They Seem to Be on Terms of Social Equal ¬ ity With the Governor General and II 1 ' Guests Aristocratic Ottawa Holds Up Its , Hands In Horror. , . , Queer rumors come from Ottawa con eernlng unconventional and altogether unprecedented , proceedings at, Rideau Hall. The governor general, Lord Aber deen, and his famous lady are said to hob nob in the most familiar fashion with their servants and to conduct their official entertainments in an unceremonious stylo that has quite shocked and horrified the society of that conservative capital. For our knowledge of the situation we are in debted to the following story by the Ot tawa correspondent of the New York Re corder, who is evidently an ardent partisan of the anti-Aberdeen faction: 1 . Never was gentlewoman more advanced and liberal In her ideas than is Lady Aberdeen. who in consequence has gained in popularity among tradespeople and the working classes what has been lost in the upper set. Since their arrival at Government House there has been literally no distinction of persons, and the "exclusive" of the capital have been horri fied beyond measure by meeting at official en tertainments grocers, restaurant keepers, pub lic school teachers and even waiters in fact, a perfect olla podrida. - To any one conversant with Canadian so ciety it will at once appear how galling this is to the Four Hundred of the Dominion in gen eral and to aristocratic Ottawa in particular. The Aberdeens' first entertainment baffles description, and the quality of the supper was truly appalling, consisting as it did of thickly cut ham sandwiches, bad claret cup and tepid lemonade. r ... Her ladyship is playing the mischief with the servants here. She has a club for their own household called the "Haddo club," and they have weekly entertainments. Recently at one of these Mr. Grant, the butler, read a paper entitled "My Impressions of Canada. Each servant is permitted to invite two friends to these gatherings, and the Aberdeens also ask a few friends. The other evening the ' LADY ABERDEEN. . Honorable Mrs. Herbert, wife of General Her. bert, a most aristocratio lady, was one of those favored, and on ringing to order her carriage was told that "the coachman had gone out." She had to telephone for a cab. When she en tered the ballroom at Government House, the first thing she saw was her ooachman dancing with Lady Aberdeen. This is a tact! - : Another day Mrs. Herbert- and a friend were asked there to lunch and went at the appointed hour. - After keeping them Waiting half an hour in the drawing room Lady Aberdeen came In, apologizing for keeping them, but said that tho "Haddo club" had a meeting that morn. ing and she only hoped the servants would have time to get them something to eat. Evi dently the servants hadn't, for after another long interval a tray was brought into the draw ing room with a small plate of ham sandwiches and some cold tea not fit. to drink, and that was all the lunch they got. The domestics at the vice regal mansion are most insolent. They don't attend to the guests and make audible personal remarks about them and laugh at their own jokes. The other evening at dinner a lady asked the butler for a fork, and he replied haughtily, "Madam, all you require is on the table." ' At an evening party a few weeks ago a friend of mine told me that when she went in to sup perquite early, too five or six of the- maids were sitting down at the supper table, stufllng themselves as fast as they could. One was at last induced to pour out a cup of coffee, but poured out another for herself at the same time, endeavoring to enter conversation with the guests. The servants wear no uniforms not even caps and aprons, which Lady Aberdeen regards as badges of servitude. Other people's servants are beginning to follow suit and say they will not wear them either. His excellency always calls her excellency "mother," both in public and private. At the state drawing room, held in the senate cham ber at the beginning of the parliamentary ses sion, every Jack and Jill in Ottawa was pres ent, while but few society people put In an ap pearance. "Mother" got , tired of standing when the ceremony was about half over, so ev erything came to a standstill for her to rest, She was just going to sitdown on the "throne," but remembered in time her husband repre sented the queen, at any rate in public, what ever he might do in private. There was nc-r where else to sit, so they spilt the difference. and each sat down on an arm of the throne and dangled their lower limbs, to the great ed ification of .the galleries. He chatted to hit aids-de-camp and she to her ladies in waiting till sufficiently rested to continue. Lady Aberdeen's appearance is against her. She has good clothes and jewelry, but seems to throw them on. At the recent drawing room no two people Would have looked more out 01 place, and certainly if a caricature of vice re gal state were intended Lord and Lady Aber deen have most effectively provided a spectacle to make loyalists weep and republicans jeer. There is quite a romance connected with Lord Aberdeen's marriage. The young peer was on a walking tour through Scotland, and knowing that he was somewhere near the cas tle of Lord Tweedmouth he thought he would call on him. However, as the hills were envel oped in a thick Scotch mist, he soon lost his way and wandered about helplessly for hours. When it lifted slightly, he perceived in the distance a young Scotch lassie, very plainly dressed in homespun and accompanied only by a large collie dog. . Thinking her some shep herd's daughter, he said, "My good girl, can you direct me to Lord Tweedmouth 's?" - " To his surprise and embarrassment, the 'good girl" replied, "I should think 1,'could, considering I have lived there all my life, being his daughter." t-..... They chatted merrily after this, and on reaching the castle It turned out that the fa thers of the young people had been firm friends years ago. The acquaintance thus made ripened into friendship, friendship into love, and their wedding bells rang Nov. 7, 1877. The union has been a most fortunate one for Lord Aberdeen, as he possesses a morbidly sensitive and nervous temperament and is frightened, it seems, by his own shadow, hang lng persistently to his wife's apron strings on all occasions. Indeed it is a common Bering that she is the better man of the two. . Tho Wild Career ot a Boi;u Chicago Iluiu. Some small boys fastened a wire to one of i those wooden: hams which are used for advertising purposes, and to the other end of the wire attached a lot of fish hooks, then dropped the fish hooks Into the Madison street cable slot at Madison street, near Halsted. The hooks quickly took hold of the running cable, and away sped the ham toward the set ting sun. ' ;-: ,:'' 1 At Green street it struck and tossed into the mud handsomely dressed Jim )e Meyer, the., wine connoisseur. At tiOOinis street it struck an Italian's hand cart : laden with fresh roasted peanuts and popcorn and scattered the load over the road. The ham journeyed right on, leaving the son of .Italy and the street newsboys to fight over the peanuts and popcorn. A bicycle rider was upset at Lincoln street and slightly injured by eolliding with the flying imitation pork. As the frayed edged ham danced along near Western avenne it caught the eye of a nearsighted saloon keeper: - '' " : "What a nice addition." muttered he, "to my free lunch counter." He grabbed a board, threw himself into position like a grand stand ball player as he comes to bat, and as the ham approached him he swiped it about amidship, broke the wire and acquired the ham. The loafers who, clad in their best clothes, stood lazily smoking cigars on the sidewalk, gently led the ham grabbing saloon keeper into his saloon near by. Chicago Tribune . 'Salvage for Injured Sailors.. . vJs. . It is usual, when one of a party of salvors receives an injury in the course of the work, to give the one injured an extra compensa tion. In the case of the disabled steamship Australian, taken in tow by the Cunarder Catalonia, 870 miles west of Queenstown, the second officer bad his ankle dislocated, and received $250 in addition to his share of the salvage, which was altogether $30,000. New York Evening Sun. ' V BRACE. THE NERVES. Sedatives and opiates won't do It. These ner vines do not make the nerves strong, and failing to do this, fall short of producing the essential of their quietude vigor. And while in extreme cases-and these only of nervous irritation such drugs may be advisable, their frequent use is highly prejudicial to the delicate, organism upon which they act, and in order to renew their quieting effect increased and dangerous doses eventually become necessary. Hostetter's Stomach BitterB is an efficient substitute for such pernicious drugs. It quiets the nerves by bracing, toning, strengthening them. The con nection btween weakness of the nervous sys tem and that of the organs of digestion is a strong and sympathetic link. The Bitters by imparting a healthful impulse to the digest. ve and assimilating functions promotes through out the whole system a vigor in which the nerves come in for a large share. Use the Bitters in malaria, constipation, bilious and kidney troume. . , Pipkin What are you going to do with your son when be gets out of college? Potts I think some et tending mm 10 scnooi. .,... 1 EXPENSIVE ECONOMY. ; Some people begrudge the little money that an Allcock's Porous Plaster costs, and then when they are racked with pain from a lame back, or from the soreness arising from a cold, they will spend any amount of money'to relieve the pain. If tney only had one ot these world-renowned plasters on hand, they would be saved a vast amount ot Buttering and be consider ably richer. At the first sign of stiffness of the ioints anDlv one of these plasters without any delay. The soreness will be greatly relieved at once and soon disappear entirely, it will be money saved to nave them on hand, to say nothing of the com fort they bring. Bkandbkth'b Fills contain no irritating matter. " With what are you going to surprise your busDana on nis recovery irom nis long liinessr" " With my new hat." 1 ; ' - DIRECTIONS i - .'-FOB CSINa Cream Balm. Apply a particle of the Balm well up into the nostrils. . After a CATARRH lo7$U fVorrCOLN moment draw strong breath through the nose. Use three times a day, after meals pre ferred, and before re tiring. ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the Na-al Passages, Allays Pain and Infismma- tlon, Heals the Sores, Protects the Mem COLD HEAD brane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Tbe Balm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. Price 50 cents at Druggists' or by mail. ELY BROTH KR8, . : 66 Warren Street, New York. Scrofula is ; Disease Germs living In the Blood and feeding upon its Life. Overcome these ; erms with , . -r ... ? , Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, and make your blood healthy, skin pure and system strong. Physicians, the. world over, endorse it. ... ..-j.; !.-', Don't be deceived by Substitutes! ? Prepare 1 by Scott A Bowne. N. T. All Draggilt. Scott's BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY. . - - ' FOUNDED 1870. A boarding and day school for boys and young men, under military discipline. Seventeenth (17) year under present management will open September 18. Thor ough preparation for college and scientific schools. Commercial Course, ACA DEMIC, PREPARATORY AND PRIMARY DEPARTMENTS. , , ' , ,,,, ' For Catalogue and Full Particulars. ' J. W. HILL, M. D., Principal, "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR GAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES MALARIA! H Three doses onlv. Trv it. IMWilfc'MiHi'tMliI'lMi isMIUiy 1 ' SlOO REWARD, 8100. i s ii 1 1 in i t - :. . Ths readers of tb.ii paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its Btages, and that it catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the med ical fraternity. Catarrh, being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1 taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving tbe patient strength by building up the constitution, and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars foi any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Ad dress F. i. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists; 75 cents. Use Enameline Stove Polish ; no dust no smell. Try Gebhia for breakfast. ' THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA by Columbus . brought . enlightenment to the . world. New fields of enlightenment in this century are in the lines of science. The triumph , or ionservative sure lery is well illustrated ' by the fact that RIIPTIIRF?r Breach, is now rad ically cured without the knife and without rtain. -- Clumsy, chafing trusses - - never cure due orten in- duce inflammation, strangulation and death. TUMORS Ovarian, Fibroid (Uterine) and u m ii we many others, are now removed without the nerils of cutting onerations. Pll F TUMORS however large. Fistula nut I Uiviunw, ana otner diseases of the lower bowel, are permanently cured without pain or resuro to ine anue. . ... ST0NF m tne Bladder, no matter how w v ii im large, is crushed, pulverized, washed out and perfectly removed without cutting. , TR!f!TIIRF ot Urinary Passage is also w I niu I Uflt removed without cutting in hundreds of cases. For pamphlet, references and particulars, send 10 cents (in stamps) to World's Dispensary Medical Association, ooo muiu Dtreei, uuuniu, in. x. An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC. Sold by Druggists or sent by mail. 25o..60o, . and 81.00 per package. Samples free. - - TrA Yin The Favorite TOOTH POWIIB JtkU Al. W for the Teeth and Breath, 26o. ST. HELEN'S Boarding and day scnooi lor gins. Opens September HALL. 19. ', 1W4. Address :: M1B8K8 KODNBY, Portland, Or. : CALKINS ELECTRIC OIL BURNER THE CREAT FUEL SAVER. HOME-MADE GAS PERFECTED AT last. No dirt, no ashes, no odor, no danger. A perfect method of generating and burning gas from petroleum oil. For heating and cooking. Fits anv stove: also adanted for furnaces, steam heaters and grates. Absolutely safe., No possi bility of explosion and cheaper than any other iuei. can ana examine tne latest invention. Agents wanted in every town and county in California, . Nevada, Oregon and Washington. f or circulars aauiess , , . , . CALKINS' ELECTRIC BURNER COMPANY, Pacific Coast Agency, 632 Larktn Street, San Francisco. . 09 CUAIT IS THE BEST. QCl WllWEet NOSQUEAKINQ. $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&ENAMELLEDCALF. 4-.$-3r.5PFlNECALF&KAN6AR01 ' w5PP0LICE,3 Soles. $5o.2.W0RKINGMEN2 ; EXTRA FINE. I,J 2.17JBuYSSCH00lSHDEa r LADIES ..;05O$2.H?'5 3.z-rtdongol, SEND FOR CATALOGUE L itJ W'L'DOUCLAS, S-4 BROCKTON. MASS. Too can save money by wearing the W. Ii. Douglas 83. OO Shoe. ... Because, we are tbe lareest manufacturers of this gradeof shoes in the world, and euarantee their value by stamping ihe name and price on tbe bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman's nroflts. Our shoes eaual custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. wenavetnem som everywhere at lower prices for the value given than any other make. Take no sub stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. A Dr. Williams' Indian Pile I I- X Ointment will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. II bi It absorbs the tumors, allays I the itching at once, acts as a poul- tice, gives instant relief. Dr, Will- lams' Indian Pile Ointment Is prepared for Piles and Itching of the private parts. Every box is warranted. By drug gists, bv mail on receipt of price, 50 cents and 11.00 WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO., Proprietors, cieveiana, unto. ,- ..... ft.?. N. TJ. No. 659 8. F. K. TJ. No. 636 P. 0. Drawer 17, Portland Or. ' DO YOU FEEL BAD? DOES YOUK BACK . ache? Does every step seem a burden? Yon need MOORE'S REVEALED . REMEDY. Headache, are caused by bad blood, and by a tail uuwii, wum uut cuuui- tion of the body. Remember ' Sarsa parilla s Be Sure to Get Hood's Hood's Pills are gentle, mild and effective. mm urnnin o r inun nunno, o. r. Mining Machinery, Bryan Mills. John- scon concentrators, jungines, uoiiers, Fump and General Machinery. Kg ti ma tea given on ail classes of Iron work. Address' 1 - " . - v:s. ' r R. H. MOORS, M. JH.i ; : .. Hotel Portland Portland, Or. , ' Do w not present smiling countenance?' ,,Why ihotild Wnott It il true we have .been overworked and even with ur greatly increased facilities, have had to work nifrMs, td supply the demands made upon us for Atrmotors, tanks and towers. This ever increasing, never ceasing demand for our goodi, even in times of groat business depression, makes us tired, but happy, as witness the smiling countenance in our glittering Aermotor. While others cannot get work to do, we are overwhelmed Willi it. Why? Because we nioka the best thing that can pi be made, of the best material mat is made, at the lowest price that ever was made. DacK it au oy ine best reputation ever made for knowing what to do, how to 1 AERMOTOR do it and in .CHICAGO variably accom- 1 DlishiiiK the re suit. All the world knows that the Aermotor Co. alone knows ' mills, steel towra how to make Wind and tanks. Orders lor them pour in up Knd corner of the earth. ' on us from OTerr nook A business depression in felt by us. The world fore, any wonder that any one locality is not is our field. Is it, there - wo are dusy ana are OouOling our last year s days of depression 7 tor premises, from tli . presents this well fed. All are prosperous, r. Kieryoue on the Aermo , ofHce boy to the owners, smiling eou ntenance.' ousy, nappy wont is . pienty, ana prospen iy attends tne design ers, makers, man n per and sellers of Aermotor. Even the purchasers of Aermotor are the wide-awake, intelligent, up to-the-times cash buyers in any community. Aermotor people have no forebodings ot disaster and hard times. Aermotor employes never strike. They Are prosperous and contented. Even in the civil commotion and great upheaval recently raging in Chicago, the Aermotor people were at work, radiant with smiles and good cheer, and ready to help bring and welcome back the general prosperity, which must, at once, inevitably return to our land. AfUUtuTOR CO.,!2th,-RockweU and Fillmore Sts.. Chicago, UL (Preserve this as No. 8 In the series of 13.) i, HERCULES Engines CAS and GASOLINE NOTED FOE- SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH, ECONOMY AND SUPERIOR . WORKMANSHIP. . ! In Every Detail. These enelnes are acknowledged hv oxnprf n. . elneera to be worthy of highest commendation for simplicity, high-grade material and superior workmanship. They develop the hill actual horse power, and run without an Electric Spark Battery; the system of ignition is simple, inex pensive and reliable. , , For pumping outfits for irrigating purposes no better engine can be found on the Pacific Coast. For hoisting outfits for mines they have met With highest approval. . . ... . ir.ir intf.rttiirti.nt tiiAf A.s.nnm.. tm un questioned. ""' TITiOMrtYCV" ..... j, : '' -i EPQIM -''.' MANUFACTURED 1JY ' ' '( PALMER I HEY TYPE FOUNDRY,;,; vwn rrous sua Aiuer on.. . . PORTLAND, - OREGON., Send for catalogue. ' ? ' ' ; "'' . ' ' ' ' ' '; Golden West Baking Powder HAS NO SUPERIOR IN v t any particular. . , MONEY REFtTNDED BT . ; any grocer,. ., , ! TD XTVF O 1 mar. nrwyr-n-' ' Made ih Portland bt , ; j Closset & Devers. Portland Business College, K . PORTLAND. OREGON. . $r$$ A' " AmMSTR0Hfc pR-." A- Wiaao, Sao. ' Open all the yeafc ' Students' ad-' mitted at any time. Instruction in common BnnonT unrl mmmcrrial branches, shorthand. tvDewritinor. etc. flm.T.itn Journal and specimens of penmanship sent free, Consumptives and. people who have weak lungs or Asth ma, should use Ptso's Cure lot Consumption. It has nred thousands, ft has not Injur ed one. It is not bad to take. It Is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 5e " Hood mm es u Ull UU W.UU UU II II f .1 I A Ii II VI II X "ir3'