Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABSOLUTELY PUKE AN ISLAND THAT GROWS. Once It Belonged to Missouri, but Now It s Is Part of Kansas. In the Missouri river, Dear Leaven worth, there is an island which has furnished the land law officers of the government a novel problem. This is land was on the Missouri side when it was surveyed in 1858. Now it is a le gal part of Kansas. But that is not the queer thing about it. Islands in the Missouri frequently shift their alle giance. The trouble with this island is that it has been growing. When the govern ment officers surveyed it, they found 500 acres, and that was the amount en tered in the records. When two Leav enworth men, Skillings and Diffen dorf, took out patents for the whole is land the amount of land put in the pat ents was 500 acres. But the island has been growing through all of these years in a way Missouri river islands have a fashion of doing. There are now 1,400 - acres in the island. A coalbed, it has been discovered, runs under the island, and that tends to make the land more valuable. ' Recently squatters have tried to take possession of the surplus over and above the 500 acres claimed by the patentees. The later set up a claim to .the growth. The land lawyers of the government, after taking plenty of time to think about the case, have decided that Skil lings and Diffendorf are entitled p the whole island under their original pat ents. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ' ' Jackson Park. 'During the entire summer of 1894 the main exhibition buildings will stand in Jackson park. The public will be ad mitted everywhere in the park free. The work of beautifying the park will progress steadily. On the cm day of the. new year the park commissioners assumed control. All state and foreign buildings will be out of the north end of the grounds by May 1. The com missioners will at once begin the work of restoring that end of the park to its ; former appearance and continue to iin- prove it. What may be done with the ' buildings the following year cannot be said. The board will take no action on that matter for some time. Chicago Letter. Ex-Cabinet Officers In the Senate. There are an even half dozen ex-cabinet officers in the senate, and they com- . prise some pretty able men. Only one of the six is a Democrat, and that is Vilas of Wisconsin, who played the dual role of secretary of the interior and postmaster general during the first Cleveland reign. Proctor of Vermont was the warrior of the Harrison admin istration, Chandler of New Hampshire ' was secretary of the navy under Ar thur, and Teller of Colorado secretary of the interior under the same regime. Cameron of Pennsylvania was secretary of war under President Grant, and John Sherman was President Hayes' finan cier. Boston Advertiser. What an ordinary man eats and the way he eats it would be enough to give dyspepsia to an. Ostrich unless the os trich were wise enough to as . i l . sisi ins digestion from time to time with an efficient , combination o f vegetable ex- tracts. Such a. L'orenaration is J M TO Dr. Pierce's f If 'A Pleasant Pellets. '.Li ff re They are the pills .par excellence tor those w n o sometimes ' eat r the wrong things and too much. They stimulate action in all of the digestive organs. They stop sour stomach, windy belchings, heartburn, flatulence and cure . constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in digestion, sick headache and kindred derangements. Once used they are always In favor. Lipman Wolfe & Co. PORTLAND OREGON... Have just received a full line of Tailors' Linings," Findings and . Buttons Purchased under the new tariff, We are enabled to give the Very Best Prices... Send for Samples .. J .. ' , CHICKEN WUSJNQMYS if you use the Petaluma Incubators a- Brooders. Make money while others are wasting Catalog telis all about 4? Page, it, and describes every article needed for thej Illustrated i Catalogue free.. , poultry business. The "ERIE" mechanically the best .wheel, prettiest model. We are Pacific Coast Agents. Bicycle cata- Imni. i 1 1 nl fr oives inn aescription, prices, etc., aoskts wawiu-u. FETALUMA IHCUBATOR CO., Petaluma.Cal. Branch House, 131 S Main St., Los Angeles. a wumlp. I Tl I aT B mum THE ROSE TREE. The child lies under the rose tree fair; The pink buds swell In the soft May air; On snowy wings in her dreams she flies. With angel playmates in paradise And the years flit by. 1 The maiden stands by the rose tree fair, In the perfumed breath of the summer air; She presses her hand on her throbbing breast; Life hath brought her guerdon at love's be' hest And the years flit by. The mother kneels by the rose tree fair, , In a mournful hush of the evening air; She thinks of the treasures of vanished years; Her eyes are brimming with bitter tears And the years flit by. The north wind hath robbed the rose tree fair; Its bare boughs sway in the frosty air; Beneath it the withered leaves are spread. And the mound they caress is a mound of the dead And the years flit by. " ' From the German of Ferrand by Bertha F. Strong. Shoddy Manufacture. ' Shoddy manufacture, according to the Improved system .of production now in vogue, is said to Include only such mate rials as soft woolen and worsted rags, par ticularly the clippings from tailor shops, on account of their clearness and softness, an essential point, however, being tint they be fulled but little, as the less they have been felted and matted the less grind ing is required to separate the fiber. - In addition to these clippings such stock as cast away woolen knit garments and stock ings which have been but moderately full ed are acceptable material. Cleaning and oiling, as may be necessary, having been resorted to, the material is subjected to the grinding operation, accomplished by means of a system of powerful steel point ed cylinders and rollers. The substances to be ground are fed onto a table or feed sheet and conveyed to two fluted rollers, on emerging from which they are vigor ously seized by the rapidly revolving teeth of the main cylinder, the latter containing about 1,500 strong, sharp steel teeth, turn ing at the rate of sometimes 750 revolu tions per minute. This high speed results in tearing the rags apart and separating the threads and fiber In such a manner, says The Tradesman, that the whole is finally reduced to a soft, woolly condition. New York Sun. A Coin's Return. It is not often that a marked coin once put into circulation is'returned to the per son who marked it. Mr. George Troup, superintendent of Forest Lawn cemetery, before he left Scotland, had his name stamped upon a coin of the issue of George II. It was done In fun, and at that time he never dreamed that the coin would ever be returned to him. The coin was put into circulation, and a short time afterward Mr. Troup came to this country. More than 80 years passed by, and he thought nothing more about the circumstance. One day a friend of his at lodge said to him, "I have a coin with your name upon i" "I asked him to let me see the coin," said Mr. Troup, and when I looked at it I found it was the identical piece that I had marked so long ago. I wrote to the man who was present when the coin was marked in Scotland, and he recalled the. circumstance, and I got the coin from my Buffalo friend, and now I would not take a good sum of money for it. Where that coin had been during the 80 years no one knows, but it is a strange coincidence that it should have turned up to me in Buffalo, the home I had adopted. "Buff alo Ex press. The Unsociable. We envy neither the men nor the wom en who cannot speak to a fellow creature out of their own circle or to anybody with out the formality of an introduction. There'is no computing the amount of profit as well as pleasure such persons lose by hedging themselves in with this stupid fence of fastidiousness. We have always found more of this feeling among persons who were more touchy on their social po sition than among those self respecting persons who thought nothing about it. A great deal of intelligence is floating round the world without being labeled, and those men or women who have the good sense to recognize this fact and act upon it not only are educating themselves, but conferring that pleasure which we are all bound by the common ties of humani ty to exchange with one another. It seems to us that it is only the snob and pretend er who take a different view of this ques tion. New York Ledger. ; A Fuss Made About a Half Inch. A Maine man from regions where land is tolerably plenty and an acre does not seem a very large piece invested in a lot in the suburbs of Boston and set about grad ing and arranging his fences much as he would in Maine. .He covered up one corner bound and then built his fence "about" where he thought the line was. Imagine his surprise when the adjoining owner ap peared in a great flutter over his proceed ings. The line was relocated by a survey-., or, when it was found the Maine man's fence encroached one-half an inch on his neighbor, and he had to set it over. As much fuss was made over it as a 10 acre piece would cause in his Maine home. . Lewiston Journal. . .- . Tobacco Jimjams. Horace Barnum, who, after using to bacco for years,; discontinued its use a few weeks ago, was recently afflicted with a kind of tobacco tremors. He is bo badly off that it is reported that he may have to be taken to the insane hos pital in Middletown. Bristol Letter in Hartford Times. ; Embarrassing. ' , Algy I had a most horwibly embar- wassing accident once. Took off me cut away with me topcoat in church, don't yer know. Eeggy Aw, that wasn't half bad. Why, yesterday me twousers came unwolled on Bwoadway. Life. A man went home the other night and found his house locked up. After infinite trouble he managed to gain entrance through a back window and then discov ered on the table a note from his very thoughtful wife, reading; "I have gons out. You may find the key on the side of the step." THE VANDERBILT CORESPONDENT. View of the Woman Who Cansed a Di vorce In American High Life. Nellie Neustretter, the corespondent In the recent Vanderbilt divorce case, is a rather tall blond woman about 25 or 6 years of age, said to have gone to Paris from Brussels and before that to have lived in Holland. Some say she is Swed ish or half Swedish. She is described now as the luckiest woman in Paris and was, before Vanderbilt took her up, in rather hard luck, but was not known at any time to frequent queer places. She is inclined to be reserved, quiet and shrewd. Prior to the Vanderbilt regime she was somewhat free, but held " herself NELLIE NEUSTRETTER. well in hand and always estimated herself highly. She Is not wonderfully handsome, but yet a commanding and rather striking woman in appearance, fane Is not known by the name of Nellie Neustretter at pres. ent. ' She Is the mother of two children, One of these Is very young; the older is little more than a year old.- The details concerning Mme. Neustret- ter's life may be freely published so far as she is concerned, for publicity Is the staple which women of her class most ardently desire and thrive upon. There are pun dreds of women like her in Paris and in many other European capitals. She is not the best of . her class in appearance or in vogue. She may be called a middle olass person in the sooiety in which she moves. The foregoing account of her is sent from Paris to the New York World by one wha had the advantage of personal observation. Artemus Ward's Protector. While in the show business in Pennsyl vania Artemus Ward was put to sleep in an attic where the sash bad been taken out for ventilation. In the night it turned cold. Artemus got up and was busy at the window. "What are you doing, Arte- musf" his companion asked. "I'm so c-cold," he chattered. "I was hanging up some of these hoopskirts. I thought they'd keep the coarsest of the cold out." San Francisco Argonaut. POOR INPEED! The prospect of relief from drastic cathartics for persons troubled with constipation Is poor Indeed. True they act upon the bowels, but mis mey 00 wun violence, ana weir operation tends to weaken the intestines, and Is prejudi cial to the stomach. Hostetter's Stomach Bit ters is an effectual, laxative, but it neither gripes noi enftebles. Furthermore. It promotes digestion and a regular action of the liver and the kidneys. It is an efficient barrier againfct and remedy for malarial complaints and rheu matism, and is of great benefit to tbeweak, ner vous and aged. As a mediclnul stimulant it can not be surpassed. Physicians cordially recom mend It, and its professional Indorsement Is fully borne out by popular experience. Appe tite and sleep are boih improved by this agree able invigorant ani alterative. . Justbe'ore the dawn: Jaggers (weakly face tious) Th Think I was a burglar m' dear? Mrs. Jaggers-No, a burglar wouldn't have taken half tne time to get in. SYMPATHETIC PAINS. The different organs of the body are very sympathetic. One is very apt to feel the pain of another, and it is not always easy to locate the trouble exactly. A weak back not infrequently occasions a pain in the side, and one limb often, aches oat of sym pathy for another. Allcock's Pobous Plasters are just the remedy in such cases. They ae soothing in their effect, and draw out the pain so that the back or side or limbs are supple instead of stiff, and free to perform their functions. They have been tried by thousands and minions 01 people in every land, ana witn one uniform result, entire satisfaction. Bbandreth's Pills will relieve rheuma tism. - Far Western people will not send Their kids to Sunday school Because remarks there ( o offend About the Golden Rule. MC8IO STOKE-Wilev B. Allen Co.," the oldest, the largest, 211 First St., Portland. Chickerlng, Hardman, Fischer Pianos, Estey Organs. Low prices, easy terms. 10-CKjJT MUSIC Send for catalogues. to wet and cold is very often the first step to Pneumonia, Consump tion, Rheumatism or other serious diseases. Often we say, "Ob, It's nothing," when really our health for years or for life Is hanging In the scale. A cold Is the thin edge of the wedge of disease. To keep It out is Important and time Is everything. When your temperature has been suddenly reduced by wet or cold take a teaspoonful of PAIN-KILLER I In a half glass of water or milk I (warm 11 possiDie rteaciion Degins n at once, relief is Immediate and vou 11 will have no cold, cough, sore throat or stiffness to reckon with. This sounds easy, and is easy If you have the - Paln-Killer at'! hand. Get a bottle and get acquainted. It kills all forms of pain and is worth its weight in gold. Sold everywhere, at 1 25 cents a bottle. Prepared only by PERRY DAVIS 4. SON, PROVIDENCE, R. I. l ' GKNTLK ANNIE. Gentle Annie was the girl who went forth when the spring-time came to gather wild flowers daisies along the hillsides, and forgot her rubbers. She oame back with wet feet, followed by the worst case of neu ralgia she ever had. Fortunately she was told and had long known tbat for any kind of neuralgic affection, St. Jacobs Oil is the most remarkable remedy ever used. All the year round any one subject to such at tacks should not fail to have it in the house. For all aches and pains which at all times beset us, there is nothing to equal it. JNerve pains especially are brougnt on by sudden changes of temperature, but the great remedy, applied promptly, will sure ly cure. The Palouse, "Wash., Sugar Beet Manufacturing Company has wired an order to California for 250 pounds of sugar beet seed. . This seed will be re-, tailed at cost price to farmers or others who wish to grow beets. The first woman to be appointed a railroad division surgeon is Carrie Lie big, 'who will . have , charge of the Northern at Hope, Ind. State of Ohio, City op Toledo,) Lucas County " I Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior nartner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid and that paid firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case ot uatarrh tbat cannot be cured Dy tne use 01 hall's uatarrh uure. FRANK J. CHENEY, ' Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A, U. J.B80. . I seal I A. W.GLEASON. Notarv Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi monials, free. F. J. CHENEY at CO., Toledo, O. fVboia by Druggists, 750. We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years. Lizzie Fjdb- rel, uamp bt., Harris burg, jfa., May -4, 18!H. . - KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment . when rightly used. The many, who live bet- . 0 .1 j lit let ter man outers ana enjoy me more, witn vess exnenditu.-e. by more promptly adapting the woild's best products to . 1 V . 1 i i :ti ... . tne neeas 01 pnysicai oeiug, win atteBt the value, to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. ' ;- Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and trul j beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and . . i . 1 . i .1. , : 1 met. wun me approval ux tue uiuuium profession, because it acts on tne isna nevs. Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every. objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug cists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it iB man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute 11 onerea. Ely's Cream Balm Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. -- Heals the Sores. Apply Balm into each nostril, j Eli Bbos., 6tf Warren St., N. Y. FRAZER BEST IN THE WORLD. AXLE CREASE Its wearing Qualities are unsurpassed, aotuallr outlasting two boxes of any other brand. Free irom Animai uns. um ihk uifl J. , FOR 8AEE BY OREGON AND .HP-WASHINGTON MI5RCHANT8-fl and Dealers generally. RAMBLER BICYCLES... - Ladies' and Gents', , - All Slzes...All Weights $45, $55, $65, $85, $ I OO , Second-hand Wheels for sale and exchange Send for catalogue, FREE. , Live agt's wanted FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CO. 837 Washington St , PORTLAND, OB. A surf r.nnp fhr ph k Itohing- Piles known by moisture like perspiration, canu intense itching when warm. 'Jhie iorni and Blind. Bleed 111 or Protruding Piles y ielil nt once to DR. BO-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY, wntoh .arts directly on parts affected, absorbs tumors! al- ijb luuuiujf, cutwuuK a permanent cure. 1 rice 610. wtfuw w man. jsr. oosamio, lilluua.. r.URFK WHtHF all HSF F4IIS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in lime, eoia py aruggists. n. auzm T h at T i red Fee ling Is a certain indication of impure and im poverished blood. If your blood could always be rich and pure, full cf the . red corpuscles upon which its vitality depends, you would never be weak, or Kervous 1 Boils, pimples, scrofula, salt rheum, would never trouble you. But our mode of living, shut in all winter ,' in poorly ventilated homes and shops, depletes the blood and there is loss of appetite, and weakness. Hood's Sarsa j parilla is the standard remedy for this 1 condition. It purifies, vitalizes and 1 enriches the blood, overcomes that tired feeling, builds up the nerves and gives perfect health. Read this: "Our daughter, Blanche, when four years of age, had a humor break out on her hands and faci, which our physician . pronounced eczema . If the cold air reached her face or hands they would swell Hp, look almost ' purple, and headed blisters would form and break, M ood's Sarsapari 1 1 Is the Only True Blood P REWARD. , : $10 Reward for information as to - the present whereabouts, or death of Ansel White, who left Santa Cruz, Cal., in 1865. Address Wm. Pierrepont White, Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Cal. ' Tbt Gibmia for breakfast. " DR. GUNN'S LMPBOVED ' ' LIVER PILLS A MILD PHYSIO. A movement of the bowols each day it necessary for health. These pills supply what the system lacks to i la. i - mi : i " ti j i : v.i .1.. make It regular. They cure Headache, brighten the Eyes, and clear the Complexion better than cosmetics. xaoj neiiuwr Kripo uur bjukuu. u uuuvmua iuu, will mail sample free, or a full box for Sfia Sola every where. BOSAKKO MED. CO., Philadelphia. PALESTINE CORN Is the moFt profitable crop to plant on dry land. Yields 2.500 lbs. shelled corn and twelve tons of fodder. Canbeplanied till July and harvested with ordinary machines. Send $1 per acre for seed desired to Sacramento River Nursery Co., Walnut drove, California. SAVE BHOK LEATHER 0,9 01. . Ask for Dyke's Diamond or Oval Boles and Re volving Heels. Imitatloi s are worthless. Fur sale by leading shoe dealers. Eureka Sole Co.,24 Front street. Portland, Or. Agents wanted. Territory for sale. , l ; If you want work, or can organize a lodge, write to the order of Fraternal Argonaut, Booms 87 and 88, Donohoe building, San Francisco Cal. . NEW WAY Portland, Walla Walla, Spokane, via O. R &N. Railway and Great Northern Railway to Montana points, St. Paul. Minneapolis, Omaha, St. Louis, Chi cago and Kast. AddresB inearest agent. C. C. Donaran, Gen. Agt., Portland ,Or.;R.C. Bte vens.Gen. Agt., Seattle, EAST Wash.; C tt, Dixon, Uen. Agt., Spokane, wash. No dust; rock-ballast track; fine scenery; pal ace sleeping and diningcars; buffet-library cars; family tourist sleepers; new equipment N. P. N. XT. No. 693 -8. P. N. U. No 670 Insist on A f-V 'it. !!BRS. WINSLOW'S nSBl'fi , FOR CHILDREN TEETHINQ - gtfergagrergrgeiggeisigcieos in packages j Costs no more than inferior package soda t never spoils the flour, keeps soft,' and is unt il versally acknowledged purest in the world. 11 Hade only by CHURCH & CO., Hew York v j y Sold toy (Tocers everjwtere. i r Write for Arm and Hammer Book of valuable Racipea FBfiE. MALARIA! Three doses only. Try It. 'WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF ,T SAPOL O Estab. 1 866. CORBI TT & IMPORTERS, SHIPPING and COMMISSION MERCHANTS; Liberal advance made on approved consignments of Wheat Flour, Oats, Wool and Hops. Special Imports from China, Japan and In dia: Tea, Coffee, Rice, Matting-and Rugs, Spices, Sago, Tapioca, China Nnt' Oih etc From Liv erpool: Liverpool Fine, Coarse and Lump Rock Bait, Chemicals of. all kinds, Tinplate, selected No. 1 returned Wheat Bags, Hop Burlap, Roll Brimstone, Baas Ale, Guinness' Porter, Scotch and Irish Whisky, Brandy and Wines, for sale In quantities to suit the traded PORTLAND, OR." SPRAY NG COMPOUNDS Discharging a watery fluid, and the burn ing and itching would drive her nearly wild. Unless we encased her little hands she would fear patches of skin : from her face and hands. We tried many doctors and many remedies, and at last gave the case up as hopeless. But pur daughter Cora tried Hood's , Sarsaparilla, to cure a scrofulous lump near the left beast, which caused her much pain, and af er taking 4 bottles it disappeared. , Blanche,, who is now eleven, had spent seven years of suffer ing, so I concluded to give her Hood's Sarsaparilla. She took 5 bottles, and her face is smooth and soft as a baby's, the color of a rose petal. Her hands are soft and white, where four months ' ago they were blue antl red, and calloused nearly like leather. . I can not express my gratitude by pen or mouth. It seems a miracle, and our ; friends are surprised. " Mas. Ansa U L. Clark, 401 E. 4th St., Duluth, Minn. We would not have expended HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS doing galvanizing, for which we made no extra charge, had there not been merit in tt. Galvanizing consists in coating the strong but most perishable (in thin sheets) metal, steel, with the almost indestructible (even when very thinj metals, zinc and aluminum. If there were not great merit in galvnmzing, no one would pay H more for galvanized barbed wire or sheet Iron than ungalvanized costs. If wo were making painted wuramiiis wj-aay, we raouia xurnisn on Bn. for $ That Is a aooA nriee for an 8fnnt vtnlntpA windmill WE BUILD FOR TUB AJF. WE WOl I,l NOT -EFX TOC A POOR, PAINTED WHEEL, IVOR ONE HADE OF ETAL GALVANIZED BEFORE BEING PIT TO (J ETHER, IF YOU WOULD PAY 118 DOUBLE PKICK POR IT. We build the best we know, and knowing that painted thin sheets are practically worthless, we have nothing to do with them. The enormous cost of preparing to da galvanizing, and of doing it well on a large scale, deters others. 8031E BUY GALVANIZED SHEETS AND PUNCH AND SHEAR- AND BIAKE. THEN I P AFTERWARD. WHEELS OR YANES HADE OF GALVANIZED 1HEETS RUST OUT FIRST AROUND THE RIVETS, JOINTS AND EDGES, AND ARE, THEREFORE, ROT 80 MOOD AS PAINTED ONES. How any concern can get our prices for painted windmills and painted towers, or those made up of gaivanited material, cut, sheared and punched after the gal vanizing is done, can only be erilained by the fart that people who buy them are ignorant of the value of galvamtmg. We now galvanize everything after it is completed, ven bolts and nuts. We galvanize with the most improved processes and in the most perfect known and attainable manner. The vrocesst When a section of an Aermotor Wheel is all riveted up, completed and cleaned of rust and impurities, it is vmmervea ik meaea mtno and aluminum and Ifft IMsre until it becomes until every' crack, and opening of every dosed up and satu molten metal, and nieces oomvoaina the as not as tnat metat,ana cranny, crevtce, par sort s jtuea, , rated with the the whole S8 section become soldered and welded then you have some- too ether as one niece. thing that is strong, en. during and reliable. It is expensive to do, and small We keep tiO tons of zinc and doers eannot afford to do it. aluminum melted from one year send to another. The silvery white coating which every portion of the Aermo is tine and aluminum when a time, forms, with thesteel, alloy, which eanuot be indestructible In our p re prices ot, wind' mills, illustration of what we REDESIGNING AN OLD IT IN INFINITELY 811. juts every pore ana covers tor Wheel, Vane and Toitw, it is first put on, but after a chemical combination or L wetted ana is practtcally vious aa. we taniea os towers, etc., and as an could do in the way of ARTICLE AND PUTTING I'FKIOIt 811 APE AT A PRICE. ANNOUNCED RIDICULOUSLY SHALL THE OFFER OP AN ALL.STEEL VERY Si PEKlOH FEED CUTTER, WORTH 940 AS PRICES GO, AT $10, IN OUR NEXT AD. WE SHALL OFFER YOU SO.HRTJ1ING Of STlLXi GREATER INTEREST. Aermotor Cp., Chieago. , W-L-DOUCLAS CUftlT ISTHEBEST. Wt) OrlWt FIT FOR AKIN. cordovan: FRENCHAENAMELLEB CALF. 143.50 fine Calf &Kangarool 3.SP.P0LICE,3 soles. .EXTRA FINE- 2.$l7JBOYS'SCH0OLSH0Ei LADIES- S run fad KATai nr;iir Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes AH our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value tor the money.' ' They equal custom shoes In style and fit Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform stamped on sole. From $i to $3 saved over other makes. ' If your dealer cannot supply you e can. "-". Of Imitation . . trade marks and labels. . f V DO YOU. FEEL BAD? .DOES. YOUS. . BACK ache t , Does every step seem a bui den T You need MOORE'S REVEALED. REMEDY. MACLEAY CO . mc is93. In Convenient Form (To he diluted with water for use) ENDORSE J BY IHE OREGON AND WASHINGTON STATE B0ARCS OF HORTICULTURE Write for Descriptive Pamphlet and Price ; Manufactured by DAVID M. DDNNE KSSITSSr