THE MOKXXN'G OREGO'IA3T, FEXDAT, JTJ3TE 30, 190S. RATE III NOW ON Michigan Central Notifies the ' Interstate Commission. PRICES CUT TO THE EAST Tickets Will Be Sold From Chicago for $16 First-Class and $15 Second-Class by Tills Railroad. CHICAGO, June 23. The threatened -war in passenger rates to the East -was. pre cipitated today by the Michigan Central, which filed notice with the Interstate Commerce Commission that on July 1 it will selL tickets between Chicago and Eastern points at the differential rate awarded it by the board of arbitrators. The differential rates will apply over the New York Central, as well as over other connections east of Buffalo. It is under stood the Grand Trunk will meet the cut rates of the Michigan Central by putting in rates of $16 first-class and 515 second class, from Chicago to New Tork, on July 1. As the matter now stands, the rates over the Michigan Central to New York will be $18 and 517. and 530 over the Grand Trunk, Erie and Wabash. The rates of the three latter roads will not apply, how ever, over the New York Central, that road having refused to accept any differ ential business except from the Michigan Central. PALL OF SMOKE OVER CITY Rattle of Volleys Is Heard Every Few Minutes. ST. PETERSBURG. June 22. (40 P, M.) Shortly after noon an untimed dis patch was received here reporting that complete anarchy reigns at Odessa, The inhabitants aro panic-stricken and are huddled togethor in the bouses, fearing the mob and torch. The streets were filled with frenzied workmen fighting the troops. The warehouses, quays and some of the shipping in the harbor wore ia flames. The correspondent of the Associated Press who forwarded this dispatch had to make his way to the telegraph office through denne smoke which oovored the city like a pall. He hoard volleys every few minutes. Ia the darkness tho mob was beginning the work of pillage and plunder. The correspondent added that blue jackets' with machine guns had been landed from the battleship Knlaz Potem klne in the hands of the mutineers and then fought with the strikers behind bar ricades against the troops. Hundreds were killed and the ships were crowded with wounded. There were rumors', the correspondent also said, that mme of the soldiers had joined the mutinous soldiers in fighting against the troops, but he was unable to confirm this report. There are about 40.000 troops of all arms at Odessa, nut 'there are no forti fications In which they could stand a siege If the rioters and mutineer got the upper hand. y The -Russlans of Odessa comprise PcarcoSJ" one-third- of the 600.000 Inhabi tants of the city, about 1S8.0W of the residents being Jews and the remainder Greeks, Armenians. Turks and people of various European nationalities. In gen eral the members of the lower clashes are persons of the most desperate char acter. Insiders pold heavily on the Bourse today, but only during the latter part of the session, when rumors that some thing was wrong got abroad aad prices fell sharply. Troops to Be Sent to Far East. "WASHINGTON, June C9.-The State De partment .has received a cablegram from Mr. Meyer, the American Ambassador to St. Petersburg, saying that extensive mo bilization has been ordered ht tho dis tricts of Kioff. St. Petersburg. "Warsaw and Moscow, because of the necessity of immediately increasing the forces in the Far East. It Is expected that under these orders betweon 100,000 and 209,000 men will he called Into service. Mayors Demand a Constitution. 5T. fbteksblkij, June 28. The ac tion of the Mayors assembled at Moscow In discarding ihe Zemstvolsts' programme and pronouncing boldly tor a constitu tion, is another poser for the govern ment. "With war and rebellion at Odessa, the whole country in a ferment and the elected Mayors of the large cities de mandlng a constitution, the government appears to bo almost driven into its last entrenchments. Post Is Given Grlpcnburg. ST. PETERSBURG. Juae 2. Leutcn ant-General Gripenburg. wm was re turned from Manchuria for disobeying th orders of General ivurepaiKta. has been appointed Inspector-Genera! of Infantry. Railroad Men on Strike. REVAJU Russia. June 29 Railroad em ployes here to the number of 468 have struck. A squadron ef Cossacks has been dispatched to Capsal to suppress rioting. Details are lacking as all the telephone communication with the pte.ee is sev ered. NOTED SICK PEOPLE. Secretary" Hay Is Gaining. NEWBURY. N. H.. June 2?.-Secre-tary Jen Hay. although stUl confined to bis bed. continues to gain steadHy. Last night he slept well, and today ap peared much refreshed and considerably stronger. Ex-Speaker Henderson Gaining. DUBCQUE. Ia.. Jwae David B. Heftdecwoit. ex-Soeaker of the National Hawse of Representatives, vrfee suffered a stroke of paralysis, was reported this nterMiog to be resting easily aad gatalag strongth. Norwegian Officer Is Deported. STOCKHOLM, June 2. A Norwegian officer whose movements excited suspi cion vms arrested en the parade grounds at Trosa yenteroay. according to a Karl stad newspaper. The Norwegian, who was wearing plain clothes, was escorted to the frontier by a Swedish officer. It is reported that the suspect was attached to the Norwegian general staff. Crisis Believed to Be Passed. BERLIN. June 29. Ambassador B4 fcourd. who was received by Chancellor von Buelew today, made' a further communication from the French gov ernment, which is regarded by the For eign Office as another. step towards an adjustment of the differences betweea the two governments., The official opinion continues that France will agree in principle to a con ference on the Moroccan difficulties and that secondary questions will ulti mately be settle satisfactorily. The newspapers generally refer to. the crisis as being passed and comment in a mod eraHe tone on the French contentions. THE BISHOP'S WJSE RATS Respectfully Submitted to John Burroughs. Henry-W. TV&rrea In ZIos's Herald. In 1EJ4-7 I lived in the parsonage of St. -J John's Church, in iieaiora avenue, urooit lyh. -Suddenly the lower story and cellar were Invaded by a small army of rats. After several preliminary skirmishes, in which they suffered somewhat in killed and wounded, they took possession of the brick incasement of the furnace as a fort, through a passage made by one brick In the obscure back part being left out for circulation of air. They provisioned the fort with a peck of sweet potatoes, ready to stand siege or make depredatory excur sions through the sally port. Discovering the situation, I slipped a brick Into the aperture. Igleefully said. "In the morning I will came down and make a Sedan for the whole army.' They appreciated the situation as well as I, and communicated it to their fellow- Trtr RomI. Coxnmlaiioner Peter Rotst from Italy ha received many compliment far hit quick werk in eecuiiSK an, exhibit at the Pair after roeotfcs bad sen by with little dose. Two months' time and a liberal use ef the telegraph and cable set together the works of art he has displayed la the Foreign BulJdlnR. marauders outside. The collar floor was perfectly comented, except a little hole whore the water pipe came up in a corner 12 feet diagonally . away. Between those Inside and outside they agreed upon tho following i5an. Each party of sappers and miners should excavate a tunnel un der the cement, and meet half way from the furnace inciosure and tho water-pipe hole. This they did, and every last rat escaped, the dirt . being about equally thrown out at each end. The engineers of tht- Mont Oals tunnot did not make the French and Italian ap proaches meet exactly in the center. A traveler can feel the shunt of the car as he rides through. But these engineers communicated their thought, made their plan, did the work, and made no such blunder. Did they think? STIR UP HAWAIIAN CHINESE Mass Meeting Called to Indorse Boy cott on America. HONOLULU. June 28. A Chinese mas meoting has been called for Saturday night to Indorse the efforts being made in China to effect a boycott of American goods, on account of the operations ef the exclusion laws. Launch Hit by Steamer Vashon. TACOMA, June 29. The lives of a score of people were ondangerod at Quartermas ter Harbor this afternoon, when a collis ion occurred between the steaner Yasboa and -the gasoline launch Anna. Several of the occupants of the launch were precipitated Into the water, but all were promptly rescued. Mrs, Swan P. Swanson, of South Seventh and M street, had her wrist cut. while Andrew Ander son's arm was slightly hurt by being caught between his craft and a launch. Death nnd Injuries at Fire. NEW YORK. June 3. One life has been lost and two ft re jh en received serious hurts in a South Brooklyn are. The prop erty loss was only tt9. William Gar dam was suffocated while trying to reach the street to obtain aid for his wife and a servant girl. The nreatea wore en a hose cart, which they drove into an elevated railroad pillar to escape running down three womeH directly In Its path. To Consider Chinese Boycott. SELAXGOR. Malay Peninsula. June PS. The Chinese Chamber of Com merce will meet July 2 to consider the auostlen ef joining in the boycott of American merchandise until the Chi nese exclusion act is repealed. The feeling here is high, and it Is cens4d ored probable that the local Chinese will join in the movement. Von Kostcr Made Grand Admiral. KIEL. Jnae 29. Emperor WHHam has promoted Admiral von Roster to be Grand Admiral of the German fleet. Von K aster has long held high commands and has the complete confidence of the xevcrnmeat as an exceptional ad mints tra or. He has now barely recovered from an Injury to his leg, which was crushed in a gun accident on the flagship. Farewell Dinner to Sir Caspar. 'LONDON. June 3. Sir Caspar Pardon Clarke, director ef the Metropolitan Mu seum of Art at New lerk. was given a j farewell banquet at the Criterion Res- j taurant last night. He was presented with a seuvenir In the form ef a massive J stiver bowl a an ebony plinth. Clark. Is Elected Chairman. NEW TORK. June 29. The execu-1 tive eemiBtttee of tfce Saa Pedre. Los : Anpeies & bait laice Itafiroad. com posed ef Senator "W. A. Clark. E. H. Harrimaa. K. C Kerens and "W. D. Cor nish, met here today and elected "Wil liam A. Clark cAairtaaa. Xo Power to Alter Rates. BOSTON. June 2. The executive oemmtttee of the supreme council of the Royal Arcaaura today announced that It had no power to alter the new sehedole of rates. The iaerease was an absolute and Immediate necessity, they say. Rear-Admiral Lewis J. Allen. NEW YORK. June S. Rear Admiral Lewis J. AXen. U. S. N retired, died to day of paralysis, aged 6S years. FHRSTHhTARMY mnr join bholt iGesUautd Froa Fint PX-) fought on the side of the rioters against the troops. A state of siege has been declared In the city. The conflagration is sweeping along the harbor front, the sailors and strikers refusing to per mit attempts to extinguish tho names. Three uninsured ships of the Pan-Russian Company have been destroyed. The offices of the port administra tion, the stores of the Pan-Russian and Russian Companies and many private establishments and a great number of wood yards have been burned, and the fire Is now consuming long lines of railroad cars, containing cargoes un loaded from foreign ships. Many ships succeeded in leaving the harbor. The surviving officers of the battle ship Knlaz Potemklne number 11 in stead of eight. A number of them were sent ashore today by tho muti neers. They confirm the details of the mutiny cabled to the Associated Press. The body of Omiltchuk today was again taken on board the Knlaz Potem klne. from which a delegation of the crew visited the Commander of the Odessa military district and asked him to accord a military funeral to the dead sailor. The newspapers have suspended pub lication, and all regular business is at standstill. BLOODSHED BRINGS QUIET Lodz Is Dominated by Troops , nnd Factories Will Open. LODZ. June 29. Lodz today Is quieter than It has been for months past. The continuance of martial law makes life and property safer than since the strikes began in January and insures excellent prospects for the resumption of work In practically every factory In the city., Today is a holiday. The people are promenading the streets and attending church as usual on such occasions and thousands of worklngmen and their families aro pickntcking In the near-by woods. Millowners are looking forward to "at least several weeks of steady work, giv ing them a chance to flit orders which have piled up, owing to the .strikes. Martial law has permitted the authorities to announce such measures as will make the resumption of disorders practically impossible. The streets are deserted aftor 9 o'clock at night, and the theaters, concert halls and wineshops are closed. Otherwise the life of the city Is proceeding normally. and with the exception of numerous pa trols of Cossacks and Infantrymen in the streets and military detachments sta t toned at the biggest factories there Is no sigh of the terrorizing days of the past week. Those days were indeed fearful, marked as they were by the killing of many In nocent persons and great brutality on the- part of the troops. The estimates of 39 4W people kHIed and 1M9 wounded would appear to be justified, though it 1 lmnosslble to give anything like tho accurate figures. It is believed tnat even without martial law the people would re main owlet, as they have had severe treatment at the hands of the troops, As a result of the strike since January the workmen have gained an increase In wages averaging per cem ami now thev annarenllv have decided to work quietly for the present. MOB TRIES TO BURN ODESSA Ton Thonsand Incendiaries Bear Torches Soaked in Petroleum, SPECIAL CABLE. ST. PETERSBURG. June 3. The au thorities are enforcing a strict Internal censorship and practically no news ef the happenings in Odessa Is obtainable. Even official communications from the foreign Consuls there have been refused transmission over the telegraph wires. It is reported, and generally believed, that the sailors at all of the Russian ports on the Baltic Sea have revolted and are now In arms against the government. Serious disturbances are said to have been besua at Krenstadt. where It Is rumored the rioters burned the govern ment storehouses and alcohol depots and have erected barricades. Only the most strenuous effort on the part of the troops prevented the burn ing of every building In the City of Odessa. A mob of W.0CO desperate Incendiaries, bearing torches soaked in petroleum, time and again tried to set fire to buildings In the resldont section of the city. Neither public nor priate structures were safe, and It was only by the free use of their machine guns that the authorities man aged to drive the Infuriated rioters to ward the waterfront. Sailors of the Potemklne. who came ashore to join in the fight, have repeated- ly asked for the exact situation of the Cossack barracks en the landward side ef the city, and it is expected that an attempt will be made to destroy it with shells from the battleship. SQUADRON" SLOW IX STARTING Two Days' Delay or Battleships at Scbastopol. ST. PETERSBURG. June 3 (3:5 A. M.) A dispatch which arrived here early this morning from Sebastopol theBaby If, you want a good Food for your baby, a food that is en dorsed by physicians, a food that contains a large amount of digestible constituents, a food that feeds, a food that will nourish, sustain and pro mote the growth of your baby, try MeHin's Food. We will send a sam ple for you to try. XeCla's TeeA is the 6 V LY Wants Feed, which received the Griani rrie, the UAut award af tk LaaWUaa For caexeitUa. ScLaois. 19C Bath er tfcia a aM aaeaaL KEU.OTS FOOD CO., BOSTON, 3CASS. announced that a squadron of battle ships, the Trl Sviatltella. Snope and Rostlslaw, with a cruiser and several torpedo boats, only started for Odessa at 5 o'clock last even ins;. This explains the non-appearance of the squadron at Odessa, but It Is diffi cult to conjecture the reasons for delaying- departure two days at such a critical juncture. STATE OF WAR IS DECLARED Czar Invests Military Commander at Odessa With Special Authority. ST. PETERSBURG. June 23. The Em peror has issued the following ukase ad dressed to the ruling Senate: 'In order to guarantee public safety and to terminate the disorders at Odessa and neighboring localities we have found it necessary to declare a state of war la Odessa and vicinity and to Invest the commander of the troops In the military district of Odessa with the rights of mil- j Itary authority and special rights of civil J suiiuuuuBuau lur uie acicnse ul orucr and public tranquillity."- TRANSPORT SEIZED BY 3IEN Officers Turned Over to Crew of Knlaz Potemklne. ODESSA. June 29. The crew of a government transport which arrived here today from Nlckolleffa mutinied. seized their officers and joined the crew of the battleship Knlaz Potemklne, to whom they turned over the captain and other officers of the transport. It is understood that foreign Consuls have applied to their respective gov ernments to send warships to Odessa. MANY ESTATES ARE ABANDONED Agrarian Riots Extend Over Govern ment of Kherson. ST. PETERSBURG, June 29. Agrarian riots now extend over almost the entire government of Kherson. Many estates have been abandoned, their owners flee ing to Ellzabethgrad. There is a similar state of things at Ekaterinoslav, where Incendiarism Is rife. FIRE ON OFFICERS' QUARTERS Mutinous Sailors on the Baltic In Fight With Soldiers. L1BAU, Russia. June 29. The Russian sailors here mutinied last night, attacked the government stores, seized the arms and fired into the officers quarters. In fantry, artillery and Cossacks were brought to the scene of the fighting, but the result is not known. Intonse excite- -raent prevails here. Mutlnccrs Add to Crew. SPECIAL. CABLE. ODESSA. June SO. (2:25 A. M.) Firing continues in ail directions In the city, the soldiers shooting' Indiscrim inately. The crew of the transport Vecha, who mutinied on the voyage from Nlcho lalef. has gone on board the Potomklae. with the result that the ship now has plenty of men on board to handle her guns should a fight come. Eleven surviving officers of the Po temklne and the officers of the Vecha were sent on shore this afternoon. Six were killed. No British Steamers Injured. LONDON, June 3. Telegrams re ceived from Odessa by shipowners in London and Liverpool, confirm the re ports of the state of anarchy prevailing In the Russian city yesterday. These advices add that the situation is quieter today. No British steamers were dam aged, and so far as known no British subjects were Injured in the rioting. All business at Odessa is at a rtandsttlL Peasants Ambush Cossacks. RIGA. Russia. June 29. Strikers and peasants today ambushed a number of Cossacks in a neighboring wood, killed one ef them and wounded several ethers. Full Speed for Odessa. SEBASTOPOL. June 23.-A battleship and a cruiser left here during the night with orders to steam at full speed for Odessa. For Bmby's Bmfh, To beiutlfy tie kls. c1bs th scalp, mnr Use fctr. trp cfcaflsr. ItcMac and IrrluUoo. to krp the dtUeate alia pare and aweet, especially Utile babies, tters'a zoOAzg Ilia HARFINA SOAP "A&ruftof Pine Ekn in Every Ctke." Krdlcttrd. dwxtortslar. fracraat. Vtatlredn ef wozaea ay Hartna lui w equal for rry wu pes of toilet, aita mad nsrery. AWed ay SUa healta TreatsaenL It destroys all trr rrri. -. VMltkT acaln. rorr akia asd beaatlRU natr. raertts of tbeae taarreloas prrparatloaa. Bfae Sttbttltstea. No aeap la asedlcatrd lika-Hartaa. WOOOARD. CTARKK CO.. Fourth aad Waablastoa Sta. connnemenu Blood poison. soterY thorouralr eurea. xauiura. "VOfJXG SiaCX troubled with night emtsaiona, dreams, exhausting dralaa, baahfulneaa. aversloa tu society, watch deprive you of your xaaahooo. YOU OR BUSINESS OR JaARKXAGl. HID D LK-A ti fcto 3US, who Zrotn excesses and a trains have lost theix KASLV PCWEK. BLOOD At) SKIN PIS EASES. Syphilis. Gonorrhoea, painful, bloody urlae. Gleet. Stricture, Enlarged rrostate. Sexual .Debility. Varicocele. Hydrocele. Xla ney and Liver troubles cured without XKRCURV OR OTK2K roisuNUtfl DRUGS. Catarrh aad rheumatism CURED. Dr. "Walker's methods are regular and aclentinc He uses no patent b as tro ma or ready-made preparations, but cures the disease by thorough ssedlcal treatment. His New Pamphlet on Private Diseases sent free to all aua who de scribe their trouble. PATIENTS cured at home. Terms reasonable. All ietters answered la lala envelope. Consultation ire and sacredly ceaadeaUaL Call en or addreos DR. WAJLXFR. 181 Fkt Street. Corner YamfeM, PrUll4 Or ULISIINSTIEET California limited Meets Freight Train Head-On. TWO BRAKEMEN ARE KILLED Engineer of the Limited Is Scalded and Cannot Recover Several Others Are Seriously Wounded. KANSAS CITY. Mo.. June 19. East bound Atchison. Topeka fc Santa Fe train No. 4. the California Limited, and a heavy Kansas City Southern stock train, westbound, collided bead -on on the Belt Line tracks at the Glllls-street crossing, two miles from the center of the city, early today. Two persona were killed and three Injured: The dead: WILLIAM FRAZIER. of Indtpndene. ila.. flremta of the Kansas City Southern train. MICHAEL DEVISE, of Kansas City, a switchman, riding la the Kansas City Southern-cab. The Injured: C. F. Willis. Marcelln. Mo., astd 32 yeara. engineer ef the Santa Fe Limited, badly scalded, cannot live; Jesse M. Tabbutt. baggageman of Santa Fe Lim ited, scalded and hurt Internally; may die; one passenger, male, name unknown, be lieved te be seriously hart. Several passengers were severely shaken up. but otherwise uninjured, and were able to continue the trip to Chicago. Both trains were running at a good rate of speed. Both engines were badly wrecked, the forward combination car on the Limited was slightly damaged, and half a dozen stock cars were demol ished. Blamo for the collision has not been fixed. The Limited train apparently had the right of way. Thomas Fltzmortis, engineer of the stock train, who jumped and escaped Injury, could not be found immediately following the wreck. Engineer Willis, badly scalded and suffering Intense agony, crept to the porch of a shanty Just off the roadbed. The flimsy porch gave way under nis wetgnt. precipitating him to the ground, where he was found unconscious and taken to the hospital. KILLED BY A GREAT WIND Six PcrsonjrLose Life In Kansas, and Score Injured. PWTr.T.TPSRTTTin. Kcn Jun 29 Six persons were killed and 2o injured, is of the jailer seriously, in lue aiuriu iiui suu here and m this vicinity last nisht. The rnTohS The dead are: Mrs. Robert Alexander and two daughters, aged Z and 4 years; Mrs. Jane Alexander. Elmer La n man and Daniel "Weaver. The seriously Injured are: H. B. Mor gan, wife and two children; Charles Cas well, wife and daughter: Arthur Caswell. wife and baby; Mrs. B. A. Mitchell. Rob ert Nelson. Rutherford Alexander. John A?exiaTr?- MrT TV. tSSSE ana brother. Net a building in Its path withstood j Hs fury, and the terrible force of the" wind was Intensified by the violence of electrical discharges and a terrible fall of hall and water. Hailstones of Ice measuring 15 laches la circumference were picked up an hour after the tornado passed. The precipitation Is estimated at three inches In a apace of 30 minutes. The course ef the tornado, so far as can be learned. Is about 15 miles long and one-half mile wide. It disappeared Just east of this city. Car Left on 3Iain Track. ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Jnue The Santa. Fe passenger train coming from El Paso was wrecked at San An tonlto, south of here, today, by colliding with some loaded freight cars that had been pushed upon the main track acci dentally. The first coach of the pas senger train was telescoped and Conductor A. W. "Wells, of El Paso, was killed. Five persons were Injured, one Mrs. D. P. RIee, of Denver, seriously. Perish In Burning Hotel. LICKING, Mo., June 29. Three per sons perished in the burning of the Collier Hotel, a frame building, here today. The dead are: Mrs. V. L. Shelp and infant: Emmett Sticker, of "Willow Springs. Mo. tfafr FaAfecr, Tmcnh Of my Of FM, Fto9tormilhyHmyIB HAIRHEALTH autstrd by HARFINA SOAP to cleaaae sea!?, lastantly irmu daadraa. ktlla tr&s, atosafcalr faluac pro not pa growta of talek. laatroea aahr of the rich color and braoty of jouta. Cm Halxtcalta with Haiflaa Soap. It Xmwm YonLookkfj Yoamr Larra SOc bottle, drsrrlats. Take aotalsff wlttost Villa Bay SpedaiUes Co. aJfaatar. Frii Sp Offir Ei3 till, tale to any er rouowia? erofpsts aaa raid, for 60c aad tbla adr. Free aoap net cirea by drorxiat wltaoat tils aaUre a!r. aad 20c. for Halrbtalta, Kaae... ..... X&istu ,..r . WOODAIU. CLARKE A CO.. Fourth aad IVaahlactoa Sta. Twenty Years of Success In the treatment of chronic diseases, such as liver, kidney and stomach dlsordtra, constipation, dlfcr rooea, dropsical awelUnsa, .Bright disease, etc Kidney and Urinary Complaints, painful, difficult, too frequent, milky or bloody urine, unnatural discharges speedily cured. 1 Diseases of the Rectum Such as Plies. nr.ul. Uaure. ulceniUuB. mccoua iaj s; bloody discharges, cured without the knife, paj& or Diseases of Men Ciot. aincturv. unnatural losses. t. -uro guaranteeo. T snow am Fan. Owing to the recent general clamor made against medicines containing large quantities of alcohol, Doctor Kerce has decided to prove to the pnblic that his "Favorite Prescription" for the diseases and "weaknesses of women is not a patent medicine in the fall accept ance of that term. Hereafter the ingredients of his "Favorite Prescription" "will be printed on the "wrapper of every bottle that leaves the laboratory. YOU CAN TRUST A medicine tbat has-been deservedly popular for over & 'tfiird of a century that has cured thousands of lromeii of thoee diseases peculiar to the sex and-inwhich the manufacturer has sufficient confidence in the sterling merit of the medicine to give to the public a full knowledge of its ingredients. EVERY WOMAN- Who takes this "Favorite Prescription" of Dr. Pierce, will know just what she is taking. This medicine contains the non-alcoholic extracts of the following native plants: LADY'S SLJPPER Cypnpedhtm PuhescerJ). T BLACK. COHOSH Gmirifuga. Racemose). UNICORX fcOOT Chamaltrium Lutein). BLUE COHOSH CaulophyUttm ThaUdroides). GOLDEN SEAL Hydrastis Car.adctsis), NATURE'S OWN QURB For those distressing complaints so common to women. During an extended practice, in which Dr. Pierce made the diseases of women a specialty, he found that Q wjwk pnmKinnHnn nf AmonV'ni Trior! irfrirl nlo-nfc -rr-rvnl3 j " LMW i, oiutuau -Lu.veu.jauiy uiuc ou txic ueuuiuiLUig wastes ctllu. drains, all the aches and pains incident to womanhood. Consequently he put up this favorite remedy in a form that could he easily procured at every drug store. DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION Keeps women looking young hy keepinsT disease away j . - -1 . j from tJiose maTvelously the female sex. stops those bearing-down sensations. It fits the wue for the task of cd-hearing, making the period of gestation one of comfort, shortening labor ana making it almost painless. It fortifies the whole system, so that recovery after confinement is quick, and there are no dangerous after-effects. VfWJ UCUVCO JL Ci Y UillU JL X OVX XJ UXUIX OUiO IU KJXS AJ.CCU.LiX ier than the hahe of the mother who does not take it Pommery Champagne THE STANDARD OF QUALITY Quality versus Quantity One reason "why Pommery Cfearapagae maintains its popularity with those who demand the best of wines, is that the Pommery stand ard of quality is never lowered ia order to join, the race for quantity. IN A Tx-- ..,-,-?,., . rnre in everv ease ten free. Letters confidential. Jnatrucjtve BOOK. FOR ililN mailed free la plahs wraciaer. TVe cure the worst cases of plies la two or three treatments, without operation, Cure guaranteed. If you cannot call at office, write for Que alien, blank. Home treatment auccaaafat. Ofnce hours, t to 1 and I to 1 Sundays and. holidays. 10 to 1Z. DR. W. NORTON DAVIS & CO. OfSces la Vaa-Noy Hotel. 52ri Third at. cor. Pine. Portland. Or. MEN AND WOMEN and severe. "We with equal skill and success treat and cure. Hydrocele. Varicocele. Syphilis and Gonorrhoea, Spermatorrhoea and Prostatorrhoea. Nocturnal Discharges, the result of disease from youthful abuses or ex cesses, nervous and constitutional Decline. Piles; P.ectal Ulcers. Ecsema. Alcoholic Nervousness, Strictures. KlJney and Bladder affections. Inabil ity to control or Incontinence of urlae and many other maladies. "We treat all In strict confidence safely, successfully and honestly. CWiSULTATlQH AND EXAMINATION OtCce Kemrai 8 A. 3C to St. Louis gSSgi"- Dispensary Cor. Scceorf aad Yaatftill Streets. Portia, Or! T - T -TS .77 . P1""10 J 1- i . , Qelicate organs which dis- It quiets the nerves, and The. hahe of the woman WEEK We treat successfully all private aesp. tous and chronic diseases of men. alia blood, stemacs. heart, liver, kidney and throat troubles!. "We cure SXPHTT.li twlthout mercury) to stay cured foravac la 30 to 60 days. "We retaoTe STRIC TURK, without operation or pahi. In U cays. "We stop drains, the result of self-abuse. mndiately. "We can restore the sexual vizer of any man under SO by meaaa ol Heal treatment peculiar to ourselves. We Cure Gonorrhoea In a Week The doctors oZ this Institute are all reguiar graduates, have had many years expenen.e. have teen known, la PortlaaA for 15 years, have a reputation to main tain "1 will undertake no case trnlaw certain cure can be effected. we undertake or charge no fee. Consult. Don't permit yourselves to worry day after Jay anJ night after nig.it, when relief Is now and always here at hand. The St. Louis Medical and Surgical Dispen sary is ready, able and competent to do It ia the quickest possible time any curable case of disease can be accomplished. "We will restore you with a. celerity and a skill that will not only please but astonish, you. Young mea. middle-aged men. frail men. worried men. do you know your malady? It 70s do not vre do. and will tell you the facts about any deviation from, health, either the most trivial and obscure or unusual FREE "Write far Syaasteaa Slash; sue Reek If Yea Cosset CxIZ. SjP. X.j SwaOaye, 19 to 12 omly.