! 1:1 1 ASIDE from the fact that the l cheap baking powders contain alum, which causes indigestion and other serious ailments, their use is , extravagant. It takes three pounds of the best of them to go as far as one pound of the Royal Baking Powder, be cause they are deficient in leavening gas. . -' '' ' There is both health and econ omy in the use of the Royal Baking Powder. ROYAL BAKINQ POWDEB CO., 106 WALL 8T., toEW-YORK. 11 hi ! . i 1 Beautiful and Ignorant Africans. The most beautiful black, race in Africa, a tribe in Nyassaland, 6n v..ose looks even missionaries grow eloquor.t, are really as Ignorant as fishes, and taough they have discovered the'use of file have never risen to the conception of clothes of any kind. Million. - - , Entomology as a hobby is now widely pursued by young people, and no depart ment of natural history is more attractive. But the biologie study of insects, though of the first importance to the economic en tomologist, is to him only the first step. ill TO PUT ON needed flesh, no mat ter how you've lost it, take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. It works wonders. - By restor ing the normal ac- plump, I tion of the deranged organs and functions, it builds the flesh up to a safe and healthy standard promptly, pleasantly and nat urally. The weak, emaciated, thin, pale and tranv are made round and rosy. Noth- Huruiony lu (jimtH "Mv dear, dou't you intend to invite Mr and Mrs. Green to your party?" asked Mr Biller. ' "Certainly not." . . "Why not, my dearf They are good friends of ours." "What if they are? I am going to invite Mr. and Mrs. Brown." "Well, can't you invite the Greens as well?" - "Why, John Biller, you shock me with your taste. Brown and Green in my parlor togetherl Why, next you'll be asking me to wear blue and yellow. I declare you mm Viava no idea whatever of harmonv." London Tit-Bits. titroncr. . ing so effective . as a strength restorer and flesh maker is known to medical sci ence; this puts on healthy flesh not the fat of cod liver oil and its filthy compounds. It rouses every organ of the body to ac tivity, purifies, enriches and vitalizes i the blooa so that the Doay leels relreshea and strengthened. If you are too thin, too weak, too nervous, it may be that the food assimilation is at fault. A certain amount of bile is necessary for the reception of the ' fat foods in the blood. Too often the liver holds back this element which would help digestion. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery stimulates, tones up and invig orates the liver, nourishes the .blood, and the muscles, stomach and nerves get the rich blood they require. Spent Hundreds of Dollars with no Benefit. M. J. Coleman of p Sargent St., Roxbury, Mass., wrues: "Aiier suffering from dyspepsia and constipation with un-' told agony for at least 18 months, I am more than pleased to say that after using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Pellets ' for one month, I was entirely cured, and from that day to this I do Hot know, thank God, what even a slight headache is. I paid a doctor on Tretnont St., Boston, in one day (for his advice onlv.l the sum of $10.00 with fa.50 for , -J?7. medicine, and derived no M. J. Coleman, Esq. benefit. I got more relief in one hour from your medicines, as lar as my siomacn was concerned, than from all the other medicine I used. If anv oerson who reads this is sufferine from dyspepsia or constipation and will use your medicine as 1 nave aone, nc win never regret u. An Improvement For Ships. The proposal to sheath ships with copper coated with mercury is attracting atten tion. The idea is that such an arrangement would effectually prevent barnacles from adhering to the bottom of vessels. In or der to keep the mercury on and to prevent oxidation, the copper would be constantly charged with electricity. This would bring about another interesting possibility. Any gold or silver that might be in the water would be precipitated on the bottom of the vessel, and it could then be scraped off when the vessel arrived in port. New York Tribune. . - - ' Modern Children. ''-' "So you are 13 years old, are you?" said a visitor at a Fifth avenue mansion to the little daughter of the house. "Yes, and I now realize that it's an un lucky number. It's too old for dolls, and pa says it's not old enough for gentlemen's ociety, was the reply. Texas .sittings. L. DeyoLAS is the scrr. NO SQUCAKIN& ' 5. CORDOVAN. FRENCH&ENAMELLEDCALP. " 4..vnNECAlf&IOWSrH!l 3.SPP0LICE,3SoLE2k 2.I7-? BoySchoolShoei LADIES Wfr"9? wfDeuauAS, '. hufm&ai BROCKTON, MASS : Test caa money by weartac the W. Jj. Dong-las 3.00 Ska. Beeaasa, w. ar (ha larrest manafaatuma at . this gradaef sboo la ths world, and (naraatM ta.lf value by stamping ths aama and prloa on aha bottom, which protect you ag-abut klgh prleas ana ths middleman's profits. Our shoes equal etuteai work In style, sasy flttlng and weaving qualities We have them sold eTerywhere at lower prices ret the value glren then any other make. Take eo sua stltute. IX your dealer cannot lupply yea, we earn. w S3 t a IFrom Face, Neck and Aims -in fl.ve minutes with N DKNE, without pain or injury to the skin. Bend stamp for circular. Local agents wanted. NUDRNK MKG. CO., Rorm 12, The Ven dome, Portlsn'l, Or. FOR LADIES ! " 9100 IN GOLD will be paid by the Koch Chemical Co. for any cave of temale weakness that will n t vield to IiR. J. S. KOCH'S ANTI SEPTIC SANATIVE POWDER. P,ioe $1.00 per box. For sale by all druggists. . Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth ma, should use PiBO'8 Cure for Consumption. It has cared Choneands. It has not Injur ed one. It is not bad to take. His the best cough ayrup. Sola everywhere. Hoc . Thrice Happy the Modern Man. The average 18-year-old boy now has a much greater variety of information than men aged threescore and ten had 100 years ago, and men with salaries of $1,200 a year can 'secure more advantages and luxuries than kings could 1,000 years ago by the ex penditure of millions.' (ialveston News. A certain amount of daily exercise is nec essary to enable one to study with a healthy mind in a healthy body, but if a boy trains for a "orew" or "team" he must give up many hours that otherwise might be de voted to books. In 1859 a Milan student is said to have discovered the secret of petrifying human nesh. In 1866 he was drowned in a ship wreck on the Mediterranean sea, the won derful secret perishing with him. The deer is furnished with supplementary breathing places in audition to the nostrils. and this would appear to be an extraordi nary provision of nature, giving the beast of the chose a freer respiration. 50ctsu and'stf'fehl jitSfZjF: l$1.00Bottle.&I Csl (f Ej & 31 I One cent a dose. WClg&awSi 25cts., I suets. $1.00 Bottle. I One cent a dose. It Is sold on a enarantee bv all rime gi3t3. It ouaes Incipient Consumption and is the best Cough and Croup Cure. of disease feed - on life, and are only overcome by the making tissue. of sound, healthy Scott's aLaJmuwuaBraDJJ, . Emulsio the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, is an easy, palatable fat food that makes new tissue quick ly and gives strength. Phy sicians, the world over, en dorse it. Don't be deceived by Substitutes! Prepared by Scott Bowne, N. V. All Druggieta, ; IRVtNG INSTITUTE MS Btreet' Bclect Boa ding School for Girls. Eighteenth year. Nineteen teachers. For illustrated catalogue address REV. KDW. B. CHURCH, A. M., Principal. MR? VMSl nw? SOOTHING J!MI. IIII1ULUII U FOK CHILDREN TEETHING - rar sale fcjr all Uraca-Uta. S Oeate a kettle. AN OLD TIME PROSPECTOR. Perhaps an Eskimo Who Was Driven Sontk Sixty Thousand Years Ago. Texas has had its old settlers stretohing away back toward the dawn of creation, the hems of whose garments tradition does not reach, but whose careers were probably as full of wild adventure as that of any Indian or Mexican fighter that has ever adorned the pages of Texas history. One of those old settlers was found about 10 days ago by D. D. Pittman while digging a well on his lot on Thomas avenue, Dallas. At a depth of 82 feet below the surface. and after blasting through a stratum of limestone four feet thick, Mr. Pittman found a human skeleton in the postter tiary sands. The skull, finger bones and other thin bones, on being brought in con tact with the atmosphere, crumbled away to powder, but some of the larger bones stood the test of atmospheric exposure. and, beyond the crumbling of the articular surfaces, are in a good state of preservation. This is particularly the case with the thigh bone. . - It in all other respects resembles the thigh bone of modern man except as to its anatomical neck," which Dr. Armstrong, the city health officer, says is not shaped like that of the present race. However, as nature adapts itself to its surroundings, it is to be expected that there was some dif ference between the fore and aft movement of the thigh bone that was in use 60,000 years ago and that of the present time. The bone, while as thick and heavy as that of a man of medium height, is only 11 inches long, which would represent a man about 4 feet 2 inches high, or about the stature of an Eskimo, and taken in connec tion with the -geological formations, those of the second glacial period, in which the skeleton was found there Is hardly any doubt but that it belongs to the Eskimo race. - : The cold of that period destroyed the northern tribes, except such of their hardi est members as escaped south. That there was a southward movement of Eskimos In those days is as certain as that there is now a winter movement of tramps from the rigorous climate of Iowa and Nebraska to the more genial one of Texas. Doubtless this poor Eskimo lived between the paleo lithic ana neoiunic penoas ine ages 01 un polished and polished stone weapons, mark ing the hiatus in the Bible between Adam and the period where connected history be gins. : :- What a wonderful story could this skele ton tell if it had a tongue! But here the question suggests itself, Had this Eskimo yet reached the origin of language? Did he say "yes," or did he merely nod his heaar How did he string the echoes of his thoughts together? Unfortunately the skull, that part of it most valuable to science, has crumbled away. tralveston News. ." - - . ' --Where Soldiers Are Shot. In the work on gunshot wounds, Dr. Ludwig Brandt gives some interesting sta tistics about the Franco-Prussian war In 1870-L The number of officers and men of all ranks belonging to the German armies who were wounded during the war amount ed to the immense total of 116,821. Of these 99,566 survived, 11,023 died in hospital, and 6,223 died on the field of battle. ; , The wounds of those who were under hospital treatment, including the wounds of those who died in hospital, were thus distributed: Wounds of the head, 11,041; of the neck, 1,922; of the chest and back, 11,' 495; abdomen, 4,553; upper extremities, 83,- 914, and of the lower extremities, 43,952, while in 8,721 instances the situations of the wounds have not been recorded. -. . A noticeable fact is the unusually large proportion of wounds of the head, which nearly equal those of the chest and back to gether and approach three times the num ber of those of the abdomen. The number given (11,041), however, includes 2,130 inju ries to the face.- ' j -' ; - The wounds by rifle bullets more than double the number of those caused by artil lery projectiles, but the information in this respect is not of much value, as out of 2,030 gunshot wounds of the face in no fewer than 1,398 instances the particular projec tiles by which the wounds were caused have not been recorded. British Medical Jour naL ' ' " ' - -' " Curious Statistics of the Blind. - The people of Russia are more terribly afflicted with the infirmity of blindness than any other race, sect or nation on the globe, the proportion being 21 to every 10, 000 of population. In 1886 there' was an official census taken of the blind of Europe These statistics show a remarkable state of affairs, especially in European Russia, the Caucasus and . Poland. In the countries named there was a total of 189,872 persona who were entirely blind. The whole of the remainder of Europe (and mind this in cludes the thickly populated countries of Germany, trance, Spain, Holland, Bel gium, Great Britain, etc.) only has a blind population numbering 188,812, while the three Americas, North, Central and South, with their islands, have less than 23,000 per sons who are totally bereft of sight. . In the Caucasus the women, especially those of Country districts, are more liable to cecity than men, the proportion being about 27 to 19. In Poland there are 25 blind men for every 14 blind women, the same percentage holding good over the. most of Russia in Europe. St. Louis Republic. . . Electric Shocks From a Carpet. Our sleeping room has au ingrain carpet from which we get marked electrical expe riences. On a cold morning one can hardly take a step without being strongly electri fied. By shuffling across the carpet, taking only two steps, I have many times drawn spark one-eighth of an inch long.- By tak ing a dozen shuffling steps and touching the water faucet I have several times drawn a spark nearly one-half of an inch long. Indeed it is so common and so excess ive that it is quite uncomfortable. I have several times thought seriously of getting up some arrangement for gradually dissipating the charge on one's body, so that we can avoid the unpleasant shock when using the Water. It should be stated that this high degree of electrification is not an everyday experience, but it is very com mon when the thermometer in the room goes below 50 or 40 degrees Fahr. Minne sota Cor. Science. , ... Sir Ji ahua's Tame Bird. Sir Joshua Reynolds used to amuse him self in his last days in his house in Leices ter square with a little tame bird, which, like the favorite spider of the prisoner in the Bastille, often served to while away a lonely hour. But this proved a fleeting pleasure, for one summer morning, the window of the chamber being by accident left open, the little favorite took flight and was irrecoverably lost, although its master wandered for hours in the square and neigh borhood in the fruitless endeavor to regain it. Chambers' Journal. . The Place to Start. Whenever you long to benefit the world by assuming the duties of fool killer re member that charity begins at home. Kate Field's Washington. NErEnjrBLB. "A mlllloifpeople out of work," says a newspaper, writing of these hard times, Added to tbls misfortune are the physical infirmities with which thousands have to bear. But there is one thing that is never idle; always at work, unceasingly in search of those thus deterred, it seeks to cure such and help them to grasp a chance when it comes. ; in is is. me mission 01 01. jacoos Oil. Amone the millions there are thou sands suffering with neuralgia. For this it is a positive cure. Use it and there will be a thousand sufferers less and a thousand chances more to get work and hold it. Bet ter times may soon come and there is noth ing like the great remedy for pain to help yon out of painful troubles and into place again. - - - Where Astronomy Halts. To the layman it may be a matter ot in terest to know that even the great glass of the Lick telescope, with its 36-inch diameter and vast disk, brings into view no discern ible surface on any celestial object outside of our solar system; it only marvelously In creases the brilliancy of those twinkling points that lie beyond the abyss which the eye must traverse in passing from our solar system to the distant worlds of space. Polaris, Capella, Alcyone, glow from their remote depths only with an in tenser bright ness. They have never been drawn out of their almost infinite remoteness so as to disclose to human eyes any appreciable sur face. When will their awful secrets be made known and the. long silence of ages be broken? It has been supposed that the large tele scopes now in existence have nearly at tained the maximum of the size within the possible reach of" human skill. Here at least on the frontiers of the created uni verse we must halt and wait until another day may break and the shadows of the pres ent may nee away. Exchange. . Rules of Two Mill Owners. A mill owner not long ago issued the or der that the girls in his employ should not wear laced shoes. The reason he gave was that each one's boots became untied at least 5 times a day and took at least 5 seconds to retie. When these 25 seconds were multi plied by 300 the number of girls In his era- ploy the loss of time was, he said, too seri ous to submit to. Another mill owner, talking over this case, said that he bad forbidden visitors be cause each of his "hands" turned her head to look at them. Computing 20 visitors a day and 2 seconds for the head's turning to each of the 600 employees, made over 6 hours daily wasted in that gesture, bta tistics are inexorable things. New York Times. ' - The Separate Sexes In Flowers. ' It has been recently noted, especially in the dahlia and the chrysanthemum, what incidentally a German author, Hildebrand, has some years ago adverted to, that certain forms of flowers follow the sexual differ ences. In most composite, for Instance, the ray florets of the tublar character are hermaphrodite have stamens and pistils In 'the same flower. " This is notably the case in the dahlia and chrysanthemum. The ray florets are strap shaped and are female only. But under the hand of the florist double dahlias and double chrysanthemums are given to us,, the doubling being in these cases nothing more than changing the tubu: lar floret into a strap shaped one. ' .-. ' But the purely pistillate condition ' fol lows the rigulate corolla, and a purely double dahlia' has the whole flower consist of pistils only, the stamens having wholly disappeared with the tubular florets. Just why these coincidents should exist, Kas-uofe yet been explained by vegetable biologists. More attention is now being given to these subjects than formerly, as it is believed their study will throw much light .on the laws which regulate the production of 'the' separate sexes in flowers. Hew York lnde- Dendenb.' ' .- :; v,yrr - '.. - . -:t.-.i: . , -; tTFB OR DEATH ? : V.; It Is of' vital importance t hat it shdula1 be wri- derstood by persons whose Sidneys are; inactive that this condition ot things is finally Inductive ol astateof the organs where life nanus in the1 balance. Bright's disease, diabetes, albuminuria are ail aueases 01 a very oosunate cnaracier in their mature stage, and all have a fatal tendency, They often baffle the most practiced nfedjca) skill and the most approved remedies of mate ria medica. .But. opposed at the outset--that is to say, when the kidneys bein' to discharge their functions- inactively witB-.-Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the dangerous tendency Is checked. Very useful also is this h ousel) old medicine for those ailments of common occur rence constipation, Diuousness, dyspepsia ana nervousness. It is a safeguard; against malaria and averts chrontu rheumatism. .. - mean alone, don't you?" "Yes; a loan that's it exactly, I want toborrow five." ; ' . -r' SAFE, SURE AND .SPEEpr r " ' I tr; So external remedy ever yet devised has so fully and unquestionably met these three prime conditions, as successfully as Ajlcock's Pobous Plasters, ) Tjiey are safe because they contain no deleterious drugs and are manufactured , upon . scien tific principles of medicine. TheV-are: sure because nothing goes into them except inr greuients wnicn are exactly aaaptea to ine purposes for which a. plaster is required. They are speedy in their action r because their medicinal qualities go right to their work of relieving pain and restoring the natural and healthy performance o the functions of muscles, nerves and skili., Ask for Allcock's, and do not be induced- to accept a substitute. . , ; " ' '.-. ji ttBAHDBBTB's fiLLs are sate and sure.,. Minnie What is the snbiect at t lie Olrl'a Tin- bating Society to-nieht? Mamie Which is -the hardest to disconnect yourself from a bicycle or a hammock? . , . ; For Tired fYl others "I feel' very thank ful for what Hood's Sareaparilla has done for me. I have taken three bottles and the medicine has made a great change. I was All Run Down from trouble and overwork, and had other complaints com mon to my sex at my age, 44 years. - Now since taking Hood's Sarsaparilla I am much stronger and am srain in ar in flesh: I would advise all overworked, tired, weak mothers to take Hood'B Sarsaparilla to build them up.", Mrs. G. W, Warnock, ceveriy, neorasia. - - - ' Kemcmoar, Hood'ssuCures Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c, Ely's Cream Balm . WIIX CURE ' CATARRH iJMjSOOentsJ ApnlvBalm intoeacb nostril ,3o75?A ftorcCOLDl 'r- A World's Tribute. America Leads the Nations in the March of Progress. Among the wonders of the World's Columbian Fair the grandest - was the exhibit of American products. The Ex hibition was, in this respect, an object lesson of the grandeur xand glory of the Republic. Among the exhibits from the United States no article of itstilass stood so high as Dr. Price's Cream BafdngPowder. " The Chief Chemist of the Agricultural Department at Washington, backed by an intelligent jury at the Expb&ition, found it strongest in leavening power, peerless in its purity and beyond comparison in unifprm excellence, ... v.-- Received Highest Award ' ; ' .At'.the World's Fair. The . award is a matter of official record."-; ! v Nothing could settle so decisively the. immeasureable superiority cf Dr. Price's over all other powders as the great honor bestowed at Chicago. - - , Bow to Go Up and Down Stairs, 1 (. If,. girl wants to learn to occupy stairs with a fair amount of self possession, she can do it. This, is a case where, practice, brings perfection.':," " . . . 1 t&'Hd 'W,;!liolcl:. body'-.; erect, whether1 coins up or down.'' Don't Rive an Imitation of a' than with Wampi Hold the body and shoulders In a line horizontal to the flat of .the steps.'' -Then don't climb all veri.f. Most-' women -nsetheir elbows for propellers or ' oara. J' They jerk- themselves up stairs ; by: them. 'Hold - the elbows well down by y,our side t,nd -mount from the Knees. . j, is .n,-.a.r xo acquire, inis, nut once 'gained liis'a wonder how one persisted so loni in usia every joint in the operation. solidity That is what injures the musoles of the bncslf. and ' jars - the body.: In going np acaira : press he ; ball ot the loot on the tread of the stairs, and secure a spring from that ti6; carry id the next tread. In eomlns down, poise on one foot aind laijid' well for- ' ward on the ball and toe of the other foot. And .don't, for rnercy's gake, toe in. Lift the skirts in front aS yflu mount and: leave the long, graceful line from; the waist to the skirt hem undisturbed. Buffalo News. An Odd Southern Name. '. Of all the odd appellations that ever came . to my notice is one l heard not long since In a little town down In Mississippi I think it is Hazelhurst. I was passing along a side street one day when, a coal black ne-. gross appeared from a neighboring doer Way and shouted,- "Gloryi. Glory Hallelni lahl" I thought the wdmah was crazy andi nausea to see just wnai ner iorm 01 aemen raacbuld be."' Looking 'around a moment, Khe repeated 'the call, this time much loud er than before:-: This time I heard the an swer from behind a fence; - .J:-., i ,,n;: -. . '"Yer ,1 i ma'in; whut yo' wantf" , . : fi- "Nebberyo,:min child, Whut I want; W eum yerl'' Immediatelylafter there ap peared; from behind the fence-one ef the and upon inquiring I learned that the child had actually been christened Glory Halle luiah Jones. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. jfreaa nuae witn qiOmiHM-A WIST " 1 BAKING POWDER. : ' It makes a MeM. live, sweet foafl'' Dealern sell It on the manufacturers' firnaranteA. r-.T.OMSET. EE VERS, For Hand, Or. , : .. . ElJfAI'NESB jCANNOT BE CUBED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only oue way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitu tional remedies, Deuf ness In cauued by an in named condition of the mucous lining of the eu-titchian tube- When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sou d or imperfect hear ins, and when It is eniirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless ibe Inflammation can b. taken out and this tube tesiored to its normal conditioi , hearing will be de-troyed forever) nine cases oui. ot ten art can ed by catarrh, which is noth-ng but an inflam "1 condition of the mueous sarfaoes. ' W will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness ("Bused by catarrh) that cannot b. cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for o rcu lsrs; free.- r, J. CHENEY fe'C()., Toledo. O. Sold by druggists; 75 cents. No, faud, dear; if a parsin sits In the light of the crescentmoon.it doesn't f.illowluat he will catch 'newmoonia.'. You're a little ot la your spelling, anyway." J,PWIS PEYDEN'8 M AB1NE &T8TORT Or THE PACiriC NORTHVVKST, ' This exhaustive review of the marine in dustry is hearing completion; and, as we dp not wish to slight any matters of inter est to niarine men, we would like to hear from ou. ; All data or photographs sent us will be returned as soon as possible, The work will contain accurate Accounts of 2,500 steam and sail craft that have made marine history in the Northwest, detailed accounts of 850 wrecks occurring here, sketches and engravings of; all promirient old-time craft and i he men who ran them, and hundreds of pages'of interPBting marine miscellany. , ...... Lewis fc Dryden Printing Co., ' " - - . Portland, Or. E..W. Wbioht, Editor. ; THB INLAND fRINTEB Should be in the hands of every printer, publisher,; bookbinder and advertiser who consultshis best interest. Published by Inland Printer Co.", Chicago, 111. Tbt Gibhia for breakfast. Use Enameltne Stove Polish; no dust no smell. S. Dr. Winiams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. Tt. fllianrha il,A tllmnpa all.na I the itching at once, acts as a .poul- wtj, Rivco iiitjiaiib leiiei. w, w 111 lams' Indian Pile Ointment is prepared for Piles and Itchinir of thn nrlvnfo parts. Every box is warranted. Br drusr- fflRta.'.lw mail fn MAain, nl nr. r.A nnn J. and $1.00 WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING. CO., Proprietors, Cleveland; Ohio. : SIE e HOW KTOs SAVE ; IVIOWEY. Buy your GROCERIES and PROVISIONS of us, and we will save you money. We handle the best goods and deliver free to trains or boats. We buy and Bell for spot cash, and eell goods cheaper than any other nrm in tne country, send us your name ana address, ana we will mall you our new price list, which -will be out soon. We offer to-day : Dry granulated sugar in lCO-lb. sacks for..'.'...5'60 1 Best coal oil per ease...; fl 85 Portland Hour per barrel.... , v-' 16 1 A'rbuckle's coffee per pound. ..'.i;.......-... - 22J oeuu us a iihl oi wuui you uoeu, auu we win iuu&e you speuiui prices. . Auaress your oruers to MARK L. COHN & CO., 140 Front Street, Portland, Or. DON'T BORROW TROUB LE." B U Y 'TIS CHEAPER I N TH E END- MALARIA! Three rtoRM onlv. Trv it. DO YOU FEEL BAD? : DOES YOUR BACK ache? - Does every step seem a burden? You need MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY. K. P. N. U. No. 667 S. F, N, U. No. 644 tL! bhus, w narru St. le ion.