Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 17, 1905, Page 5, Image 5

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    THIS HOUSING- OKEGQKIAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, -&Q5.
NEW TRIAL GIVEN
Supreme Court Reverses Ver
dict on Burton, .:
DECISION NOT UNANIMOUS
Counts Relatingto Placc'Where-Senator
Received Money Are Found
Untrue Judge Erred in
Charge to Jury.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 1C. The cause of
Senator J. R. Burton was decided by the
United States Supreme Court today, dis
missing the writ of certiorari to the Cir
cuit Court of. Appeals lor the Eighth Cir
cuit Court, and reversing the verdict of
the District Court for the Eastern Dis
trict of Missouri on .'the ground that the
payments to Burton were made in Wash
ington. The District Court was there
fore reversed and the case remanded for
a new trial.
The opinion was handed down by Jus
tice Peckham. who took up the various
counts and recited the conclusions, as
well as the divisions of the court, as fol
lows: First The question of the construction of
the statute upon which this indictment was
framed is the first to arise. Upon that ques
tion a majority of the court ( Justices Har
lan. Brown. UcKenna. Holes and Day con
curring:) is of the opinion that the facts
, alleged in the Indictment show a case that
is covered by the provisions of the statute,
while the Chief Justice. Justice Brewer.
Justice White and the writer of this' opin
ion dissent from that view, and are sof
the opinion that the statute does sot cover
the case as alleged In the Indictment.
Second Assuming that the statute aplles
to the facts stated in the Indictment, a fur
ther question arises upon the general merits
of the case, whether there was sufficient
evidence of guilt to be submitted to. the
jury, and a majority of the court (the same
Justice!) concurring) is of the opinion that
there was, oris not prepared to say there
was not, and the came minority dissent
from that view and is of the opinion that
there was no evidence whatever upon which
to found a verdict of conviction.
Where Lower Court Erred.
As to the sixth, seventh, eighth and
ninth counts of the Indictment, the court
llnds that the averments as to where the
different checks were received and paid
were not true.
The checks were received In Washing
ton, indorsed by Senator Burton and de
posited In the Rlggs National Bank, In
this city. This constituted a payment In
Washington, and not In St. Louis, where
the checks were afterward paid by the
Commonwealth Trust Company, and the
decision states that "the court in Missouri
had no Jurisdiction to try the offenses
set forth in these counts of the Indict
ment already referred to."
There was no question that such was
the fact, and It was error to submit the
matter to the Jury to find some other
fact not supported by the evidence. Con
tinuing, the decision says:
In the case at bar the proof was not disput
ed. The checks were passed to the credit
of defendant unconditionally and without
any special understanding. The custom of
the bank to forward such checks for col
lectio Is a plain custom to forward for col
lection for Itself. The only liability of de
fendant was on his Indorsement. All his
made a payment at Washington, and as a
result there was a total lack of evldece to
rusialn the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth
counts of the indictment.- The court should
have, therefore, directed a verdict of not
guilty on those counts.
This is not a case of a commencement
of a crime In one district and Its comple--
t on in another, so that under the statute
the court In either district has Jurisdiction.
There was no beginning of the offense in
Missouri. The payment of the money was
in Washington, ad there was no commence
ment of that offense when the officer of the
Rial to Company sent the checks from St.
Louis to defendant. The latter did not there
by begin an offense in Missouri.
Error in Charge to Jury.
The court also found error in the re
fusal of the District Court to charge as
required when the Jury came into court
and announced Its inablllay to agree. The
failure to charge as required was because
the presiding Judge considered the points
were obstructions of law, but It after
wards appeared that the points had a
bearing upon the Jury's consideration of
the case. On this point the decision says:
Balanced as the case was In the minds
of some of the Jurors, doubts existing as
to the defendant's guilt in the mind of at
least one. it was a case where the most
extreme care and caution were necessary
In order that the legal rights of the defend
ant should be preserved. Considering the
attitude of the case as It existed when the
Jury returned into court for further Instruc
tions, we think the defendant was entitled,
as matter of legal right, to the charge asked
for In regard to the previous requests to
charge, which had been granted by the
court under the circumstances stated, and
It was not a matte rof discretion whether
the Jury should, or should not. be charged
as to the character of those requests. A
slight thing may have turned the balance
Against the accused under the circum
stances shown by the record, and he ought
not to have longer remained burdened with
the characterization of his requests to
charge, made by the court, and when he
asked for the assertion by the court of
the materiality and validity and those re
quest which had already been made, the
court ought to have granted the request.
Justice Peckham also took occasion to
comment upon the fact that when the
Jury came in with a disagreement, the
Judge asked how the jury stood, saying
that the practice was one which should
not be encouraged.
No Injustice to Burton.
Justice Harlan dissented from tho
opinion on both points on which the lower
court was reversed. He htdd that the
failure of the court to give the Instruc
tions required did not deprive Mr. Burton
of any substantial justice, and on the
other count contended that in the matter
of the checks the Washington bank was
merely Burton's agent In collecting money
on it. "It seems to me." he added,
"that in reversing the judgment upon the
grounds stated In the opinion the court
has sacrificed substance to mere form.
New Trial at St. Louis.
The trial under the indictment charg
ing Senator Burton with reeching a cash
payment at St. Louis will proceed Immedi
ately at that place. Tho Department of
Justice has not yet considered the ques
tion of the trial place of the indictment
alleging payments in this city. It is" pos
sible .the statute of limitation may oper
ate against it.
The Timber Resources of America.
W. Frank McClure In the December Book
lovers Magazine.
Across the Great Lakes in Canada there
lies one of the world's largest reserves of
timber. In spite of the tariff imposed,
much of this timber is today coming to
the United States. The forests of the Do
minion are beginning to yield abundantly.
More than 1.000.000,000 feet of pine sawlogs
and square timber, during a recent season,
were cut upon territory held under tim
ber license from the crown. Much of
Canada's timber land has not yet even
been explored. In the newly developed
districts of Algoma. which are close to
the Great Lakes. It is estimated that there
are more than 100.000,000 cords of spruce
and pulp wood, while in the districts of
Thunder Bay and Halny River there are
nearly 200.000,000 cords more, A belt at
least 3000 miles long is believed to exist
in Canada between Alaska and the At
lantic. It has been estimated that at the pres
ent rate of cutting, the greatest timber re
sources of the United States those of the
Pacific Coast States will be exhausted in
leas than- half a century. The annual cut
of shingles and lumber In these regions
is some 4.500,000.000 feet. The standing
timber of Washington. Oregon and North
ern California at present Is twice that of
the original timber lands of tne ortnern
woods. Washington produces about as
many feet of shingles and other lumber
as Oregdn and California together. This
state Is noted for its shingles, mere ocing
mor than 1000 shingle mills within its
borders. At -Tacoma are located the larg
est sawmills In the United States.
KOEAL SUEGEEY.
Recent Case In Indianapolis Attracts
Wide Attention.
Boston Transcript.
When surgery can be depended upon In
any considerable number of instances to
correct not merely nnysicai iroumes. oui
mental defects and moral abnormalities
as well, the achievement may be regarded
as the coronation of the many tnumpns
It has won during the last half century.
As science develops this may not be too
much to hope for, especially as It seems
to have been already accomplished In the
capital city of Indiana. The story Is told
of Jesse Beard, a lad of 12 years of age.
who manifested a .violent temper and
trtmlnal propensities. He was disobedient
to his parents and detested the discipline
and Instruction of "the schools. He ran
away from home, and when upbraided
threatened to kill his mother and sister.
He showed tendencies somewhat similar
to those that gave Jesse Pomeroy his
unique notoriety: but. fortunately, sci
ence took him in hand before those tend
encies had expressed themselves to the
same deplorable extent.
Finally he was brought by his parents
before the Juvenile Court as an Incorri
gible. The chief probation officer was a
woman and very likely a mother. At any
rate, she took an Interest In what seemed
a desperate and hopeless case, and had
the boy taken before an expert for ex
amination. Investigation disclosed the
fact that wheri 3 years old he had
fallen into o. trench, his head striking
some timbers, after which he was quite
ill. and was threatened with brain fever.
Following this lead, the surgeous located
the old injury, and trephined -the skull at
that point, disclosing a fracture and brain
depression, with chronic Inflammation of
the brain covering. The pressure was re
moved and the brain restored to Its nor
mal condition, since which time the sub
ject has shown an entirely different dispo
sition. He has become kind and obedient
and anxious to make up for the oppor
tunities lie had previously thrown away.
A couple of years ago Dr. Lorenz cre
ated an agreeable sensation in this coun
try by his skill in straightening out de
formed limbs among children: but how
much greater would be the social benefit
if deformed brains could be set right. We
do not look for the time when science
can make a wise man out of a congenital
Idiot, but there may be many cases in
which accident has had a share for which
science opens up a way of salvation. In
fact, the doctor who operated upon the
Indianapolis boy claims' that deformity of
the skull should be corrected by artificial
means s'oon after the child is born. "The
skull can be shaped with safety any time
within ten days after birth."
There may be a belated and uninten
tional recognition here of the claims upon
which phrenology Is based. There are
cases of crime in which it misht be more
just and more humane to turn the offend
er over to the expert sifrgeon than to tho
executioner. The last hanging la Con
necticut, we believe, was of a boy 18
years old, who had committed a mur
dcr for no reason that he could give or
any one else "Imagine, let along the line
of his ancestry, for two generations at
least, epilepsy and habitual drunkenness
were the distinguishing characteristics,
and he had manifested merely hereditary
traits: but the law had made no provision
for these and he u-ns hsnirM nil tho
f-Aanie: 'Probably the Indianapolis boy
would sooner or Inter have come to a
similar end had he missed the good for
tune to attract the attention of those
with more advanced ideas and livelier
sympathies than the common. The sug
gestion opens up a great Held for science.
pnnantnropy and humanity.
The Moon's Craters.
Waldcmar B. Kaempffert in DectVnber
Booklovers.
If there be craters on the moon that
are anything: but extinct they must ex
pel something. Judgins' by the dis
charges of our earthly volcanoes, that
something must be water and carbonic
acid gas. Water cannot possibly exist
as a liquid; for the temperature of the
moon's surface during the long lunar
nignt is probably nov far from 460 de
grees below the zero mark of a Fan
renneic inermometcr. ice ana snow
are the forms, then, which lunar water
must assume. Is there any evidence of
it? Hundreds of "crateriets" are lined
with a silver coatins that gleams daz
zllngly when the sun shines full upon
them. Capping: the loftier peaks tho
same silver glow may be seen. On the
slopes of the greater mountain chains,
on the ramparts of huge craters the
silvery sheen casts its halo, fading
away strangely as the sun rises higher
and higher, and reappearing at sunset
Just before the long, cold lunar night
sets in. From many of the craters,
notably from Tycho. long white rays
spread out for hundreds of miles enlg
mas in the old moon of a generation
ago, but In the new moon of today deep
crevices illuminated only when the
sun is high in. tho lunar heavens. What
Is this silvery substance that caps the
Apennines of the moon, gleams on tlve
slopes and radiates from the craters?
According to the new school It Is slm
ply ice and snow, collecting at the
poies, on summits, ana in the very
places where It ought to collect
Moreover. It partly explains the curious
changes that occur at different times
of the lunar day In the size of the
crater Linne. the "very small, round,
brilliant spot," previously mentioned;
It explains the illumination of deep.
snow-bottomed pits and abysses that
are Inky black at sunrise and sunset,
and brilliantly white when the sun
shines directly Into them; and It ex
plains the fading away and reappear
ance of white stains at different per
lods In the lunar day. The molting and
and falling of snow, tne disappearance
and reappearance of hoar frost, alone
can account for there changes. In old
descriptions they arc said to be due to
variations in illumination; in the phil
osophy of the new moon they are at
trlbutcd with benutlful simplicity to
the alternate evaporation and freezing
of water expelled from craters In erup
tion.
Courtship and Its Cost.
Atchison Globe.
A young man sued a girl in another town
recently for breach of promise, estlmat
lng In the bill for damages that his time
spent In courting her for three months
was worth J500. Statistics will show that
the young man exaggerates his value.
Peniaps his employer doesn't give him
JoO a month, and If he worked all day and
all night he couldn't cam $75. If he were
not In the girl's parlor he would be on
the streets loafing, and getting Into vic
ious company. The time spent in court-
lag was undoubtely wasted but it was
wasted without any more lasting effects
than a scratch on the young man's con-
celt- ills neart may have been touched,
but It Is doubtful If his pocketbook was.
The New Jersey courts have taken n th.
matter of courtships and find that the or-
umary courts ii ui costs as little as $20.
The average cost Is only 122. and th
rage duration Is IS months. Tho young
woman could make more by earning her
own theater and chocolate money Instead
of loafing with the young man. If there
are any damages due anybody, they are
due the girl's iather. who is out coal, gas
and the attention of his daughter during
LOGS UP A NOTCH
Yellow Fir Goes Up to $7.25
a Thousand.
LOGGERS PREDICT SCARCITY
Camps Will Not Open Until February
1, and Mills Are Rapidly Saw
ing Up the Available
Supply.
The price of Jio. J. yellow fir logs
has gone up a notch and all grades
below that quality have received a cor
responding Increase. As yet Che rise
Is not KreaU From a shifting price of
$6.50 to $7 a tuousand'it has now gone
up to 57.25 and loggers believe that
it will soon be $7.50 and remain there
for six months.
Logs are becoming scarce and there
is reason for the rise in price. There
are said to be no camps logging at
the present time and the rafts now in
the water are scarce. Moreover, they
are becoming scarcer evrey day and
the owners are holding off for a good
figure before selling. The camps will
not open again until the first of Feb
ruary and will not be In 'lull swing
until April or May. iieanwnile the
mills are eating up the available sup
ply day and night.
Last Fall the mills could get logs
at their own figure and plenty of them
at that. But tne conditions have 'sjpev
changed. The loggers shut down their
camps two and, in some cases, three
months ago. Since that time the avail
able rafts have become gradually
scarcer, and though no famine Is
threatened, the supply Is limited and
has no immediate prospect of being
materially Increased.
. The first indication that the mills
were bidding for rafts came recently
when the Deep River Logging Com
pany and the Yeon, Pelton Company
both sold rafts at $7.25 a thousand.
a rise of 25 cents above the highest
price which has been raid since last
Spring. Almost simultaneously with
this purchase the Portland Retail Lum
ber Company, which practically con
trols the local lumber market, raised
Its price of common rough lumber from
$7.50 to $8 a thousand. The market
had shown itself to be in a more
wholesome condition than at any tlma
since last Summer.
The changes in price of both logs
and lumber show that the logger
have received what will amount to
half the Increase. They believe they
will receive ICall. however, before many
weeks. The officers of the Portland
Lumber Company have expressed tne
opinion that" No. 1 yellow fir logs
would soon be selling for $7.50 a thou
sand and would sell for that as late
as June. The loggers nre not so san
guine as that, but they expect the
added Increase until May.
Neither loggers or lumbermen ex
pect that prices will receive any ma
terial Increase until the war In the
Orient ends. They expect, however,
that after the cessation of hostilities,
there will be zreat sections of coun
try opened and a big demand for lum
ber will follow. The war now on has
materially affected the shipments of
lumber from this port apd Is In .great
pari responsible for the present reign
ing low prices.
OPPOSE FOREST POLICE.
Tillamook and Clatsop Representa
tives Against Fire Protection.
Tlmbermen who introduced a bill In
the Legislature providing for a more
efficient policing of the Oregon forests
during the Sumer months to prevent
fires have met with unexpected opposi
tion on the part of representatives
from Tillamook and Clatsop counties.
They have learned that these legisla
tors have been taking the attitude
that the bill is a very good sort of
thing, but that there is no necessity of
extending It to their counties, as they
have heavy dews and wet sea fogs
which come upon the land overnight
and put out the fires. So. ask they,
why should their constituents be put to
the trouble of securing a license every
time they wish to set a fire and why
should the counties be bothered with
Are rangers?
The tlmbermen agree with the rea
soning, but doubt the premises upon
which it is based. They say that TlHa
mok and Clatsop counties are as subject
to forest fires as any portion of the
state and give a few facts to bear out
their statement.
In Tillamook County some of the
largest and deadest burns in the state
exist, they say. and one In particular
extends acrdss the big divide between
the Wilson ad Trask rivers, and an
other, even larger, extends away to the
northward.
Aside from these there are several
dead and barren burns which were
swept by fire In the last ten years.
Four owners state that they have lo3t
16,000 acres, some of the best timber in
the counties. The owners are: The
Whitney, the Hammond, the Duboisc
and the Streeter companies.
Last year two companies, the Du
bolse and the Rlten and Wentworth
companies, lost 25 40-acrc tracts In one
township and half a-sectlon in another
township in Tillamook County, and a
whole section In Clatsop County. These
two companies spent $5,000 fighting
fires during the Summer.
These facts are to be brought before
the House to show that the timber in
terests of Tillamook and Clatsop coun
ties need as much protection as any
where. Of the timber In the state, esti
mated to be worth at the present time
$10,000,000, about $2,000,000 worth is In
the two counties which are supposed
to be tree from nre.
BATTLE IN PHILIPPINES.
Constabulary fa Samar Have Bloody
Encounter With Natives.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 15. Ueutenant
General Chaffee, chief of staff, today re
ceived a cablegram from General Ccrbln,
commanding the Philippine division at
Manila, saying that he has received the
following dispatch from Brigadier-General
Carter, commanding the Department
of the VIsayas, dated Tacloban, Janu
ary 1:
"Lieutenant Avery, one of the Philip
pine scouts, and two native employes
were wounded in action at Dolores River
January 14. Private Austin. Hospital
Corps, was wounded, and nine Constabu
lary were killed in action near Maelog.
Samar. January 8. Lieutenant Avery and
Private Austin arrived here today."
The officer referred to In the above dis
patch Is First Lieutenant Morton L.
Avery, of the Philippine Scouts.
Sent Back to Asylum.
KALAMA. WASH., Jan. 16. Spe
cial.) Marlon Colvln was adjudged In
sane and committed to the asylum this
morning. He was sent up from this
county about six years ago to the
asylum but was released as cured
after a short time-
'
CHIFFONIER, with golden oak,
white maple and mahogany finish.
swell top drawers, hat box, oval
French mirrors; speeinl... S12.B0
e GOLDEN OAK KOCKER, full spring
seat, upholstered seat and back
In best leather; special 91X75
573
IRON RED, enameled In lavender,
pink and gold; special $10.75
BAKER LOSES SUIT
Liability of Defaulting Sheriff s
Bondsmen. Involved.
APPEAL TO SUPREME COURT
Decision of Lower Court on Appeal
of Lincoln C. Burton Against
Clara Anthony and Oth
ers Is Upheld.
SALEM. Or.. Jan. 16. (SpeclaL) The
Supreme Court handed down two deci
sions today, in one of these Baker Coun
ty loses its case on appeal involving the
liability of the bondsmen of defaulting
Sheriff Huntington. The decisions are as
follows:
Daker County vs. Huntington.
Biker County, respondent, vs. A. II. Hunt
ington and Harry A. Duffy, defendants, and
A. Brown. James Fleetwood. J. V. Insen
bofer, J. T. Fyfer. D. Crtwrtght. appellants,
from Baker County. Robert nakln. Judge.
Reversed and remanded. Opinion by Chief
Justice Wolrerton.
This was a suit on an instrument alleged to
be the additional official bond of Huntington
as tax collector of Baker County. Duffy and
the appellant were sureties. The bond did
not expressly state that it t an additional
bond to secure faithful performance of duty
as tax collector. The amount fpeclfled was
$10,000. while the total amount' for which the
several sureties became obligated was only
$70OJ. Brown and Fleetwood did not justify.
This suit having been brought to recover an
account of Huntington's defalcation, the sur
eties demurred to the complaint on the ground
that it did not state a cause of action, since
It does nut appear from the instrument that
It was an additional bond siven by the Sheriff
as tax collector.
The demurrer was overruled and the case
tried, resulting In a Judgmtnt for the county.
An appeal was taken. The supreme Court 1 oorne aown oy ibis new eipcnracc 01 mc
holds that the complaint states a cause ot All the pain and misery which young
action, for It may be shown by proof that ' girls commonly experience at such a time
this -was the additional bond provided- for by I may, in almost every instance, be entirely
law. At the trial .the defendants undertook I prevented or cured by the use of Doctor
to show that they did not authorize Hunting- ! Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It estab
ten to deliver this Instrument to the County ! lishes regularity. It tones np the general
Court, but the trial court rejected the testi- ! health, and cures headache, backache,
stony. ' nervousness and other consequences of
The Supreme Court holds that this waa er- womanly weakness or disease,
rcr. for the defects In the bond mentioned ( The anxious mother of'lhe family often
above were aufflclent to put the County Court , times carries the whole burden of responsi
on inquiry and overcome the presumption that 1 bility so far as the home medication of
when the bond was given to Huntington be i common ailments of the girls or boys are
waa given authority to delirer it to the I concerned. The cost of tne doctor's visits
County Court, bince tne sureties are not
estopped from showing that the authority was
sot given, the evidence offered should have
been admitted. The cae Is reversed and
remanded to the lower court for such further
proceedings as may be proper.
.Burton v Anthony, et al.
Lincoln C Burton, appellant, vs. Clara An
thony. Wsjter Anthony and H. H. Burton,
guardian of Walter Anthony, respondents,
from Yamhill County. R. P. Boise. Judge,
affirmed. Opinion by Justice Moore.
Held, that where a minor and his mother
borrowed money with which to redeem the
former's property from sale on foreclosure of
mortgage, the lender cannot secure s, decre
declaring a. Hen upon the land in his favor,
but otherwise, if an agreement had been en
tered Into to the effect that the lender should
be substituted in the place of the former cred
itor. Superior Judge Is Impeached.
SACRAMENTO, Cat, Jan. 16. Articles
of impeachment against Superior Judge
E. S. Torrance, of San Diego, were pre
sented In the Assembly today by Mc
Cartey, of Los Angeles at the request
of the Los Angeles Bar Association
Judge Torrance Is accused of having gone
Third Week of Our Annual
Discount Tag Sale
During- which you will find the discount tags of 10, 15, 20, 25 and 33 Per Cent"
attached to odds and ends throughout our store. You will find more Furniture
Bargains in this store this week than ever before in any furniture house in .the
city. Don't overlook our Carpet and Curtain Department.
The JEWEL trade
re tV is a gwroifcee
cf absolute Stow
perfectia.
No more solid
3 million
used
We Sell These Ranges at $1.00 a Week
Give You a Free Trial of Thirty Days.
Ranges Delivered and Set Up in Your Home the Same Day Ordered.
POWERS
"The Store That Saves You Money" Cor. First and
to the horns of one of the parties to a
divorce suit and there, questioned wit
nesses", to the . prejudice of the adverse
litigant.
FRUITGROWERS AT BOISE.
Southwest Association Called to Order
by President Smith.
BOISE. Idaho. Jan. 16. (Special.)
The Northwest Fruitgrowers" Associa
tion met here today for a three days
session, with representatives present
from Washington, Oregon. Utah and
g aTA? JS&i" i?d.i2S
: display of apples and pears had been
prepared by local growers and It has
interested the visitors very much.
The meeting was called to order by
President E. L. Smith, of Hood River,
whp made a brief address. The com
mittee on legislation made a report. Mr.
Castorn of Hood River, said Oregon was
badly In need of legislation, among
others a law prohibiting the selling of
fruit under the names of other sections
than those where It was raised.
Governor Gooding could not attend
the session. His address of welcome
was read at the afternoon session by
Secretary Slnsel. of the association.
Through President Smith a handsome
gavel was presented the association by
the secretary of the Oregon Historical
Society. It was made from wood of a
Royal Anne cherry tree taken to Ore
gon In 1S47 by Henderson Luelllng.
from Iowa, and from an apple tree
grown from seed plantgd at Vancouver
by James Bruce, gardener for Dr. Mc
Laughlin. Papers were read by A. McPherson,
Idaho State Horticultural Inspector,
and Professor Aldrich. of the State
University at Moscow.
Tonight the visitors met with the
The first lesson that the youce girl ha
of womanhood is usually a patnrol one.
cu- tn Vnnig what heaaaehe means.
and backache, and sometimes is sadly
very often much too great. At such
, times the mother is invited to write to Dr.
5L V. Pierce, of BnSalo. N. Y.. for medical
advice, which is given free. Correspond
ence is held strictly confidential
Backed np by over a third of a centnry
of remarkable and uniform cures, a record
sach as no other remedy for the diseases
and -weaknesses peculiar to women ever
attained, the proprietors and makers of Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription now feel
fnlly warranted in offering to pay $500 in
legal money of the United States for any
case of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Pro
lapsus, or Falling of Womb, which they
cannot cure. All the World's Dispensary,
Medical Association, Proprietors, of Buf
falo. N. Y., ask is a fair and reasonable
trial of their means of cure.
Toar wonderful aaedidne, 'Favorite Prescrip
tion." bas helped me greatly In time of scficx
ing." writes Mrs. Minla WrtRBt, of Edwards,
lad. "Last winter I was unable to do ny wort,
was to be.coafined In February, and a lady In
Blisois wrote and told tne about your medione.
I csed three bottles of FaTorite Prescription,
asd wQl say X had the easiest and quietest con
finement I ever kad. Had three children be
Ibre.aad woold safer from twenty- ar to thirty
six hours before birth, but this time oaly two
feoors. Kave a fiss baby girl and ske ts the
soft health t one of all. I ara still aaisg the
-irarite Prcscriptioa ' a a loule."
mREESfSnfERAMTlHTHEM
and durable Stoves and Ranges ever
most convenient to operate, the most economical to use.
The handsomest designs and the most artistic stove ornamentation
that artist ever created. Many styles for both heating and -cooking.
MORE THAN
Jewel Stoves and Ranges
in American homes
Idaho association. Among those present
is Professor Carlisle, of Spokane, who
will read a paper tomorrow evening on
by-products.
Lined Up by Robbers.
SEATTLE. Jun. 15. Eleven men and
a woman were lined up against the
wall of a saloon two blocks from the
police station tonight by twro masked
men. The robbers entered the saloon,
by a side door, forced the occupants of
the place to line up and after firing
one"shot to terrorise them, the thugs
robbed the cash register of $30 and
made their escape.
Bay City Banks to Merge.
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 16. It 13 an
nounced by I. W. Hellman, Jr.. that tho
Wells, Fargo & Co. bank and the. Ne
vada National Bank, of San Francisco,
will merge their capital and interests
under the corporate name of the Wells.
WSBHm
PLASTERS
Are a universal remedy fer Pains in the Back (so frequent
in the case of vomea). They give instantaneous relief.
Wherever there is a pain 'apply a Plaster.
DIRECTIONS TOR USE
Forpafna in the region of
the Klensys, r I or a Vosdc
Back, th p litter shoald be
appllsd as ahvnm above.
Wesrevtr thee fa pain
apply AHceck's Master.
For Rheumatism or Pains
la Shoulders, Elksws or
elsewhere, or for Sprain),
Stlf fnftBS.etc., and for
Achlag Pest, cnt plaster
slzeand skape req aired and
apply to pstt asected as
shown afeove.
Rheumatism9 Colds, Coughs
Weak Chest, Weak Back
Lumbago, Sciatica, &c, ice,
enuine porous plaster and have never been equalled as pern curers.
'urthennare. thev am absalutolv ri 05 tko-w nnmMi Klio
donna, opium or any poison whatever.
Insist Ufoa
This DINING CHAIR
of solid oak, with
cane seat; - s.
special' ..Sl.oe
imous tor ctkx 40
years. Known and
told wsarerer stSTflB
built.
Tfee
CHIXA CABINETS In
golden and weath- e
ered oak at lowest
prices.
Taylor
Fargo-Nevada National Bank with a
capital of $6,000,000 and a surplus 6
$3,500,000. Mr. Hellman says the, com
bined assets o'f the two banks after
consolidation will approximate $30,
000,000. The purpose is to conduct all
the business In one building. The cler
ical forces of both Institutions will be
provided for.
Light Docket at Kalarna.
KALAMA. Wash.. Jan. 16. (Spe
cial.) Judge McCreedy. the new Su
perior Court Judge, will hold his first
session of court, in Cowlitz County
Tuesday. Tho Judge will find the
County Jail empty and only one crim
inal case on the docket.
To cure scrofula, salt rheum, dyspepsia,
catarrh and rheumatism, take Hood s Sar
sa pari 11a.
Be sure a bottle of PIso's Cure is kept on
hand for sudden colds.
For Sere Threat, Cessks,
Bronchitis, for Weak
Lnsgs and for painfal and
sensitive parts of the a Wo
rn ea, apply as indicated.
Havlas; AUcock'a.
EST. 1847. jj
W