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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1894)
.... . .-. I , , S ' : THE Royal Baking Powder, be sides rendering the food more palatable and wholesome, is, becajise of its higher leavening power, the most economical. The United States Government, after elaborate tests, reports the Royal Baking Powder to be of greater leavening strength than any other. !" Bulletin 13, U. S. Ag. Dep., p. 599. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., THE LADY BARBER. Before this newer age began We thought the art tonsorial ' Belonged by right of birth to man From ages immemorial. . , ' But she has come, with fixed intent, To prove to all the nations That man Is not pre-eminent In barber-ous operations. Oh, shaving is a sweet delight ' Since she the razor wielded) My heart unto her charms so bright ' Has altogether yielded. And. though she thinks 'tis only gush. My ecstasies amaze her. I hail her vueen of comb and brash And goddess of the razor. Some day, with lather on my cheek (Such is the plan I harbor), I shall courageously seek '. The hand of my fair barber. . But if she has already found Some man to love and praise her Her "No" would "cut" me, I'll be bound, - More deeply than her razor. National Barber. Shall Only the Few Be Saved? '.' ' Down on Madison street, between La Salle and Clark streets, a sermon is preached every day and at ail hours of the day. Not a sound is ottered, but the words carry a force and effect that are seldom exoelled in any of the Chicago pulpits. .' . The busy surge of humanity often . pauses for a moment to hear the mute but eloquent appeal. Men with business suits sometimes drop out of the crowd to linger an instant and calculate with their wonted rapidity the marvelous les son of a chart Religiously inolined people hang for minutes musing on the figures, and at times a sigh escapes their lips for the condition of this world. Some take notes. . The text, as it is a sermon, is, "Go forth into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature. " It is a plea for missions at the top of a chart with 1,424 squares. Each square is about an inch and represents a million people, all of them together the population, of the . world. Each religions organization is characterized by a different color. The Protestants number 116,000,000; the Greek church, 84,000,000; the Roman . Catholics, , 190,000,000; , the ... Jews, . 8,000,000; the Mohammedans, 170, 000,000, and the heathens the enormous number of 856,000,000. The heathen world is painted suggestively in black. Right in the center are three white squares. They look lonely and endan gered as a little white skiff tossed on the heaving bosom of the dark and stormy sea. Only three small squares out of that vast number to represent the Chris tian element in this world! And this only the nominal Christians, for three- fourths of one of these squares is red, representing 750,000 professed Chris tians. All kinds of remarks are made by the people who look. Chicago News. The Sole Woman Delegate. Miss Annie Lincedd was the sole woman delegate among the 60 who attended the fourth annual convention of the National Textile union recently held in Philadelphia. Miss Lincedd is presi dent of the Providence union, No. 43, and master workman of the Knights of Labor assembly, No. 4,047, of Provi dence. She is a cousin of Miss Mary O'Reilly, one of the deputy factory in spectors of Pennsylvania, and like her is a student of the labor question and a bright speaker. The National Textile union embraces in its. membership all branches of the textile industry, inolud ing workers in cotton and gingham mills, lace curtain operatives and square weavers and dyers, and the del egates attending the convention repre- sented 40, 000 workers. Mrs. ' Martha Moore Avery of Boston was one of the speakers. Philadelphia Item. Australian Aborigines Dying; Out. The aborigines of Australia are steadily dylnjr out, although the colonial govern ment spends a considerable sum on their support. Victoria and New South Wales have very few blacks left at all, and the number lessens every year. Since 1861 1 have been af great sufferer om catarrh. I i tried Mv Uream JSalm.' and to all appearances ami cured. Terrible headaches! from winch I had lona tuf-1 fered are gone. W. J. Hitchcock. Late Major 17., 8. Vol. & A. A. Gen., Buf- jau, jx. x. ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Paia and Inflammation, Heals the Bores, Pre tects the Membrane from colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril, and is agreeable. Price, 60 oents at DrnggisW or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, , 68 Warren Street, New York. . DR. LIEBIG & CO., Special Doctors for Chronic, Private and Wasting Diseases. Dr. Lieblg's Invlgorator the greatest remedy for Seminal Weakness, Loss of Manhood and Private Diseases, Overoomes Prematureness and prepares all for marriage life's duties, pleasures and respon sibilities; $1 trial bottle given or sent free to any one describing symptoms ; call or address 400 Geary St., private entrance 406 Uwm St., San Francisco. t:ilKFS WHrHF ill FISF Fill S- Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I In time. Sold by dnifnt'sts. .E m;aRjgt.-,,.j ........... . 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. A KING IN MINIATURE. Prince Edward Albert, the Infant Heir to the Throne of Great Britain, ' If Queon Viotoria, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York should die tomor row, a baby boy who looks exactly like several million other babies of the same age, and whose knowledge of life has not extended beyond the narrow confines of his royal oradle, would be king of Great Britain and Ireland and emperor of India. This interesting Infant is his royal high ness Prince Edward Albert, only son of the Duke and Duohess of York, grandson of Albert Edward, Prinoe of Wales and great-grandson of Queen Victoria. If the three people who now stand be tween his oradle and the throne live and reign so long as Queen Victoria, however. the baby prince will be baldheaded and wearing false teeth before he begins to way the scepter. The queen is now 76 years of age. She has been monarch of all she surveys in the United Kingdom for 67 years and seems good for 10 years more at least. She was 19 years old when she was crowned queen, and the eldest of her nine ohlldren, Prince Albert Edward, is now 63 years of age and a grandfather, but he seems no nearer to the throne of England today than he did In 1841, when he first opened his baby eyes. Prinoe George, the sailoj duke of York and father of the infant Prinoe, Ed war PRINCE EDWARD ALBERT. Albert, was born In 1866 and is conse quently but 29 years of age. He was the second son of the present Prinoe of Wales, but became heir to the throne owing to the death of his elder brother, Prince Al bert Viotor, in 1892. .With a great-grandmother of 76, a grandfather of 63 and a father of 29 between him and the throne, it will doubtless be many a year before Prinoe Edward Albert becomes king. If the present infant, heir to the throne grows to resemble his father, he will be a very lively youngster. It is said that when Prince George was 3 years old M. Adolphe Beau attempted to take his picture, but met with considerable opposition from the playful royal infant, who insisted upon winking gravely at the artist, first with one eye and then with the other. Thus far the present infant prinoe, who was born June 23, has devoted most of his time to eating, sleeping and crying, like less royal, but no less human, babies the world over. Be sleeps in a quaint cradle that was made for Queen Victoria In 1840, and that was used by all of the queen's children. It is covered with the richest of lace, and the sheets, pillows and blankets are the finest that money can buy. ' Her Nose Salted by a Stranger's Kindness. A young man who has lived in Canada and seen what Jack Frost can do when he is in an angry mood was walking across Boston common one morning when the thermometer was registering below zero. As he passed a pretty girl and glanced at her face he noticed that the end of her nose was very white, while the remainder of it was very red. He recognized the symp toms in an Instant. The flesh looked as if it was on fire, except where it was so white, and there it had the appearance of wax. He promptly accosted the young woman. "Excuse me, miss," he said, "but your face is frozen." , - "Drozenl" sne said. "What do you mean?" ' "I mean," he replied, ''that your nose is frostbitten and very badly too." Then he advised her to accompany him to a drug store and have the frozen member attended to at once. She submitted with out questioning, for the young man talked as if he knew what be was talking about. After getting her into a warm place he rubbed the tip of the nose briskly with snow, and the blood came creeping back into the chilled arteries. Tho patient winced under the pain, which could not have been greater if she had had needles jabbed into every pore of the frozen flesh. She stood it bravely, enough, however, and when the circulation of blood was restored the young man left her in care of the druggist and hit) liniments, and went on the way rejoicing that he had been able to save the pretty girl from disfigurement for life. Boston Herald. . . . Valuable Bookmark. Aaron Hohnah, a life long resident of West Millbury, died a short time ago, leaving an estate valued at nearly $10,- 000. When the administrator examined his effects he found among other things an old fashioned clasp Bible that Mr. Holman had been in the habit of reading every morning before breakfast. The administrator was told that the owner of the Bible had used a very odd looking bookmark, and looked to see what it might be. His surprise was very great when he discovered it to be a certificate of deposit of $700 in the Worcester Safe Deposit and Trust company. The de posit had been made in March, 1881, and for ten years the $700 had been drawing interest at 8 per cent. The old man had evidently felt wealthy enough to use this valuable bit of paper as a mark in his Bible, and thus combined finances and gospelinside the same covers.- ABOUT HANDSHAKING BETTER A3 AN INDEX TO CHARAC TER THAN HANDWRITING. The Cold, Metallic Grasp of the Avarloe and the Jerk of Simulated Delight, and Then There's the Grip of a Friend, Never to Be Mistaken. The study of character as indicated by handwriting is largely pursued both for pleasure and for profit, experts claiming that the hidden nature of the most re served man or woman will infallibly creep out through the finger ends and proclaim itself truly to the practiced eye; that the twist of an "s". or the cross of a "t" may indicate the soul of a saint er the instincts of a sinner, while in the lilliputian dotlet of an "i" may lurk whole history of hypocrisy or honesty kindliness or cruelty. It may be so. It may be that, while the subject matter is absorbing the mind, well trained by worldly wisdom to lie, the unsophisticated soul slips out in the unguarded formation of the in finite variety of curve and dash which is called handwriting. ., It seems, then, that, though the eye js the window of the soul, the hand is cer tainly the door from which it issues forth into the world, for none need to be experts to recognize at once the char acter of man or woman when engaged in the grand old greeting called handshak: Variety in handwriting may be infinite, but is it not so in handshaking? And as a means to unveil hidden thoughts or feelings the latter test must surely bf the better, for people write in truth oi falsehood and their writing remains tht same, but if people greet hypocritically though their words follow their wit. their hands grasp those they greet as their hearts alone command. i Handshaking, therefore, while in gen eral style it may serve to indicate the character, may also, by individual appli cation, mark the true relation in whicb the factors stand. . ' ,L Who has not felt the cold, metallic avaricious grasp, devoid of warmth or feeling, with which a man of business welcomes you? Does not something creep out .of his finger tips, telling you that while his voice says, "How do you dor his heart feels. "How much shall I make out of you?" . . . Have not all experienced the jerk ot the man who simulates intense delight in the meeting, but involuntarily drop? your paw as if he were afraid it would burn him? He probably owes you money and his handshaking tells you that his joy m the' encounter is all a sham. On the other hand, many are aware though the experience is more rare, bow the grip of a friend whose heart is sin cere sends a thrill through their own and in that moment they know that be reads them as clearly and truly as they Understand him. Then it is their turn to drop or retain their warm grasp, a their instincts dictate. - But their in stincts alone are their rulers. Again every one knows, or will know sooner or later, that handshaking and lovemaking are inseparable. ' When love is in the soul, does it not creep out at the finger tips and tell its tale of gladness or woe quicker and more surely than by any other channel? Come, all you noble army of experts in handwriting, can you tell "Does my Phyllis love me truly. though you are shown a gross of her let ters? And can you mistake that timid yet trustful pressure of her dainty digits as they meet yours and linger awhile like a kiss, then drop gently away like a tear' Examples such as these prove that in the shaking of hands individual relations are revealed and thoughts may undoubt edly be read. By a more general appli cation this process may typify character and broad outline w soul. Old wise women say that "a cold hand and a warm heart" are always asso ciated. Some venture to think that ex penence proves this to be a fallacy, at least as concerns the method of shaking hands. A warm, steady pressure, whicb reveals the pulsation of life, is surely the babit of those whose hearts overflow with the milk of human kindness, whereas a cold, inanimate touch is the natural style of those unemotional machines called heartless humanity. : . This is generally recognized, and as all virtues are aped and exaggerated so a certain class, in their anxiety to impress their friendships, torture their victims to the extent of the thumbscrew. . But the boarding school miss, who will listlessly lay her hand in yours, must-not be too hastily judged, for her manner proclaims that her character as yet is not formed and matured to the icy cold dame, the warm, loving woman, or the fast, flighty fickle and insincere ape. The man who shakes your hand vio lently up and down, then drops it with an air of having, done his duty, suggests such thoughts as molded into word might say: "Therel Don't say 1 didn't shake hands with yon, whatever else you may say," and thus the fact that he mis trusts you is implied. The handshaking of the man who, by prolonged pressure, causes uneasiness should probably .be read an overweaning value of the favors he confers and anx iety that you should not underestimate his friendship. , Such a man may be set down as a victim to conceit, but con sciously lacking the fuel on which to feed his master. ' . . The hasty snatch, and still more hasty flingaway, is preferable to either of these modes, for it betrays a self reliant spirit and a happy indifference to good or bad repute. The man with this method of hand shaking is at least no hypocrite, and that is as near as most men come to hon esty. ,. ". . . The absurd Dractice of crivmiz one or two finerers onlv alwavs seems a deliber ate insult, and is doubtless so translated by all students of, handshaking. It is a glaring proof pi littleness. , The heart and mind may' be judged to be propor tionate witn tne part profrereo. xne metnoa or shaking bands adopted iy great.men has often been described. although modern interviewers systemat ically ignore this and give preference to minute details of dress and immediate surroundings, New York Times. THE HIGHEST OF HONORS To Dr. Price's Cream Balking Powder at the Great Fairs. :i . .' ; For leavening power, keeping qualities. furity and general excellence the World's air Jury decided that Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder had no equal. On each of its claims it was awarded a first prize or a diploma. All tne baking powders entered for prizes were subjected to a most exhaustive examination, and the jury was the best equipped to make the decision of any ever got together. Their verdict was supported bv the testimony of Dr. H. W. Wiley, chief chemist of the United States Department of Agri culture at Washington. Dr. Wiley is an expert on food products and the highest authority on such matters in America. This verdict settles a long-debated ques tion as to which among the many baking powders is the best. Chicago Tribune. Note. Since the foregoing was pub lished the World's Fair triumph has been confirmed by Highest Award and Gold Medal at the California Midwinter Fair. Wasting Valuable Time. An old farmer died in : a little village in the neighborhood of Paris. His for tune, the fruit of years of patient toil, was invested in a nice compact little farm; A nephew of the departed, believ ing himself to be heir, called a few days later on the lawyer, and before saying a word about the succession thought it only right and proper to shed a few tears. "Poor uncle," he murmured, "so kind, so affectionate. To think that 1 shall never see him again." The notary allowed the young man to give full vent to his sorrowful emotions, after which he quietly observed: "1 suppose you are aware that your mnele has left you nothing?" , "What!" exclaimed the nephew, sud denly changing his tone. "I'm not down in the will? Then, why on earth did you let me stand weeping there and making a fool of myself for a good half hour?" Soleil du Dimanche. To Live an Old Man. "1 understand young Briefless is about to marry the daughter of old Bonds, the millionaire." ' ' . ' - " , "Yes, so I atu told." - ' ' i !;: : "Will he give up the law business?" "Yes.' He will give up the law busi ness and go into the son-in-law business." Texas Sif tings. . ".. Her Remarkable Taste. ' "Do you think, young man, that you could give my daughter all she asks for?" questioned papa grimly. :. "I aw think so, sir." murmured the lover bashfully.. "She says she wnr.t only me." FxehsnTg THE LAND OF PROMISE Ik the mighty West, the land that " tickled with a hoe laughs a harvest;" the El Dorado of the miner; the goal of the agricultural emigrant. While it teems with all the elements of wealth and prosperity, some of the fairest and most fruitful portions of It bear a harvest of malaria reaped in its fullness by those unprotected by a medicinal safeguard. No one seeking or dwell ing in a malarial locality is safe from the sconrge without Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Emigrants, bear this in mind. Commercial travelers soiourning in malarious regions should carry a bot'le of the Bitters in the traditional gripsack. Against tne effects ot exposure, men tal or bodily overwork, damp and unwholesome food or water, it is an infallible defense.- Con stipation, rheumatism, biliousness, dyspepsia, nervousness and loss of strength are all reme died by this genial restorative. . Lucifer That new method of making shades uncomfortable is a flat failure. Satan How's that? Lucifer The people look at our imita tion ice man and just laugh. STOOD THE TEST. Allcock'b Pobous Plastees are unap proachable in enrative properties, rapidity and safety of action, and are the only re liable plasters ever produced. They have successfully stood the test of over thirty years' use by the public; their virtues have never been equaled by imitators who have songht to trade upon the reputation of Allcock'b by making plasters with holes in them and claiming them to be "just as good as Allcock'b," and they stand to-day indorsed bv not onlv the highest medical authorities, but by millions of grateful pa tients who have proved their efficacy as a household remedy. Beware of imitations. . Ask for All cock's, and do not be persuaded to accept a substitute. Bbandkkth's Pills will purify the blood. " Don't yon think Binkles has a very breezy manner r- 11 you reier to in airing his opinlens, I do. you refer to the delight he takes Spiritual, Liberal, Social and Political Reform' era Books: send for catalogue. W. E. Jones. ai Aider street, Portland, Or. orci$ exjoys Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing; to the taste, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, jiver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. : Syrup of Figs is th only remedy of its kind ever nro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt im its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists., Any reliable druggist wh may pot have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. I)o not accept any substitute. i CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, SAM FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, M." HOW'S THIS 1 We offer One Hundred Dollars' reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. ... ... F. J, CHENEY & CO., , Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 76 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Die Enameline Stove Polish; no dust no smell. Tbt Gibmia for breakfast. TAKE STEPS in time, if you are a suf ferer from that scourge of humanity known as consumption, and you can be cured. There is the evidence of hundreds of liv ing witnesses to the fact that, in all its early ataees. consump tion is a curable disease. Not everv case, but a large percentage of cases, ana we dciicvc, fully 98 per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's ftnlden Medical Dis covery, even after the disease has pro rressed so far as to induce repeated bleed- tu-ex- txeme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by " Golden Med ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. . They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by the best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis representing them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal - malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted.. Nasty cod liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypo phosphites had also been faithfully tried in vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on receipt of address and six cents1 in stamps. You can then write to those who have been cured and profit by their ex perience. Address for Book, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. : An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC Boia ny uruggists or sent oy man. zoo., ouo and J1.00 per package. Samples free. XYf TTA The Favorite TOOTH POTOSJ JLkw XL U f or the Teeth and Breath,26o. Children will not develop uniformly unless - they get sufficient nourishment, They will be thin, weak, hollow-chested. Scott's Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil and Hypophosphites, over comes the tendency toward thinness and makes children strong and healthy. Physi cians, the world over, endorse Don't be deceived by Substitutes! - Prepared hj Soott Bowns, N. All Druggist - 1 FOR LADIES ! IOO IN GOLD will be naid bv the Koch Chemical Co. for any cate of female weakness that will not vield to DR. J. 8. KOCH'S ANTI SEPTIC SANATIVE POWDER. Piles L00 per dox. r or sate oy an druggists. WANTYOU TO SEND 84 cents in stamps to SMITH'S (Jasli Store 414-418 Front Street, San Tranclseo, Cal. Will send in return 1 emb. Handkerchief, 1 pair ladies taffeta gloves, tan or gray, 1 pair 25c Fancy Hose, 1 ladies' or girls' untrimmed Hat, our cnoice. ana one copy 01 i4t.page Home vircic. contains many thousand pictures and prices telling how to get over hard times. Mention this paper, THE GREATEST ASTHMA MEDICAL DISCOVERY OF THE CENTURY. DR. HAIR'S HAY FEVER Whv iiuflfer when I will send you Free, a full eize $1.00 bottle of my Asthma Cure, if you will imply pay express charges on delivery. A valuable Treatise ou Asthma, Bronchitis and Hay Fever mailed free. Dr. B.W.HAIB, H33 W.4Ui HU Clncinnatl.O. iDrMURAT'SK Woman'. Bar. Frisod. New Falls Absolutely Hfe. The Gr.l Prenoh Iuhmim Keiu.dv. Purtly Vegetable. Marvelous Testimonials. Kew mod- Itat bonk "Woman's Friend," and ooapon for 1 Box Free. PH. MUKAT MEP1C1ME 0O4te h S.l, claelnoaU, a CORD-WOOD, - Hxkculxs Gas or Gasolini Strains . But Power for the Purpose. Palmer fc Key, S. F., CaL and Portland, Or. "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR GAIN.". MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOL-IO I MALARIA I H Three doses only. Try it. It's Hood's that Cures The combination, proportion and process by which Hood's Sarsaparillaispreparedare peculiar to itself. Its record of cures is unequalled. Its sales are the largest in the Hood's Sarsa parilU w o r 1 a . x ne testimonials re ceived by its pro- Cures prietors by the hundred, tellina the story that VWV8V Hood's Sarsnparilla Cures are unparalleled in . the history of medicine, and they are solid facta Hood's PillS cure Constipation, Indigestion. W. L. Douclas S3 SHOE NO SQUEAKING 95. CORDOVAN, french&enamelledcalf: 4-5.5JFlNECALF&lftKGAB0l ??.eP0LICE,3Soua. Z.L73 Boys'SchoolShqex LADIES 3' Be5TPqN60M. SEND FOR CATALOGUE W'L'DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, AlASlJL Tea can save money by wearing ta XT. L. Donglas 83. OO Shoe. -Because, we are the largest manufaoturari et IMS graaeor shoes In the world, and guarantee tiiair value by stamping the name and price on tfee bottom, whlob protect yon against high prices as4 the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wesVlng qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prioesfor the value given than any ether make. Take ao sub stitute. If your dealer cannot supply yeu, ws aaa. DO YOU TRAVEL ? IF SO, YOU WILL FIND. THE BIG FOUR ROUTE THE BEST LINE VESTIBULE TRAINS. . ELEGANT DINING CARS. QUICK TIME. r V Ask for Tickets via . Big Four Route. e. 0. Mccormick, d. b. martin, Pass. Traffic Manager.. -. Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt. CINCINNATI. 7 . . L70F7 AND TYPEWRITING OFFICE. Thorough system and instruction; good teach-, era; low terms; short time; positions to com petent!. Mail orders carefully and promptly attended to. For further particulars call on or address KDITH A. BROWN, 42 Hamilton Building, Portland, Or. Portland Business College, - . PORTLAND, OREGON. . A. T. ijuiBTBoira. Para. 1. A. Vasoo, Sse, Open all the year. Students ad mitted at any time. Instruction in common school and commercial trsashas, shorthand, typewriting, etc. Colleos i Jotjbnal and specimens of penmanship sent free. CALIFORNIA U Best Home I UTERINE TONIC Best Home Remedy for Female Diseases. Lady Agents wanted in every town. Address Cal. Uterine Tonic Company, 4U Sutter street, San Francisco. ;j V.E.BEN0, Manufacturing Jeweler Ann . DIAMOND SETTER. All kinds of lewelrv made to order and re paired at reasonable rates. Rooms 8 and 10, n'ji Washington street, Portland, .Or. THE ' lfever has trouble with bread made with GsItfeal'estBakliigPGwder It is absolutely pure. CLOSSET oi DE VERS, the makers, Portland, Or., guarantee every can. PORTLAND WIRE AND IRON WORKS, ,. ' 834 Alder street, Portland, Or. - Bank and OfflnA-Rftlllnira Pmrto (IradpN Vmlt Dipping Baskets and aU kinds of Wire and Iron - ir or, eeno. lor catalogue. . IRVING INSTITUTE BCtt gtr,et Bolect Boaiding School for Girls. Eighteenth. ' year. Nineteen teachers. or illustrated catalogue address BEV. EDW. B. CHURCH, A. M., Principal. Cut this out; It won't appear again MOTIVE POWER I HERCULES GAS and GASOLINE zEnsra-iirsriEs. . . PALMEB & fiEY, M Francisco, Cal. and PortlaM, or. VP. N. O. No. 564 -8. F. N. U. No. 641 sT I iJj iuu JBADY DOES YOUS BACK --hiLSiver'r eteP Beem a burden? You need MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.