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At Chicago Royal Leads AH. As the result of my tests, I find the ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER superior to all the others in every respect. It is entirely free from all adulteration and unwhole some impurity, and in baking it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than any other powder. It is therefore not only the purest , but also the strongest posuder with which / am acquainted. WALTER S. IIAINES, M. D., rrrf rf Chemistry , Hush Medical College, Consulting Chemist, Chicago Hoard of health. Ail other baking powders are shown by analysis to contain alum, or ammonia. ¥ r, > lime 2'tMp No Accident. There had been a iw In Dam Haller, cl Mr. William Smith had been delivered person to the undertaker. Big Pete had ~n arrested on general principles. And an tomey .volunteered to defend him. He ~k the ground that the shooting had n an accident and was arguing away at e Jury at a great rato when Peter rose to s feet. "Excuse me, ymir honor, and gentleman the jury," ho said, "but I can't stand Is any longer. My friend here says it as an accident that Bill Smith was shot, our honor, my reputation is dearer to me an my life. It would have been an accl nt if I'd missed him. Tve been shootin -und this territory for 30 years and never ' an accident like that yet. That's all ve got to say, yonr honor," and Peter sat wn amid great applause, and the Jury dn't leave the box except to congratulate on bis acquittai.— Detroit Free Press. Blessing* of Freedom. Bilkins—My! My! What an unspeakable essing it is to live in a free countryl Wilkins—Of course. Bilkius—Yes indeed. The paper says that o full name of the Hawaiian princess is ctorla Kawckin Kainlani Lunalilo Ka inuiahikipalapa Cleghom. Wilkins—Well? Cleghom.—New York Weekly. They All Try. Night Editor (of New England paper)— ? the editorial correspondence from Chi ~o got in yet? elegraph Ik I i tor—It's o:» the wire now. "How does it begin. " 4 'The glories of the great Colombian ex ition aro simply indescribable, houting to foreman through speaking be—"Save about three columns for de iption of Chicago fair!"—Chicago Trib . , Bilkins—Well, in this free republic tt 11 be perfectly proper to address her a, A Great Inventor* rs. Hogan—And fwy isn't the old mon orkin now? 'rs. Grogau—It's a Inventor he is. ITe got up a road schraper thot does the rk of foive min. 'rs. Hogan—An how minay min do it e to r-run it? Grogan—Six. It will be a great ng fer givin iraploymint to the Iaborin n.—Indianapolis Journal. Poetry and Fact, e had just eaten a piece of the first pie had ever baked. hat is the matter, dear?" she asked, it that feeling of sadness And longing t is not akin to pain?" No," he answered; "it isn't a feeling of ne** and longing. Ifc is a feeling of sad and shortening."—Washington Star. He Fixed It. ara—Dick, fix my mallet. Ick—What's the matter with It? lara—The handle comes out every time 1 1 play with Ella. ick—Then play with some one else.— th. Many of Them. ynicus—I should think it would give a turn to take caro of that baby, omesticus—I shouldn't, mind one turn, snally takes about 40 a night to keop quiet.—Detroit Tribune, Almost. irst Actor (in a tragic whisper)—Are we te alone? r, ud Actor (glancing grimly at 'the audience) — Almost. — New York -kly. 'olden dkin£ PoßVder hen in Portland be sure to take in !t n t ^ 8t u no . velt - v at th e Exposition, euall bake biscuits and cake every ™oon a„d evening on onr pretty - r j jJJ 8 . Stove. Everybody cordially _ j " av ® a biscuit with 'us and see wonderful merits of Golden West mg 1 owder proved by actual work. OSSET & DEVERS, PORTLAND, OR. t/r ÏÇÇHntO PILES k n ow » by moisture 9 *■ P«rsptrstiqn. osuse Intense itching OU __ LELD at oncr to OR. BO-$AN-KO'S PILE REMEDY, 0T y ftlol} s ets directly „„ „ •bsorbs tumors. sUsys itch n tumors, sUsys •P* rT u*n^Titoure. l*rl< W Or ps.L Dr. Bossnka. t «A4. Dr. Sossnko, Fhllsdnlp HS. WINSLOWS '•«Ss ussrs..: • N. Ü. No. 519—8, V. N. TT. No. I FUGACES ANNI. Oh, roy love, my queen of May, The light of youth \a gom\ Thy balmy tresses gather (fray. Thy rrny UpH are \ran. Wll] thy true eyes Miter yet Am! their nu pliai '•mile forgetf Oh, en y .love, will Time deceive. Will he wither true love ho? There [» more In low*, believe. Than the silly nation* know; More in love, when bloom is dead. Than t!»c roue wreath round hia head. Oh, my love, and If thou need HarW when the north wind* blow; If thy tender foot print* bleed On the flint« among the «now, I'OVt? will raise a sheltered cot. Where the ice blast enters not. Oh, my trtio love, ae are wise; When -now whitens on our land Underneath the cloudy skies We will travel hand In hand, Hlnce we have not far to ko To our rest beyond the snow, -Lord de Tablejr. thk most febtilm AM klUCA. \Vbat is there in this Alberta, through which the Canadian Pacific Railway I rnn ". tlja t it should draw trainloada of settler- and settlers' eflects from Idaho Washington and Oregon? The most fertile soil in America, wood, water, coal and climate; that is what they say. This \ aller of the Saskatchewan seems to have been rediscovered of late by some Washington and Idaho men, who kept things (lark nntil they and their friends had seenred locations immediate ly around the few depots already erected when the line was oj>ened. Then they sent word of what they had found, anil their friends are going in by the score. The country, they say, is large and good throughout, and new stations are prom ised as settlement requires them. Then Maine, Michigan and Vermont caught on, and sent up delegates to spy out the land and report. They gave a practical answer. They wrote, saying they had examined the country, had selected lo cations and were coming home to sell the old place and go where it was worth while farming. The grain and vegetables they saw cannot be excelled in North America, and can be equaled in very few parts. The cattle, horses and sheep were rolling fat and standing up to their knees in rich native grasses. Why was this not all known before? Because for generations only the Hndson Bay Com pany knew it, and they wanted no set tlers in their fur country; and when they lost hold of it there was no wav of getting to it. Now two branches of the Canadian Pacific Railway run through the richest parts of it. Experiments With Durable Woods. In some tests made with small squares el various woods buried one incJ) in th* ground, the following results m-re ob tained: Birch and aspen decayed in three years; willow and horse chestnut in four years; maple and red beech in Ive years; elm, ash, hornbeam and tjmv hardy poplar in seven years; oak, Scotch tr, Weymouth pine and silver fir decay ed to a depth or half an inch hi seven years; larch, juniper and arbor ritce were uninjnred at the expiration ef the ■even years.—Chicago Times. Th« Political Chameleon. When the chameleon had to explain Ms changes of color, it is recorded that "Then first the creators found a tongne. " The political chameleon differs from the natural one. He is all tongue, and he uee it, while exhibiting in succession all the hues of the rainbow, to prove that he has never changed his color at all.—London Saturday Review Why the Duke Sold Ills F.state. The Duke of Westminster, who ha* »candalized the English aystocracy by telling Cliveden, his ancestral estate in Berks, to Mr. Astor, exenses himself by ,ying that he has a family of 10 children to provide for. The sale adds fôO.OOO a year to the duke's income. Time* Have Changed. Mrs. Smythe—BefoT« we were married you didn't use to groan the moment I eat on your knee. Smythe—I know it. mv dear, but you didn't use to stick a millinery bill nndeT my nose then, either.—Life. The letters in the various alphabets of the world vary from 12 to 202 in nuni ber. The Sandwich [slander's alphabet has the first named nnmber, the Tar tarian the last. While Eyraud was being prepared for the guillotine hp saul: Don t bother nje about religion. Tell my wife and daugh ter to do the best they can. That Is all I wish to say." Remember that proper cultivation and uee of the voice not only add to its beau ty, but prevent it from becoming pre maturely old. wprn and cracked. The largest cut stonee In the world are in the Temple of the Sun at Baal bee. Matjy are more than 80 fqpt long, SO feet broad and of unknown depth. Yt8, I HAVE A QOODL Y HERITAGE •» inln. I her. to trap. 'is.v«*!*" rrul1 ,h * piewmi .wig, and Tml W lhf < " ro ' WI<1: 0*>' than shall ill Joy cby ripened sheave*. '( Iie * n or<hari1 . scan and prop F«>d bearing Ire«, each watered in lu plaMt Or If a garden, le. I. yt .id tor vr Z " *'* , **l nerljs and herb* of grace. But It my lot bo «and, where nothing grows} ^'pralm ,ll,h " ld W Tun* a Ibankfnl for Ibougb lhy desert bloom not as tho rasa, it y«t can r«ar tby palm. — Cbrlattoa Q, K orattl la Atalaaia. A WHITE ONE. the air was thick with steam and ins pregnated with the smell of soap, and the temperature waa try no means low, more especially aa th* sun waa streaming In through the uncurtained windows, but the laundry girls were used to thaw Inooaven Jeoc» and thought nothing of th^ they chatted continuously over their work, not because they were happy or be cause they had anything particular to say, out btcntiMe they bad no conception of the dignity of silence. The conversation was perhai» not of the most edifying deserts tloo, and the language employed wns forcible, garnished by slang, and not free from superfluous expletives, for these girls were not of the highest type There was a eu rions ta wdrtpess, or rather gaiidinem, aliout their, for the most oart, ragged dresses; they had big, heavy fringes, which the stenm hiwt taken out of curl, sc that in nearly every Instance they strng gled into the bold eyes beneath them; their faces, too, were In striking contrast to their hands in the matter of cleanliness, for It was not compulsory to put them In the water to earn a livelihood; but they were better in this respect than they would ire nearer the end of the week, for today was only Tuesday. The only exception to the universal an tidiness wns manifested in the person of one whom the girlH called T,iza (the H be ing pronounced as if it was the diphthong ai). This 'Liza, the preliminary "a" of whose name was invariably dropped by her acquaintances, was a hunchback, and her face, though It possessed the merit of clean lioess, was almost repulsively ugly. The complexion wns sallow, the mouth badly shaped, the eyebrows obtrnslvely dark and heavy; very sad were the eyes beneath them, had there been any one to note their wistful look, but 'Liza did not encourage scrutiny, and Indeed the brown eyes were uot remarkable in themHeires, and were moreover half hidden by the drooping lida, from which she glanced in a sideways, half sinister manner. 'Liza was not very popular among her companions, partly because she chose to ire exclusive and partly because she could on occasion say unpleasantly sharp things. But there was one pensai whom she loved, and that was Miss Callender. By and by the ringing of a bell created a diversion among the workers. Almoet simultaneously eight pairs of red, soapy arms were drawn ont of the wasbtnbs, eight pairs of red, crinkled hands were wiped on some portion of convenienCap parel, and eight pairs of ill shod feet trampled into an adjoining room. At a table in this room stood a young lady, very sweet in appearance and pret tily dressed. She nodded in a friendly way to tbe girls, and shook hands with each one as they passed. She had their interest at heart, and made it her duty to come two or three times a week and provide them with dinner. This dinnerconsisted usually, as on this occasion, of a plate *f soup and a large shoe of pudding, for which they paid a penny; a second helping of either could he bad fora farthing, so the payment was merely nominal: but tbe girls were exempt from the feeling that they were the recipients of charity. The coppers were "dablied" down on the table in a little pile, and Miss CalleDder ladled om the soap, which waa quickly and noisily consumed. The young lady watched the other women, smiling. Per fectly dainty herself, their roughness did not seem to repel her, •'Girls," she said presently, in her quiet, clear voice, "I am going to give a party in the Mission hsll. Will you come?'' There was a chorus of delighted aasent, accompanied by a general clattering of spoons on the almost empty plates. " 1 xjr\ Miss what sort of a party might tt be, now?'' "Oh, friendly," said Miss Callender. "Music and plenty to eat. and—yon may bring yonr sweethearts." This caused a prolonged giggling. "Might we bring more than one?" fn qnlred Polly Blaines, who enjoyed the di» tinction of being the prettiest of the girls. Miss Callender shook her bead disap proviugly. "Yon oughtn't to have more than one," she said, smiling. "Oh. as for that, misa, 1 don't want any, Tin snre; but there, the more you draws off. the more they comes on. That's how it is with men, and that's why them as : don't want 'em always has the most ad ! mirer«." j And Polly, conscious of a fascinating re- ! trousse nose and a dimpled chin, tossed her head in the air. Whereupon all the girls, not to be out done, and by no means reticent on the sub ject of their love affairs, fell to talking about them, finding the topic eminently congenial, and treating it in a manne» which displayed no more vnlgarity of heart than is concealed by certain ladies. Miss Callender rather encouraged than checked them, she liked them to be per fectly natural before her, and was glad of anything wKioh gave her an insight into their live* and character. Two there were who kept silence—one a little newly married woman to whom love was too sacred for common speech, and 'Liza. Tbe pudding she had begun to attack seemed to stick in 'Liza's throat, and she had great difficulty in gulping it down, for the other hunger of which she was often conscions, the hunger of the heart, now so asserted itself as to make her o-b Uvious of bodily needs. Something there was, too, of bitterness in her miud as she listened to the talk of these others. Per haps Polly's words did more to cause it than anything else, "Them as don't want , 'em always has the mast admirers.'' I>ook ! ing up she suddenly met the eyes of this girl. To her morbid imagination they ex pressed pity, perhaps scorn. She erim soned. There was a momentary lull, so that they all heard her when she said in a po cnliarly loud, harsh, defiant voice: "Mine Isn't living: mine Isn't." Yours? Did you have «weetheurt once?" asked the married woman, not an gently, though there wa« the slightest per ceptible accent on the pronoun. "And why no?" asked 'Liza and her voice was louder than before. "It isn't .y pretty girls a, has people earing for 'em. There's other things besides looks." 0ÎUC jj moro ^ M ^ ____ . mi-1 'l.ixa with promu »ay of your pink, di Of 'course there "Iri' dearT saiT Mis* Cullender .-soothingly, for Liza'« eyes UoodneHM 1m worth man." YY'mt wh* hi* nnine, Liza?" asked Polly Blaine*. Polly wa* conceited, and 'Liza hyper sensitive, scented patronage. "I ain't going to tell yer," she said. Then, with swift contradiction, "bin first name wa* Charlie." "Was he handsome?" asked Polly, pinch ing her neighbor under the table, so that the latter, a high colored* coarse looking girl, gave a little squeak. 1 never see anybody better looking." titude. "H» wasn't lolly men." fPollj'* and ins the In the be the was wns sc It the ire of be of her her to not the a a in of tivoredfoitor happened tob« fair.') 'Tie fhk dark, and hi* none w«t wt might, like * gentleman'*, aud h?!* teeth Wh* white, jukI" warmed to h«r eubjecWand be naed to wear a red »ilk tie with « pin In It. And, *he went on, "he aJwnya gave me lot* 01 preeenta—lati —Hod he loved me to R» he couldn't bear me out of hi* aight. Uh," iihe cried excitedly, "he did love me end we waa to happy, keepiu company, and he wa» a-gofn to marry me"— She pauaed abruptly. Indeed, her »brill voice almost beyond her control. "What did he die of?" naked one Of the girl*, with genuine companion In her tones. Indeed* from that day began a new era for Uxa. Whether It wa* that Ml*» Cal lender singled her out for opeclal attention. ot because they were really capable of a lasting impression themselves, It is tmpoa sihle tosay, but It Is certain that she va differently treated by the other women, and equally oertain that this treatment had a salutary effect upon her. Kepellant at first, ehe grew dally more approachable, lee* suspicions, more gracious, and her better qualities came Into play. Perhaps the Influence of Mins Callender had not a little to do with this, for from the begin ning 'Usa had loved her, and now her feeling waa little lees than worship. And to love another la no good for a woman's eoul that it works tike magic on her whole being. It made possible to 'Uza the com prehension of a love higher than Mira Cal lender's; and tbe little London heathen, being taught by her dear lady concerning those thing» of which *he had been fgnor ant hitherto, tweame what tbe girls called "religions. " Toward the end of the summer, she con sented to be confirmed* and went to classes, and this seemed to the others to make 'Usa more important, especially when she ex plained that "there was ladies at the classes*" lAza was nearer being happy now than she had ever been in her life, sod yet she seemed sadder too. Often she heaved great sighs that made her neighbor turn and look at her, and frequently there were marks of tear* on her face; ho that by and by it g rew evident to the others that there was some thing weighing upon ber. One day the little married woman, who had developed a sort of friendship for her. ventured to ask if anything was tbe mat ter with her. "I can't help seein as you ain't quite yourself, 'Uza," she said, "you ain't in no sort o' trouble, are yer?" 'Liza shook her bead. " 'Cos if there's any way of helping yer, 'Liza, it ain't much as I could do, but what I can I will, yer know. Might It be as yer've quarreled with some one, or is H yer riot, now?—or perhaps maybe"—color ing, in doubt as to how 'Liza would take it, "maybe you're caring for some one agin, which we can't help our feelings." 'Liza shook her head. "It ain't nothink o' that, Mrs. Jones." she said. "It wouldn't be religion, as is depreasin yon, I hope?" said Mrs. Jones, with as much severity as she was capable of. "It do take some people like that, which there was a young man our way as came nigh goin off his head, but that ain't naterai. It ought to make us 'appy. My Jim, he's sort o' re ligious hisself, which be pays great rispeck to Sundays, and always washes hisself, and Pm sure a brighter man you couldn't see." "It isn't religion," said 'Liza, "and yet it is. Everything get« sort o' turned up side down when one looks at things that way. and all what seamed natural once secnis wrong now. It's interestin seein how things twist around, but it's sad too: it's disturbin. There's past things I'd wish different now." "P'raps yon could undo 'em," suggested Mrs. Jonea, who wa* eminently practical. "Anyway, God knows, don't he, if you're sorry?" 'Liza sighed. "I s'pose," she said, with apparent ir relevance, "one didn't ought to care if one was loved or not; and there ain't no doabc » pride is my Ijesettini" Mrs. Jones shook her bead meditatively. She was afraid "religion wits upsettin Liza," she told her husband that night. As the time for her confirmation drew near 'Liza looked graver than ever and more worried. At last it came to the day itself. She had obtained a holiday from the laundry through the influence of Mis» Cal lender. What was the surprise of that lady and the others therefore when in the midst of the midday meal in rushed 'Liza! She had on a clean print drees, made for the oc casion, but her hair was disordered, her face pale from fatigue and excitement, her eye« shone brightly. 'Hullo." exclaimed the girls in a breath. "My! aint she a swell." They thought she had come to show off her drew«. "Eliza," said Miss Callender, '"what do you want? You will be late for your con flnnation." "Oh, miss," gasped 'IJza, almost breath less. as she was. "I had to come. I've tried and tried to say it, and I never could, and at first it seemed a white one, but lately it's come atween me and God; and I've thought on it at night in bed. and when any : of you has been kind to me, it ha' cut me ! like a knife; and, oh, miss, when you've j spoken of him, I've been a-near failin'down ! and explaining to yer, but somethin held nie b«ack. And I told God, but he seemed a dreams is too well known to require com meat, for probably every one has expori , enced the very disagreeable results of sleep ! Ing on the back. —Nineteenth Century. to say it wasn't any use my jnst tellin. un less I undid it. Oh, please, all of you—I don't care now w!.at you think of me. or if you despise me—I can't go to church until I've told yer. Him as I talked of wa* only what I dreamed about when I was lonely, evenings and times; and there wasn't no Chariie, really, and no one ain't never loved me, nor wanted to marry me." — Ludgote Monthly. Dream* ami Position During Sleep. It would be very interesting to get exact observations as to the habits of all the lower tribes of men with regard to sleep ing, for it is a point upon which a good deal would seem to depend, if. as Tylor and most of our anthropologists believe, man's finit ideas of a spirit world arose from dreams. We know that most of our do mestic animals dream, as is proved by their movements while asleep, and the same thing has also been observed in monkeys. The effect of the position of the body during sleep upon the character of our A Word For the Cat. At this season, when the family de parts from town, a word most be spoken in behalf of tho house cat, too often left behind to lead a vagrant and precarious existence. Already on the Back Bay, where "early closing" is the rule, the ____, ... „tr __. . cat» have become conspicuous by the ab sence of their owners. A few loss felines tn the world are not objected to. but that suffering and slow starvation should manitv. Unless the devoted house cat j can be provided with a summer home, it ; should be mercifully put out of exist- ; enc« in a way the animal society under- , stands how to do perfectly.—Boston Her ald. A Clever Sparrow. A tree sparrow on one occasion built its nest in a tall elm just beneath the more bulky erection of a crow. Not only did the large nest screen the smaller, but ! it afforded a means of protection from j the vagaries of the weather. Some tim* | after the crow's nest was plundered of its contents, while that of the troo spar* j row escaped untouched.-—London Tit Bits. it * a a van gQTOTA WHEAP OF ITBKUOTj into tb* ««return* which farnUh Tl*.,r to the ■Ttloin «»ter «uterin» and «trichina th* blood th*t It I* In abort tb* louuUln bradai ttreneth UUrarantW tokwp tbi* Important luppl/uut "«tin. in order and to rratore It to actiVltT when It b*com*> InacttT*. Thl* Flo*tetter 1 « atom*cn Bitten do*. mo*t effecttullr, reraon •b'y. regulating and reinforcing digestion, pro mo log d»« *ct on pi th* tirer and bow*)*! Btr- ngth and qnlatud* of tb* neree* depend In greet incur* upon thorough diction. Th*r* I* no nerrlne tonic more highly ••framed br the medical fraternity tb«n th* Bitter*. Phrel elan* *l«o atrongly commend It for chill* and rheumatlem, kidney rod bladder trouble. •Ick bradée be end went of appetite end ilrap. T*k* a wlneglu*fni to re* time, * day. " Behold the porter—dreadful eight I Thl* travel i* do fun; In one hand i* • whluk broom light— The other hold* • gun. KIDJfBT TR OUBLIE. Some moat excruciating pain coure* from derangement of tb* kidney*. ThU 1* tbe tratimony Senator Henry C. Kelaon of N'®w York aa to the value of kucoct'i Ponoua Punrn in inch -aura : On tbe 27th of February. 1883, I wa* tuen with a riotert pain In tho region of tbe kidnay*. I »uflered auch agony that 1 could hardly stand up. As Boon aa possi ble I applied two allcooe's Poaoc* Vl** teb«, one over each kidney, and lay down. In an hour, to my surprise and delight, the pain had eanished and I waa well, I wore the plaaters for a day or two aa a precau tion, and then removed them. I have bean using Au.cooa's Poaoc* Plavtbm in my family for the last ten yean, and have ai waya found them tbe qnlckmt and beat remedy for oolda, strains and rheomatie affection*. From my experience I believe they are the beet plaster* in the world." Basapaara a Fills tone up the system. Mrs. Smythe—I believe In making the servant keep ber place. Mr*. Hiram Dally—8o do I; bat, dear me, I can't make one stay over a week I Durant C A SHOT Bl CURED By local application«, a* they cannot reach tbe efteased portion of the e*r. There t* only one way io cure deafness, and that la by constitu tional remedies. Deelnes. 1* caused by an in named condition of tbe mucous lining of tbe enstachUn tobe. When tbla tube la Inflamed tod have a rambling soond or Imperfect bear ing, and when it la entirely closed deafnem la tbe reran, and nnlem the inflammation can be taken out and th a tube restored to it* normal condition, hearing will be destroyed feerer: nine cues ont of ten *re censed by catarrh, which N nothing but an inflamed coalition of the maeons rarfsee*. We will give One Hundred Dollen for any case of deaf neaa (ceased by catarrh) that cannot be cared by Hall'* catarrh Core. Send for eir culare, tira. F. J. CHENEY A CO., __ Toledo. O. Mr Sold by druggist*; 75cents. The outlook for the Florid* orange cron in never flotlder. Cae Bnameltne Stove Polish ; no dost, no «mell. Tar Ganna far breakfast. 21 Years of Pain Sfi I suffered with eczema or *alt rheum, in such terrible agony at time* th*t I could not walk about the house. I had so many failures with < medicines that when friend urg'd me to take Ilood's &ir**tarilU, I hesitated, but finally J, took it. The hoped for beließt was noticeable at the outset, and I hare £ taken twelve bottl- s. I pletcly well and like a new woman. — . --- o t thank or pra.'se -Airs rce (p Uood'f Sarsapari.la enough for w' at it hne done for me. JosEPUiKE B r »YCE, 18 Dtvism Street, I'cekskiU, N. Y. Be sure to get Hood's because Hood's^Cures \ am com; riJiW feel like S.'S-rag ! c „ 0 , , Hood'S Pills act easily, yet promptly and tfflciently, on the liver and bowel* 25c. 1 Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil presents a j perfect food—palatable, ; easy of assimilation, and j an appetizer ; these are everything to those who are losing flesh and strength. The combina tion of pure cod-iiver oil, the greatest of all fat pro ducing foods, with Hypo phosphites, provides a re markable agent for Quick Flesh Building in all ail ments that are associated with loss of flesh. Pr*n*r*d by Scott h Bownp. n- »mists, Æ, Mew York. Sold by sit druggi»*«. ÆKt S.S.S. T'hURELY a vegetable compound, I—* made entirely of roots and herbs A gathered from the forests of Georgi a, and has been used by millions of people «nth the best result*. It CURES All manner of Blood diseases, from tho pestiferous little boil on your rose to the worst cases of inherited b'.ooi taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and SKIN-ONCER j ; ; , ! j | j "German William McKeekan, Druggist at Bloomingdale, Mich. ''Ihave had the Asthma badly ever since I came out of the army and though I have been in the drug business for fifteen years, and have tried nearly every thing on the market, nothing has given me the slightest relief until a few months ago, when I used Bo schee's German Syrup. I am new £lad to acknowledge the great good it has done me. I am greatly reliev ed during the day and at night go to aleep without the least trouble. • CATA R F? H Id br DnggiM »r »rat mail* S. T. HudUiM, Wma, K OH TBW OU Valut— that t* the bear place sasaväPMü I- srsy-asi - °*. F»va»«*e*t 5.S, 2'U" 9U»fwr Throat, Saîto» ILOtfS/fcOTlRRH ^REMEDY. mdytejta mra. Injector free. f lSH BRK^ YW*Trra. Mai» Mratb. UM WATERPROOF COAT 82335* hi the World 1 A.J. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS, Rushing —OiTO THE GREAT SASKATCHEWAN VALLEY. Securing Free Land in Aberta, The brat farming land In America. See what American (armer« nay of It: copy ol their tratl SîîîlÆÆ 8ENT FREE - Aid-re* L. A Si!PJ3S*' L * nd CommUaloner. Wfnnlura ; D McMCOLL, G. P. A., Montreal, or any agent ol the Canadian Pactise Railway. DR. GUNN'S XX7B0TZD LIVER PILLS MILD PHYSIC ONE PILL FOR A DOSE. A movement of the bowels eeeh dew is rurtesuerT Cbr hsettli. These pills supply wbesthe erstem leeks to mebe K reculer. They eure Heedeehe, belebtes «he ■yes end einer the Complexion b e t t er then ass* ■Ÿ«— ■ They ect mildly neither trig* nor Waken ee other grille do. To oenrlxu.« you of their ste rHs we ungrtes free, or e fhU box for Maente. Set** e. Bossnko Med. Oe* Phüedelphl*. W FREE —THE— Bayers' Goidi JONES' CASH STORE. The Brans' (iODi is published the firot of each month. It h îwued in tne inteiest of *11 ('onmmers. It pires the lowest crab ^Hotstions on everything in the grocery line. It will save yon money to consnlt it. kailed fres to *ny Mdress on Application. Don't be without lL It you nothing to get it. It quo tes wholesale prices direct to the consumer. Mention thl* paper. Address JONES* CASH STORE« (SO Front Street, - Portland, Or. SOCIETY ▲. FKLDENHKIM Northwest, keeps* lane stock of all dBCRKT SOCIETY BADGES on hand. Best good* at low est figure*. Badges f g made to order. EOCENE. .. s Special brand of Burning Oil. which we manufacture expressly for FAMILY USE. IT IS A PERFECT ILLUMINATOR* IT 18 HIGH FIRE TEST. IT Is OK UNIFORM QUALITY. We guarantee it to be the htohist posrblj a*AD* or ru.rvr>'AT!KQ oil. A?k for it. STANDARD OIL COMPANY. MASQUERADES, PARADES, ■ A UATtlH THE A I*IC4I S. Everything in the above line. Costumes, Wig*, Beards, Properties. Opera and Play Books, etc., furnished at greatly reduced rate*? and in supe rior quality by the oldebt, largest, be*t renowned and therefore only reliable Theatrical Hou+e on the Tncitc Oxwr Correspordence so licite»!. Gouwnnr à Co., as, 28 and 30 O'Farrell street, also 822 Market street, San Francisco. We supply all Tteatert on the CboFt, to whom we re spectfully refer. MCIIM£ TORS on Installment*. Be«t make*. Lowest prie««. Send for catalog**. *" " HI! AU If, Htpon. C'tkl. IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT." TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO RHEUMATISM CURED BY THE USE OP Moore's Revealed Remedy. HI-Î1! Iasi &, Sag Fmaim. Tkla tavoritc hotel I* ttudar th*............ of CHARLES MONTGOMERY, sud I» raanafl M oot tb* brat Family sad B rainas* Man's Mara in 8*a Francises. mmrtmmm tat Mottl Mite "—rliril Flaat-ela« amvtoe sad th* hlshaat ——-—■ ra rraprataMlUy gnarantrad. Oar mattawtS , . .. pu*. .up.*1.7*am* u> n i £S zzrirerTrs ow. re ra ira iai i •* r Lj, »1.38, £u!ji < nu4 tûffî'krara DOCTOR .1. THE GREAT CURE INDIGESTION CONSTIPATION. leplittfiftfcUmiriUKys -A SPECIFIC FOR— Mill, Ikiaitis», tilt Um, Iwn f g fa IM Ul Otto IM tsd Skis Mmml w-ta^rara-on ram», «ta wlv«.-rare« The effect ic immediate and laatlre. Tw» m threw dore. „( l) L l-7anmr7ïrâ^tre $.*^ïï jrêp* tbe blood o«l. Um livra and Udamra tve, and will entirely «redirai* frasa ttvmlra ail trac*« of Mrohla, fiait libellai, or —— otbra lonn of blood dlarara. -rr.raray*«» h «vra lntrodnrad la tbb eowntrv bra met with auch ready raie, bot et Ten >h| onfTereal »atlatartloo whenever nrad ra that ad Da. Paorar*Ruiar. rarara.*«« Tbla remedy bra bran asad In th* hraira raribta rad when rfl rabra SSO Band lor paraphlM of traUraonlala freaa thoa* who rare bran enred bv lta ora. Dnotht, tafl It at ILflOper bottte. lYyttand b* oS rtnofci. For sale by MACK & CO., • * n ** H Front St, San Franolaoo. KIDNEY, Bladder, Urinary and Liver Disease«, Drowy Gravel and Diabetes are cured toy HUNT'S REMEDY THE BEST KIDNEY AND UVEN MEDICINE. HUNT'S REMEDY Cnrra Bright-. Dtaraaa, Retention or Hon-re tention of Drine, Pains In tb* Back, !«<«■ at HUNT'S REMEDY Ittentperenoe, Hervov Dtsaaara, General Debility, Female Wraknera and fvrnrara HUNT'S REMEDY Core* BtHonanera. Headache, Jtnndtee, Bear Stomach, Dyapeppu, ConaUpotton ud Pflra. HUNT'S REMEDY laü. Hundred, hare bra n nred who bare bara (tren op to dis by triand* ud pbjaleUn*. ■OLA RI ALX BBDMim Hercules Gas Enoina (SAB OB 6ABOLI») ** oattoeMachak Our of ra flteapUelty lg Beete the World* *• «Ql Heelf firona a Beeervetr, Ie Carburetor Am gstootsfeilw. Ho Btteriei or Hleotrie Ipuk. »msvMtChopw Orwdeof Oeeellae tbea—gr ether Kngtna. on roa aiuoara «e WIMH A REY, M AMUFjtn tub bn* M Innbi SM,taa FnnInaML —AMD— PORTLAND. ORBSOI. FRAZER AXLE GREASE RestiitinVerMli fit tie SMitel SaMEnqviiril FRANK WOOLS NT Amt, Portland. Or.