Newspaper Page Text
"....Again" Misrepresenting Facts. The Royal Raking Powder Company has resorted to so many tricks to force its way upon the public; that whenever tCny cry .of fraud is raised the public instinctively, turns to the Royal flaking Powder Company. Is it any wonder? - ' , . " " ' - The Royal has recently printed a statement purporting to be an interview with Drt Benjamin F. Drew, state chemist ,and analyst to 'thai Food and Dairy Commission1 of Minnesota, to the effect that the Royal Baking Powder is all which the company asserts it to be. The statement is .made that Dr. Benjamin F. Drew, state chemist and analyst to the Food and Dairy Commission, made the representations referred to be fore the legislative committee at the last session, which ex amined various baking powders. WHAT IS THE TRUTH? . 1st. There is no such person as Dr. Benjamin F. Drew, state chemist and analyst to the Food and Dairy Commission of Minnesota. I , . ,: . ; ' 5- 2d " There is a' Dr. Charles W. Drew, who is state chem ist and analyst to the said commission. ,. 3d; ' He denies the statement in question of the Royal " Baking Powder Company, generally, as follows: ' 1st. The statements in no sense represent his attitude or his utterance. - ; - - . - 2d. There has never been, either in the published re ports of the chemist of the commission, in his testimony beore the legislative committee or elsewhere, any implied endorsement of the Royal Baking Powder as superior to other brands. , , ;: ;, . 3d. At the session of the legislative committee before which Dr. Drew testified, an attempt was made by the attor ney of the Royal Company to secure the statements which the Royal Company has since printed, which attempt failed, v 4th.' On the contrary, Dr. Drew did say there were suffi cient grounds for objection to the presence of ammonia in ' baking powders to justify the legislative committee in recom mending that all such powders be required to announce upon . their labels the fact that Ammonia was one of the constituents- and Dr Drew further expressed to the committee the following emphatic opinion: "1 would not recommend such powders to my patients, nor would I use -them in my own family." " .The Price Baking Powder Company makes a Pure Cream Tartar Baking Powder, free from ammonia, alum, lime or any taint of impurity, and feels it owes a duty to the public as well as to itself to lay bare such . trickery as the Royal resorts to in trying to wheedle the consumer into using its Ammonia Powder - 8rTB or Ohio, Citt or Tolsdo.J Lucas Cocmtv. ( , .' Frank J. Cheoey make oath that he is the senior partnar ol the Arm of F. J. Cheney Co., doing buainea In the city of Toledo, county and Mlate aforvcaid, and that said firm will pay the turn of ONE Hi;Kl)KKD ixil.LAKS for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by theaaeof Haul's Catarrh Ore. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before we and wibucrlbed in my presence thta Gill day of Itecember, A. 1). 1W6. (hk1 A. W. GLEASON, .,.; ,-, notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure to taken internally, and acta directly npon the blood and maootn sur face of the ater. Bend for tentimoiiiala, free. F. S. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. field by Druggist; 75 cent. A fanatic 1 a man who take a burning Inter est In something we don't like. LIVING ON THE B-PUTATIO OTHERS. OF "Take everything that I have but my good name; leave me that and lam content." Bo said the philosopher. So say all manu. facturers of genuine articles to that horde of imitators which thrives upon the repu tation of others. The good name of Aus cock's Poaocs Plasters has induced many adventurers to put in the market imitations that are not only lacking in the best ele ments of the genuine article, but are often harmful in their tflects. , The public should be on their guard against these frauds, and when an external remedy is needed, be sure to insist npon having Allcocx'i Posting Plabtbb. That which U preclou won't be found lying around on the urface for any one to pick up. ,. Th Quimbt House, Portland, Or., is the best ft a day hotel on the Pacific Coast. Try it. Quimby & Edwards, proprietors. "August 5) This is the query per What Is petually on your little boy's lips. And he is ' : It For? no worse than the big ger, older, balder-headr ed boys. Life is an interrogation : point., " What is it for?" we con - tinually cry from the cradle to the grave. So with this little introduc tory sermon we turn and ask: "What . is August Flower for ?" As easily" answered as asked: It js forDys . pepsia. It is a special remedy for . the Stomach and Liver. Nothing more than this; but this brimful. We believe August Flower cures ' Dyspepsia. ; We know it will. We have reasons for knowing it. Twenty years ago it started in a small country town. To-day it has an honored place in every city and country store, possesses one of the largest manu facturing plants in the country and ells everywhere. Why is this? The reason is as simple as a child's thought It is honest, does one thing, and does it right alongit cures Dyspepsia.' C a GREEN, Sole Man'fr, Woodbury,! J. Flower Caught . Black Hills Tin Mine. Joseph Hare, editor of The Tin Miner, of Hill City, S. D., in speaking of the tin mines at that place, says: "Hill City is situated exactly in the cen ter of the tin belt, which is in the shape of a half moon, and is ahont thirty utiles in length and three miles wide. We are twenty eight miles from Rapid City, the near est railroad point "The richness of these mines is simply wonderful, and one who has not been there can hardly believe it, but 1 state a fact when I tell you that there is enough tin on the dumps and in sight now to supply the United States for five years. Aa soon as the big mill is started at Hill City we shall then be able to ship the tin out in bars. Some of these mines have been pushed down 240 feet, and the deeper the richer. "The vein is eight feet thick and dips toward the east at an angle of about 45 degs. Some of the mines average 2?t per cent, of metallic tin. and the whole ledge averages 10 per cent. The capital, ists interested are mostly New York and English men. The larger part of the capital is furnished by New York men; A Bits Story. Some fishermen engaged in Belfast longb recently" picked op a very large seagull which was seen approaching the boat with wings outspread, floating on the water, but quite dead. The men were puzzled to account for the progress it made through the water, as it went faster than the boat: bnt as it came near it was found that, wound securely round the body and nnder the wings, was a string or cordage, which on closer exam ination they discovered was attached to a large paper kite then flying above them at a considerable height The kite furnished the propelling power. The bird had evidently, while flying at Bel fast, got entangled in the string of a boy's kite, bad been unable to extricate itself, and taking to the sea had been drowned in its efforts to obtain freedom Exchange r. Aa Automatic Wrapper. One of the most ingenious and at the same time practically uw-ful among the automatic machines which have been in troduced is a device which forms, fills, weighs and seals packages in thoie es tablishments where large quantities of. goods, such as fine cut tobacco, soda.' starch, etc., are constantly put up. The operation by which this result is awom plished, though decidedly novel, is not at all complex in any particular, the ma chine consisting merely' of a .aeries of forming blocks, receptacles, folders, gummers and feeders, all working in mutual harmony, so that the. packages are smoothly and continuously produced. . The forming blocks successively size the paper, which instantly afterward is wrapped around them, foldud and gummed at the end; the paper sacks are then plunged into receptacles filled with the commodity with which , they are in tended, finally folded on top and sealed. -New York Sun. PERIQUE TOBACCO. Tb ItoMon for tU INx-iilUr Flavor unit -I,-U MMMi-l AJma w.-m..w- In the ease of periiine tobacco the tripping of the midrib frnlti the lent cmiwM Uie louf to fH Into two .luternl halve, which n plncwl on top of aoh other in mioh a niniitwr thiit tli btttiteof one half of the Umf RltortmUw with the pex of the othw. Tlu'se Hre tlton twisted into what are cI1p1 "toriiiwta." Thef torqueta are fuliU'il upon them selves, tdcte bv siile, and are plm-eil in strong boxes, which are a limit twelve inches square, ami snbieeteil to (treasure. After twenty-four hours these torqueW are taken out and repacked in the same manner as ttefore every twenty-four hours for a period of a week, the idea beiqg evidently to imlijeet the torquets to a uuirortn pretwure titroiignout. a tier this period has elapsed these torquets are repacked every three days tor atxtut two weeks. During nil this time the tobacco is subjected to n constant, steady pres sure with a press of the most primitive kind. I should not forget to stte that after the tobacco has been placed in the press one week a black juico flows out of -the box, which has a pleasant odor, not un like freshly cooked prunes. Square pieces of cottoimde, 18 by 18 inches, are laid out, and on these the torquets are opened, or, to nse the term of the Eng lish speaking Arcadians, the, torquets are unraveled, great care being neces sary to separate each leaf. The largest leaves are laid npon the cottonade first, so that when rolled the largest leaves will .serve as a covering of the carrotte presently to be described. The smaller leaves are placed longitudi nally upon the larger ones until three and one-half to four pounds are placed npon the piece of cottouado, the ends of which are turned inwardly. The cot tonade and contents are now rolled into carrottes, the ends of the cottonade are pulled out and a string tied to each end to prevent the carrotte from opening, and j the whole wrapped in a clothesline, i usually m.-ule of cotton The wrapping is performed in the primitive manner that characterizes the operation throughout. Use is made of a windlass and a rope; the end of the rope is made fast to the carrotte, passed around a post (driven into the ground), a twist is now made around the carrotte, and with each torn of the carrotte the pressure is increased. This is continued until the whole of the carrotte is envel oped; the end is made fast by passing it through several tarns of the rope. This finishes the carrotte, put, before it is placed npon the market, it is 'allowed to age, which is usually from six months to a year. During this time the tobacco is allowed to undergo a slow fermenta tion, which gives the aroma and taste that distinguish this tobacco from all others. The amount of perique grown and manufactured has averaged, during the 6ve years preceding 18SK). 19,000 car rottes of four ponuds per annum. Wholesale tobaceouista have expressed the donbt that ' any modern method would produce tobacco with as fine flavor as that produced by the old and primitive manner just descnlted. Phar maceutical Era. A Complicated tawimit. If the besetting sin of the Singhalese is their inordinate love of litigatiou, this certainly is fostered by tbeir very troublesome law of inheritance, which results in such inimfle subdivisions of property that the one hundred and nine- ty-nintb share of a held, or tiie nttietn of asmall garden, (containing, peruaps, a dozen palms and a few plantains), be come a fruitful source of legal conten tion, of quarrels and of crime. Emerson Tenant mentions a case in which the claim was for the two thousand five hundred and twentieth share in the pro duce of ten cocoa palms. To illustrate this sort of litigation the Eev. B. Spence Hardy quoted an intri- cateclaim on disputed property, in which the case of tho plaintiff was as follows: "By inheritance through my father I am entitled to one-fourtb of one-third of one-eighth. Through my mother I am further entitled to one-fonrtb of one third of one-eighth. By purchase from one set of co-heirs I am entitled to one ninety-ninth: from another set also one ninety-ninth, and from a third one ninety-ninth more. Finally, from a fourth set of co-heirs 1 have purchased one one hundred and forty-fonrth of the whole." There is a nice question to solve ere a landowner can begin to till bis field or reap its produce! National Review. "Wlwn." Most people who read a paper wonld like to have it come to their hands with out any typographical or editorial er rors. This is quite possible when all the following conditions come together: When the contributor has written cor rectly. When he has written the correct thing distinctly. When the compositor has only the cor rect letters in the different cases. When he does not take letters from a a wrong case. -. -. V When he sets them correctly. When the "reader" corrects every er ror. , When the compositor corrects the "rough proof" properly. When the "reader" reads the ftrrected proof attentively. When the compositor corrects the sec ond proof properly. When the revised proof is carefully "read," When the "reader" has sufficient time to do this. And when a dozen other circumstances work together fur good. Exchange. Congress at Last Tsk Action. A bill has been introduced at Wash ington requiring all baking powders con taining alum and ammonia to be so la beled. This is a step in the right direc tion, and has been lot g foreshadowed by the action of State Legislatures, Jtoardf of Health, Food Commiostoners, etc., in this matter. The bill ffords needed pro tection to the public, for the evidence as to the injurious enects ol alum and am monia is very heavy; but it will never theless be fought bitterly by the mnnu facturers whom it affects, who are accue tomed to sell their goods as "pure cream of tartar." ' absolutely pure," etc. The bill is something needed. If a maker uses a ding in his powder, the name of which he does not want to nave printed on his label, it is prima facie ev idence that there is something wrong. We hope the subj-sct will be vigorously prosecuted all over the country, not on v as regards baking powder, but also all other food adulterations. This bill may incidenally benefit the makers of pure articles; but, if it should, this is only an additional point in its favor. A GARDEN OF A QUEEN. victoria-mas 'rwrsper-BACfteB .; : t FROM HER SUBJECTS. t. JCnglaad's Soveralgn Has m Mania tat Flu-ting TrA ' Houw Thai th Print of WalM Built and la Whlob Inj Boral Children H Pl-rcd, , Queen Victoria considers herself really M horn in the private garden of Osborne wily. For in this little corner of the isle of , Wight alone does the sovereign, t those possessions cover one-soveuth of he globe, have powers absolute, : Else where, and especially in the park of the i-oyal residences, she is nnder the re straint of the officials of a constitutional Juonarchy. 'y :?- '-'' The commissioner of public building and works treats the crown aa an insti tution of which the right are strictly limited. Her majesty cannot cut a tree without the consent of the proper official. To escape tuts vigilance me quecu wis bought in the neighborhood of her castle at Osborne some acres of ground where she may have a gardener not aubject to changes of administration. She has even gone so far as to disregard for once her position of political impartiality and ichosen a former gardener of Lord Be- consfield, a man accustomed to the grow ing of Tory flowers, But any imprudences which lie tnigiit commit will not easily reach the public. For while it is easy to get permission to roam about the grounds of the castle, this little garden is carefully shut off from visitors. A correspondent of an Euglish paper recently bad the good fortune to get into the Hwisa ohalet, which her majesty baa made into a family museum, and to walk about the aisles of trees where each tree commem orate an episode in the history of the royal house and recalls a day of happi ness or sorrow. , J A abort distance from tho entrance to his private garden is a wooden play bouse, bnilt with their own hands by the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Edinburgh in 1857. The heir to the crown has missed his vocation. He clearly had inJum the making of a nota ble carpenter. Even to the present clay the prince i rery prond of his work, and whenever he visits Osborne he goes straightway to see if the playhouse is till standing. Not a nail bus fallen, not a plank has sprung. The bouse is as Solid aa at first ' A BOC8B BUILT BY WAXES. In the little house are preserved the playthings of the royal children. Each of the children had little carriages of hi own, and all are here preserved with the initials of the owners' uames upon them. The Dnke of Edinburgh was a jack of all trades. He was a carpenter with his nliW brother, a mason with his voumrer brother, the Duke of Conuaught The miniature fortress they bnilt together is still preserved in this same garden. L is made of stone and brick, and is at least strong enough to brave the seasons. The princes worked under the eyes of their father, who was trying to teach them the art of fortification. This fortress h:ts undergone some as saults. The Prince of Wales, having his five sisters and the yonngest of his brothers nnder his command', attacked its garrison, the Dukes of Edinburgh and Counanght Almost always the heirap parent carried the parapet and drove the two dnkes into a casemate, where they bad plenty of arms and whence hunger alone conld dislodge them. 1 Nowadays the children of the Duchess of Albany and of the Priucess Beatrice attack and defend the fort which their parents, their uncles and their aunts bave so often captured with great valor after long and glorious siege, i The day of her oldest daughter's wed ding Victoria took a sprig of myrtle from the bride's bouquet and planted it in this garden. It rooted itself so firmly that now it is grown into a great busn. tuvery itime one of the grandchildren marries, the myrtle bosh at Osborne is called into requisition. --".'' ! MEMORIAL TREES. . Not far from tho matrimonial bush is a row of mourning trees. ' In February. 1862, every member of the royal family planted a tree to perpetuate the memory of the prince consort, who died in the December just before. Of the eight trees those of the Prince of Wales and the Princess Alice have grown most luxuriantly. A little distance away the queen planted the parasol pine,, which is her memorial of her husband, j In another place are the trees com memorating marriages the trees of the Prince and Princess of Wales, of tbe IDuke and Duchess of Edinburgh, of the Dnke and Dnchess of Connaught, of the Duke and Duchess of Albany and of the Princess Beatrice and Henry of Batten berg. It is in tbe shade of these trees, whose foliage murmurs the memories of happy times, that the queen likes to take tea during the hot da; - of August ! Nowlt is the new generation which is taking its turn at tree planting in this garden devoted to royal highnesses. The children of the Prince of Wales and of 'the Duke of Edinburgh have the place of honor. But the invading family of Prussia casts not a little of its shade Eipon soil which should remain exclusive y for British. Although the children of the queen's danghters are notrepre jsented, the descent of the Empress Fred trick has taken root there. The Prin cess Victoria of Prussia, her sister, the 'Princess Sophia, and the Prince Walde Imar. who died in 1879, have each a tree. The collection lacks nothing bnt the tree tof the Emperor William. Pans Figaro, ' . A Big f nect. The biggest insect of its kind in the world is tbe Hercules beetle or soutu America, which grows to be six inches in lemrth. It is said, whether truthfully or not, that great numbers of these 'creatures are sometimes seen on the jmammaea tree, rasping the rind from the slender branches by working around them with their horns until they cause the Juice to flow. This Juice they drink to intoxication, and thus fall senseless to the grorttfi New York Journal. The Wnll of the M. !.'. First Doctor This depression in my business is awtul. We shall die in abject poverty. " Second Doctor Same hero. No chol era morbus, no colic, nothing remunera tive. And all because fruit is too dear to be within reach of the masses. Pitts burg Bulletin. Hig Potato. . George L. Bartlott has had on exhibi tion one hill of potatoes which were dug npon his land on Clifton which consisted of thirteen potatoes, the small eat of which weighed over half a pound. A Nw HnfiiHS fur Pari. By the death of M. Pruvot, a lauded proprietor, who lived in the Boulevard detnrwHw,'nntt"Hett bbhiud htm a fortune of iW.OiK), the city of Paris hint received a legacy of nearly i'40,OU(i, The testator Ifft instruction that the chief Mirtion of this amount is to 'be used for the construction, and mainte nance of a "Night Shelter fur the Home less and Destitute Poor in the Seven teenth Arronditwement," Which Ineludtts the .districts of the Termw, the Plains Moniteau, the BatiguolU and the Epl nettes. Ho has also left a considerable sum for benevolent purposes aiming the young to tho town of Holesmes, where be bad a residence. Loudon Telegraph llrllllwiil Venn. Von us, the fairest of the stars, shines like a young moon on September even ings. She is visible almost aa soon as the suu disappear, and may bs seen at noonday by observers who know whttre to look. The time of her visibility is, however, lessened by her ttheru declination, which shortens her stay above the horiton. She reaches her greatest eastern elougatiua on the Slid, when she is as far east of the sun as possible, and begins To retrace her step toward him, ' becoming larger and brighter aa she approaches the earth until Oct 39, when ' she reaches her greatest - brilliancy. Youth's Coutpan-lon.- - .; ' ' , , Mimoy In Omu, . Ouo of the summer Industrie at Old Orchard beach lias been tbe gathering and the sale of "sweet grass," a kind of green thatch that grows quite plentiful ly along tho sea wall. It has a peculiar ly rich odor and a small package In bu reau drawers or a close room gives out its fragrance for weeks and months. One little fellow has peddled $13 worth' of grass among the hotel guests this sea sou. Parties do a thriving business fill ing ordurs for grass from all parts of the country. Sermons In stones, book In running brooks and dollars in every thing. Exchange. Didn't Conut Them, A Newburyport lady is credited with being the most forgetful individual re cently heard from. Tuesday she visited Plum, Island with three young children, and ou her return left one asleep in the horse car, and walked half way to her home ou a back street before she discov ered her lwa. Cape Ann Breese. A veteran athlete, known as "Old Vetter Michael," although passed bis eightieth year, recently climbed to the top of the spire of the parish church of S)tr-Alben. Uermnny. which is 133 feet high, aud stayed there some minutes, turning the weathercock round and rotttid and performing a few gymnastic feat -. . . .,' .. - Lord Randolph Churchill Is a great consumer of cigarettes, smoking almost as many as Henry Laboucheru, the edit ar" ' Nearly all the men in public life In England, except Mr. Oladstone, nse to bacco According to the secretary of the Na tional Cranberry association the cran berry crop will be 20 per cwut larger this year than tn tSt The crop last year amount! to l:J.i.UOO bushels Capt Tillman, the leader of the fann ers' movement in South Carolina, owns 1,800 acres of land, runs twenty plows and has a dairy supplied by forty thor oughbred Jersey cows Frederick II. Uaasum. the antiquarian, of New York, is to make ex-President Cleveland a present of Daniel Webster's rod, reel, wicker flask and fishing hat TiniwnrtTtH.- Htnlilen chamres of the weather cause bronchial trouble. "Hrwen'i Hrmu-liiitl Troche" will Ktve reliel. fluM only in Imtr. Price, 2S cent. ' purlitjr th-il In never Idle. ; . t . ' " '. . '7 ." j Tobacco is man's most universal luxury ; ' the fragrant aroma of Mastiff " Plug Cut starts ' people to pipe smoking, even those who never used tobacco before. ' , ), B. Pace Tobscco Co., Richmond, V. There is nothing that may not happen to a thin baby. There is nothing that may not happen to a. man who is losing his healthy weight. We say they are " poor." They are poorer than we at first suspect. , ; . Do you want almost all that is known of the value of plumpness told in a way to commendto you careful liv ing and Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil if you need it. A book on it free. "' EovTTi. RiWN,Chemi.l, 13a South 5th Avtmue, N?w VorW ' - Votir dn-c?it kwp Scotr't Emulsion of cod'lirer oilaU druggitU every w tier do. fi WALL PAPER, lOcHit perdoubJe roll. Hnd 2-neiit nUmp fut wropltB. HTHOFIKU) A MOKUAN, 1W Third Rtraut, Portland, Or..., AGEUT 7riiwte7l in fourdaynon my JClMtrlc Coraot 1 m1 KfMK:1iMft). 100 twrcant profli and cm' irtMn. Wnmnli fr. Br. Brinirnian. BrtMMt way, W . V Old Gold n4 WItbt hmmh; ieo4 your old Oolt snri Ml I war hi mall to th old nl mWahle born of A iJolemMi 4) Third treni, Ho FrMioitoo; I will wild bj raturn nruMi io own, wiruiu u ., w l m Uifwtjoiy irLU niun tolA. A VBRT rOMMOW WANT. Out of iKirln," "tll.trll," ' tltff blue." tln-w are Isiiilllnr ie11iiUvi Hik'iiiiiIim lultle, (Irttimlilu BiiKittittli, in'i'iiipiili'l w II h litl Imle, iiemnitiiuiu, hnlliHiili. Iliverly I ItltiiMl, le tviiiwlv wlileh tut ellrtUlVH lint'lilf peMatently iimhI I tin' uirmmiiil iteoil. I ;' elttclvr. evliletir lltt tlif yletti llntitllHlsiill)r IHUitlnliwI t'0iiwi BMtlhtriioollierennMt wleiv orRittilf (llfi'tiw iloen not eK(t tli lets! I Hl MHHii,iMui.tti. ti,.iiit,,p,.u tltt ttntrulti vm-ruii'M "I the lniHi'tt, refiirm sit trietiitlsr condition 1 1 lit bow,il, kwit tin hinllliliil n'twlloti el lit bile with llollur Woiintult lllltvrn. Kor i;vnr llittly yesr lltl puiulr ineiltt'tnt' hss miilllt'l Ut common wmit of Hie itcrvott liivull'l, tlte ilvi'iUo ituil of iwrMiti derlclent lit vllii lty. nit t'llli'lcnt tonic To It lcr of tin mi llitlf atrciiKth ! !trlutitllt It" f lllcscr urevtml Ive ol nmlKil nl 1 grlpi. Tlimottiiliiy cl fci'tlvu la It ton for rkvuiiiKiliint, kttlney voitf plslnt i nurnlnl, A great many sum aip imtr tntorcntod III bsv tng work tbau povvrty slxillaltvil, A ST BONO : lUNATtO. Tli well-known llrinatif Mitchell ft l.ewl Cq, stttl rHtmr it Wslkwr, dealers in wit on, larui nisflhliiery, eto., of rorilsntl, Dr , hsve ooiisnllilslmi, thus forming s cimilil itHtion with uitl'iiiitnl capital ami I'auilltlc for trsnnat't n tltslr blisitteas. The nonsiil Mutton of the two llin of good gives ths new ooinpsnv s lrgr stttl more uompltilv line of ninuhlitery uml vehicle of every il surlntlun than Is tisnitleii by uny oilier llrtn In tli n I'ltltcil Htstes, whils suporior fselll tie for pumhsaiiig in large qnsntltlH will enslils Uietn to coni)et with any nml all othsr dealers and ittsiml'seturei. They re prepared to fltrnish evetythitig In the wuy of vehlot, I'arin iiisliinpty, ugriotiltnml impleiiients, etc,, nniklug s sptvliilty of the aelebrnted Mitchell liirni and si nitgwug nil. In sildUiini to their !iradintrtcr in Pjrtl ind bruiltih h iusi'S will be mulntttliicd .t tteattls. Hiiokaue, Wulla Walla, I'oll'ac, l.a (Irantle and other point throughout the Northwest. We predict for the new firm of Mltihcll-U'wi A Wtaver t'o. a large trails. " It pay to study the interest of lh consumer1 suitl a deuler to a druiuiner who was trying to sell him short-weight iilug tobacco. "Tnke, for example, Htar I'ltig, which is usid by the gtrnl iims of chewors thnitighout the United Mtte. Btar Plug Is nut only the best and ittiwt satiafsotory chew, but every plug i a full sixteen-ouitoe pound." Cm EnsmtUn Wot Poltah ; o dost; no smell Tst Obsmsa for breakfast. JUTotAinff can Ittaid In favor of tLo boat mmlioino in tho world that may not bo said of the roost worthless. In ono Ciiso, it's truo; in the other, it isn't; but bow can yon distinguish f Judgo by what is oa There. only ona blood-puriflcr that's guar anteed. It'a Dr. Pierce 'a Golden Medical Discovery and this is what is dono with it ; if it doesn't benefit or cure, in every can, you got your money bock. Isu't it likely to be tho best? All tho year round, as well at ono time as another, it cleanses and pur ifies the system. All Wood-poisons must go. For Dyspepsia, Bilious ness, Scrofula, Salt-rheum, Tetter, Erysipelas, or any blood-taint or dis order, it is an unoqualed remedy. It'a tho cheapest, too. With this, you pay only for tho good you get And nothing else is "just as good," It may be better for tho dealer. But he isn't thi one that's 'to be helped. : ''. y SEEDS 0 ll kind nd Is nr nmntlly whole ulo awl rvull l boil rock prtcok E. J. BOWEN, OS Front Street, Portland, Or. IV Send for calalngua. ' I CURE FITS! WnMltwyeamlduiMH nMB nMrn-ly U wt"V thra faraUma H$tbhTtiuiarottiritjxltt. Iraaana nibftl cnm. I hv m-l th; d mam ot FIT1, V.VU U.PHY or PAI.MKU HlCK!li:K3 l.I. lip Muitjr, I vrro$ mi wwt& to ur tbwurt un, Hocwm oUim bv failud la do mason f urn now rMwIvtti a eura. SVtul fc aro fur Int tiM maA a Fnio U4tlof ujr hifalhbl rwnwlr. Ul Kpand P.tO(o, It. (i. BOOT, W. tU 1 11 Frarl HI., N. V. Va Man! Mam and Adam ot Enrt ASTHMATIO P.MMISMn.II.D. CUWEO TO ST CUHEO. I susaaLO.M.r. Sportsman. Attention ! It you want to hoot acenrauuy, don't foil I light your Klin with th uvlobrntod LYMAN 8IGHT8. Miuli to fll ativ rlire. iVit hiilit. A.i: ivorv Hum Kmut HI lit, in Ivory Huiitltitf Vrotti hIhIH, 0 neiiM, Hi'iit hy mull oit reipt of prti, H.T. HUDSON, 93 First Street, Portland, 8r BuuilJor new illiwtriited ttaloRiie, MORPHIN HABIT I B.Mlrt fern SURE CURE Paclflo M'llldn Co., QUO I'Ur Ht.. ton rrsnolaoo LiNDl5E Viiinnljlo inf .nimtl.in un Uinl i-U-Hr hk i-kh h nbtslUMi hy ail lrtaalti (ieo. Iluivny, HI M .iM Utiwt, Hm rraiinlnr.'u, 0,1. ,., STUMP PULLER. The moat pr' tll and aiinrwfiilatnintipiilU-r on mirth Is manulnHiimci ty Ho. llarvnv, M2 hi '.ue Rt , Hnn Krncl on, (:', V rl la) for ciiIiiI ikiio. rtlvAlatSfiarft nnwlmtcw ica'llns ranwl for all thr tlnnalurat itlacbaraaa ui prlvaUfdtiifaMaof nii-n. 4 citrtalomira for thr nnhlll ttlii( nkgiH paculls ., , hi wnm.a. .Iff d Ml, fc I rMn ti4 rtl aaft ImtitHUmw Cn. In nwommaudlus ilv ru aiirrorara. J.eTONKR.MO.DntatiHt.hl MttM bil ItrnsirlaU N. P. n7u. No.t2ts.F. N, U. o. io rvl, V f Utirulsl I'tlMl ! HELPLESS.0! Chicago, 111. WAS confined to could not from lame- suffered 5 doctors diil not help ! a bottles of ST, JACOBS OIL cured me. No return i l i m 5 years. l'ltANCIS mAURER, ALL RIGHT ,ST JACOBS OIL DID IT." , w o o o oooouoo Ws Tiny Pills0 fti.nalilK llHitlvaHIKtA tm wlmlfwirQ w lin wlallva. Tlmy ! fMl kirn- w Oalinllnl will nourlali llm IxMly, via ttptlt nikI il.'V-lon llrah. l'rk, SO o.-iila, Kurt ! alinwti In iHinlttr oooooooooo consyriPTEou. lbvtxmbivrAMilf' Hi lMtvdtaaaibrlts MlhMHiKltf a si UMnnS kind aud of Ion Undmff ha rm eurmt. IndMd an irtMn la my fall In Ita nlltMry, Utt I w II antd vw wirrl.aa -, will) Vl,tlAIU.K TKRATIHKaathladlMMiloanf anl. Iarahaillaad nuillwr Kiuwwaud I'. . il,li a, V. A. alarum, ill. t!.. IM3 lsrl N. Vt . . r. A NMTti rTfS-KJT True merit is al ways recognized. "Seal- of North Carolina" has risen from the ranks on merit alone; its su perior quality has placed it in the , front. Packed! In Patent Cloth Pouches and In Foil. Btor Uiklnr ha WmH tip Mlaa' kM Khrin in analltr. narrow wl'lllta, II, V, U, l II U l, thai will tw a14 at 11.00 to clua. iliillltiu, I:hllilrtin'tron Goat Phew with hsl, but Utn, t, .', , t Mki. MallliiK. ue. Iti.va' ur Olrla' alrom every-rtar 1-fO p wtlh' hwla, kh! 10 w', Vfiii 'i "W" fcK ' JOi". MhIIIhk, Mo. Clillilmii'N htihheni, beat, I to 10', at Jdo. Mlw' llfI HtraiK. 11 Ui V4i ' rut)tar Hubbrn, xt. l1lu', alsMi 4, bwil, IKK-; olhr ali' at J.i', too, bun. m Mn.i'a lliiitan Wlpper, fin, (Iner, flrtpat, 7c, II W. M.SM. l.i)li'a'Too HtUiwr, fl.U) fnule, Ui7, K tnl KK, l H. ... Kaonr Vara, IlKhl bin and tl brown, not the hwt or thMWntt.t 6a wr batik, K) IK-r iwumli Diroolor uil orttl (Hlor ol Htwklnit Vni,iof, Oik-, 7fo, to Pli. Will go In a wot-k, II yin Dun uatt yarn In rarli Milora Inr loiiry work, we bav ihutti at Half prtiw. Wur own li'i-ihiin. Our Ulo prllttml Hat will ttit-nt you! ak tn thrnn. Family Miimille of ll kinil. Hrll ifttiiu rmin 2'4o to io. Cainiwi Kntlt from o int run U Jx--r dan, ManyKiwita are lower. Ilurarnful of ymir niwuultunai. Write to Smith's Cash Store. 4B 418 FH0NT STRICT, SAN MANCISC0, CAL. A BICYCLE FREE. Wrlt for ritalnie ami l-rlk-uJara. , HUttu ko. FNEU T. MERRILL, lT Wualiliiicton Hi., rorllmi.l. Or. pUjlTfllH BUDS TEA A liH-iul from the forum! ol an oM ltnllh Ton Mi-ri-liHiit, Best Tea in the World for the Price. IVi ii-nu per tti. at your diuih-r'i or p&atpHld (riini thv wilts ltnKirtirar CLOSSET& DEVERS.PortlBndOr. BestintheWorldlj fiet tho Genuine! Sold Everywhere!' fsssaasssMBit i vmiun ucvl The Speolflo A No. I. Cnma, without lull, all en nt Vtaitirrr Iiihi i. nil 4lm(, mi mntti-r nt inw ki ..ti.lli.kr. l'ront alrtotiinslt brtinan 'i tcriinl n inwly. Cnn-i ivlii-n nvarylulng luia fulli il. Nulithjrull Umxdaia ',,.. Munutiuitlirarai Tlia A.Mi'himiihHt WmIWi frlrr. (IX.00. SBBS? i:iiui1 ill list tillX. Bt l'-iill n uv. TnntB. (Kaal. W I In tltun. )"i'i nv (iniffwiwm Bled; walk back; months ; I ll l "t mi in auj.u -- ------ Jlt0rMam.' Vtu&cy II SO POOR r mm ? 14 "jaUZ