Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, February 17, 1910, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE . OKEGONIAN, TniJRSDAT, FEBRUARY 17, 1910.
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s
MAY ENTER
E FOR SENATE
Ex-Governor Candidate if
Jones Makes Seattle His "
Residence.
ASPIRANTS ARE NUMEROUS
Candidacy of Walla Walton Would
Cut Kast Side Support of Rep
resentative Polndextcr
of Spokane.
"WALLA WALLA, Wash., Feb. 16.
(Special.) It is now within the Tango
of possibilities that Walla Walla, which
has always played an important part
In the politics of the state of Washing
ton, and which for six years was the
home of one of the United States Sena
tors will have a candidate in ex-Governor
Miles C. Moore for the primary
indorsement for United States Senator
to succeed Senator Sam H. Piles.
Strong- presure is now being brought
to bear on ex-Governor Moore to in
duce him to enter the contest. A fea
ture of the campaign proposed, in order
that the antagonism of Senator Jones
may not be aroused, is the suggestion
that Senator Jones may be willing To
change his legal residence to .Seattle.
Miles was the last territorial Gover
nor of Washington and during the
time Senator Ankeny was making his
. fight for election, and even after
ward, was credited with having Sena
torial ambitions. While ex-Governor
"Moore has not said that he will per
mit his name to be used in the Sena
torial contest this Fall or at any time,
it is known that he has received many
letters from all parts of the state urg
oing him to enter the race. Were it
not for two or three things that pe
culiarly affect the situation, it ia
highly probable that he would accede
to these requests.
Jones May Move to Seattle.
Chief among the ' deterrent fac
tors is ex-Governor's Moore's friend
ship for Senator Wesley L. Jones. A-s
Senator Jones is a resident of Eastern
Washington, it is felt by the latter's
friends that the election of another
East-Side Senator might injure Jones",
political fortunes In the future.
But It is known that Senator Jones baa
been Importuned many times in the last
few years to take up his residence
either in Seattle or Spokane, and it has
been intimated that if an East-Side
man should be elected to succeed
Senator Piles, Senator Jones could per
haps be induced to remove to Seattle
from North Yakima.
Senator . Jones' popularity on the
West Side Is as great as it is om the
East Side, and should a man like
Moore, for instance, be choseai this
year, it is suggested that a change of
residence for Jones would be a happy
way out of any embarrassment that
might arise from the contention that
political honors were not evenly di
vided. Poindexter Would Be Hurt.
As friendship for Jones will prob
ably be the chief factor governing
Moore's final determination, the argu
ment is advanced that Moore's can
didacy would prove a positive benefit
to Jones and perhaps the West Side
candidates, by spliting the insurgent
vote for" Representative Poindexter,
who is now the only East-Side
candidate for Piles' place. Ex
Governor More, however, will not enter
the race, except in good faith, and
would decline to become a party to
any scheme to benefit or Injure Poin
dexter or any other candidate in the
field. If he linally enters ;the contest,
it will be with the expectation of
winning.
At present it looks as if there would
be no end of candidates for the Senate,
thus splitting the vote so that no can
didate can hope to get anywhere near
a majority. While not probable, it is
not a remote possibility that the ma
jority of the Legislators will be
unpledged to support the party ohoice
for United States Senator, and some of
the candidates seem to prefer this sort
of an outcome, which would result in a
Bhow-down as to who could control
the most votes In the Legislative body.
Personal Popularity an Issue.
No one of the prospective candidates
is a man who would undertake to in
fluence the Legislators by the use of
money, and, in fact, aside from Mccor
mick of Pierce, none of them has great
wealth, so in such event the result
would be governed by political ma
nipulation of personal qualifications.
Ex-Governor Moore, while reputed to
be one of the leading financiers of the
Northwest, is by no means so bur
dened with money as to become an ob
ject of suspicion, and would be as free
from resorting to the old machine
methods as. any man in the state.
SALEM DEPOT SAFE BLOWN
Kilro-Glycerine Used by Kobbers,
Who Get $18 and Escape.
SALEM, Or., Feb. 16. (Special.) The
safi in the West Salem depot of the Sa
lem, Falls City & Western Railway was
blown open with nitro-glycerin early
this morning and $18 in caph taken.
The office door was blown completely
off and the office ' fixtures were badly
damaged by . the force of the explosion.
.Residents in the liclnity notified the po
lio and the prison bloodhounds were
taken to the scene, but without finding
; any clew.
OREGON GETS TROUT EGGS
3O0.OOO Black-Spotted Spawn, In-
stead of Brook, for Streams.
SALEM. Or., Feb. 16. (Special.)
Master Fish Warden McAllister has
been advised by the ' Department of
Fisheries at. Washington that 800,000
eggs of black spotted trout will be sent
!to Oregon for planting in the streams
of this 'state.
t Warden McAllister applied for brook,
trout spawn, but owing to a shortage
In the supply the department was un'
ible to supply the variety requested.
REGENTS MEET SATURDAY
Students Will Ask That Gymnasium
Be Named for Trainer.'
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene.
Car.. FeK" 16. (Special.) The Board of
100
Regents of the University of Oregon will
meet here next Saturday in its first
meeting since the act passed by the last
Legislature requiring that all sessions of
the regents must be held at the State
University went into effect.
Among the subjects that will come be
fore the regents will be the annual re
ports of President Campbell and the other
officers of the University. It is also like
ly that the regents will grant an addi
tional appropriation to complete the big
swimming tank in the university's new
gymnasium. Just completed at a cost of
more than $30,000. The regents will be
asked by students to name the gymnas
ium "Hayward Gym,'" in honor of "Bill"
Hayward, who in his four years as train
er here has never been defeated in a
track meet.
The members of the board are: Fed
eral Judge R. S. Bean, of Portland, presi
dent: Nehemiah L. Butler, of Dallas;
James W. Hamilton, of Roseburg; - Cyrus
A. Dolph, of Portland: William Smith,
of Baker City Frederick V. Holman, of
Portland: Milton A. Miller, of Lebanon:
Samson H. Friendly, of Eugene, and J.
C. Ainsworth. of Portland.
VARIOUS MISHAPS OGGUR
DEATH IX AUSTRALIAN" WATERS
' THROUGH FTTRY OF SEA.
Lord Kitchener's Visit Marred by
Explosion in Gunnery Practice
Maiming 1 S Men.
VICTORIA, B. C Fob. 16. (Special.)
Mail advices from Australia contain
details of Field Marshal Lord. Kitch
ener's experiences in his inspection of
the home defense military forces and
equipment of the commonwealth. His
visit to Melbourne was marked by a
tragic gunnery accident, through which
four out of 13 men severely injured are
maimed for life, if they live. A 9.2
gun exploded In the gun-pit at Fort
Nepeau. Two miss-fires had occurred
and a percussion tube was substituted
for the electric tube. The gun was
prematurely discharged when being run
up, and the 380-pound plug shell
ricochetted after wrecking the masonry
in front. Artillerymen were hurled In
all directions, stunned and bleeding,
13 out of the 14 men of the crew being
Injured. -
News is also received of a series of
shipping casualties In the South Seas.
In New Zealand water the big excur
sion steamer Waikare, of the Union
Steamship Company's flag, was lost in
Dusky Sound, the excursionists and
crew being rescued. The big Kaipara,
of the New Zealand Shipping Com
pany's fleet, stranded near Auckland,
and salvage operations were" in pro
gress when the Makura sailed. The
steamer was in mid-channel, where 31
feet of water showed on the charts.
Premier Sir Joseph G. Ward went out
with H. M. S. Pioneer to rescue the
shipwrecked company of the Waikare.
The Australian malls also contain
advice of the safe arrival at Melbourne
of the French bark Marechal de Tu
renne, from New York, after being
swept by mountainous seas which
swept Captain Parrot and his third
officer overboard. The latter had
lashed himself to a post and was hauled
on board again. The starboard boat
had been smashed, and Captain Parrot
was Investigating the extent of the
damage when a following sea swept
him overboard. He waa never - seen
again. A few days after leaving New
York th bark was in collision with
an unknown vessel during dense fog,
the Turenne being struck a glancing
blow on ithe waterline. She continued
on her way. What happened to the
other craft is unknown, as is her
identity.
Heavy floods prevailed in Australia
at last advices. At Tamworth the town
whs 1 ft. feet under water. Several houses
Viad been swept away and four men
were drowned. Near Gunnedah many
rescues were made from haystacks and
roofs by the means of boats. Several
thousand people were cut off from food
supplies for 16 hours at Tamworth.
Thousands of sheep and' hundreds of
cattle and horses perished.
GEORGIA MURDER CHARGED
Roseburg Man Accused of Crime
Committed in 190 6.
ROSEBURG, Or., Feb. 16. (Special.)
W. J. Widincamp, alias W. N. Smith, In
dictetd by a grand jury in Tathanall
County, Georgia, in September,' 1906,
charged with the crime of murder, was
arrested by Sheriff Fenton and Policeman
Palm, late this afternoon, at his home a
short distance north of this city. He is
now in the County Jail, awaiting the
arrival of an officer to escort him back
to the scene of the crime.
From information received by Sheriff
Fenton, it appears that Widincamp is
accused of one of the most fiendish
crimes ever committed in Georgia, the
victim being a man of weak mind.
When interrogated by Sheriff Fenton
tonight, Widincamp said that he had pre
viously resided in Georgia, and further
Informed the officer that he had been in
trouble in that state. He says, however,
that he will return to the scene of his
alleged crime, entertaining little fear of
the consequences.
Widincamp arrived in Roseburg about
one year ago. He recently purchased a
small fruit ranch near this city. He has
a wife and two children residing in Rose-;
burg.
SEATTLE CHINESE TO VOTE
"Hoodoo 13" Is Number of One
Family to .Cast Ballots.
: SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 16. Almost
at the last hour of registration last
night 13 native-born. Chinese appeared
and registered to vote at the city elec
tions, March 8. For the primaries only
three Chinese were enrolled.
The Chinese votes will be cast solidly
for 'candidates agreed upon. Most of
the Chinese voters were born in Se
attle and belong to the Chin family, of
which the most distinguished member
is Chun Chin Hook, a pioneer merchant
of Seattle and who has within the past
few years become famous as a rail
road builder' in China, where he now
lives.
A majority of the Chinese born in
Seattle are said to have gone to China
to live. The total registration of Se
attle is 42.649. Vine Japanese, naturaN
ized in Arizona, is registered.
"SLAVER" IS CONVICTED
Immigration - Officers "Win Case
' Against Max Thurna.
SEATTLE, Feb. 16. Max Thurna,
charged with being a ."white slave" own
er,', was found guilty by a. Jury in the
Suparior Court today.
Evidence Introduced during the trial,
consisting largely of correspondence be
tween Thurna and friends in other cities,
phowed that Thurna was making a profit
of SloO a week out- of his slaves. The
evidence was secured " by ; United States
immigration inspectors . who are waging
a war on the "white slave" trade ia the
Northwest,; J
GQ5-ACRE FiRCHARD
SOLO FOR -5500,000
Rogue River Property Bought
From Captain i Voorhies by
Spokane Men.
PEARS AND APPLES GROWN
Block of Yellow Xietvtowns Regarded
as Especially V&Iuable Record
for Past Season Exceeded
Those of Va st Years.
iMKDFORD, Or.. "Ee!b. 16. (Special.) C.
M. Speck, of Spokane, and his associates
have purchased th 605-acre orchard
tract owned by Captal n Gordon Voorhies,
a prominent clubman." of Portland, known
as the Burrell orcha'rd, paying $500,000.
The deal was closed late this afternoon,
through John D. CM well," and the new
owners will take posaession April 1. For
a month past negotiations have been
under way. i
This is thought to ' be the largest deal
ever completed in the Northwest in bear
ing orchard pro pert-. The Burre-11 or
chards hold many -of the world records
of this section. One -block of Yellow New
towns, consisting of OO acres of 8 and 9-year-old
trees. Is esix cially valuable. The
orchard is situated two miles south of the
paved streets of Medl'ord. It differs from
most of the pioneer orchard tracts of the
valley in having ben planted with an
eye to the future. Tit Is known as the
pioneer commercial otrchard of the North
west. . .
It was to this traot: that J. H. Stewart
devoted much of his. time. Much of it
was planted under Ms direct supervision.
One of Mr. Speck? fi a5sociates - in the
venture is M. G. Neely, of Spokane.
That Mr. Neely phon.'Vd turn his attention
to the Rogue River Valley is an indica
tion of the- attention this section is at
tracting throughout the world.
The- orchard was recently taken over by
Captain Gordon Voorhies from the Bur
rell Orchard Company. Not long ago Cap
tain Voorhies announced his intention of
spending a portion of each year personal
ly overseeing the property, but owing
to its sale he maj change his plans.
Although this orchard has made many
good records in the past few
years, its record -Dor the season just
closed is In itself a criterion of what
a Rogue River Valley orchard can do.
The orchard shipped 40 carloads of pears
from 48 acres, whlitl averaged $2 a box
at the orchard, or $40,000 for the crop.
The Bartletts netted '$1000 an acre and for
the, past nine years; have netted J600 an
acre. One carload of Bartletts this year
sold for $4.25 a box in New York City,
the high record of te year for Bartletts.
It ia said that a r rtion of the orchard
will be subdivided, f
-. . . -4 ' k
C. A. HUNT j IS INDICTED
Embezzlement of "Oddfellows' Funds
in The Dallas Charged.
THE DALLES,., fr.. Feb. . 16. The
county grand jury has indicted Charles
A. Hunt, of Portland, formerly of Jhls
city, on the change of embezzling
$217.50 from the OOllfellows Lodge here,
of which he was treasurer.
He was not suspK-ted of wrongdoing
until September, a few days after he
left the city. A committee of Oddfel
lows was appointed to investigate his
accounts and the ixivestigators arrived
at the conclusion ' that he was short.
Hunt was arresttid in Portland Mon
day. He now occuplesa cell in the County
Jail. Hunt residefi in The Dalles for
about 10 years. He conducted a gro
cery store here wtth ft.. S. Roberts for
several years arud, tor, a few months
before he left the V-ity last Fall he was
in partnership witti J. W. Riley in the
same kind of business.
NEVP0RT PIONEER DIES
Mrs. John BnckJey Taken by Con
sumption Ln Arizona.
NEWPORT, Or.. Feb. 16. (Special.)
Mrs. John Buckley, of Newport, died
yesterday of consumption in Phoenix,
Ariz., having been an invalid for years.
Mrs. Buckley before her marriage was
Nellie Case, daughter of the late
Samuel Case, whose family is one of
the oldest on "Fuquina Bay, and is
well known throughout the state. The
body will be cremiated at Los Angeles,
Cal. She is survived by her husband
and two -children, a daughter, aged 12,
and a son, aged 4.
JETTY TO GET $1,300,000
Grays . Harbor Appropriation May
Come Soon, Safys Senator Plies.
ABERDEEN, "WUsh.. Feb. 16. (Spe
ctal.) That the oanission of an appro-
P.
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Many
Ac if fi ' -
impound i " S
O . uju, Com C Z ii
"iUUm (- ' Z , ana Salt
. . . "5 ""'
J The Memory Lingers"
Pi? stum Cereal Company, Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.
priatlon for jetty work at Grays Har
bor was an oversight, which will be
remedied, is the understanding here to
day, and it is further stated that the
sum allowed will be $1,300,000, added to
the rivers and harbors bill in the shape
of an amendment. '
"A report on jetty materials mailed
from San Francisco to the Department,
February 14," wired Senator Samuel
Piles from Washington today. "I under
stand that the district engineer has
recommended $1,300,000. Soon as the
report is received here it will be sub
mitted to the Board of Engineers for
approval and should be in shape for
presentation to the Senate committee,
on commerce early next, week."
The data carries the recommendation
of Major C. W. Kutz, Chief of United
States Engineers for the district of
Alaska and Washington, and the ap
proval of the division engineer at San
Francisco. That the Government Board
of Engineers will favor the improve
ment is certain. The board, It is said,
has already signified its intention of
approving the plan upon the recommen
dation of the diHtrlct engineer's office.
i The matter is now up to Congress.
Hope here, is now high..
PROMOTER FLEES SOOTH
ABERDEEN" TTRM TV HANDS OF
RECEIVER ; TROUBLE AHEAD.
Man Who Capitalized 91500
Business for $70,00- Has Left City,
' Believed tor Loa Angeles.
ABERDEEN, Wa3h., Feb. 16. (Spe
cial.) Organized on what is declared to
have been a J. Rufus Wallingford basis,
the Modern Supply Company of this city,
is now in the hands of a receiver and
M. E. Cox, promoter, who is said to have
capitalized a $1500 business for $7000, has
left the city. He is presumed to be in
Los Angeles:
Knowledge of the affairs of the com
pany has just been made public through
the appointment of A. E. Graham as re
ceiver upon petition of the creditors.
The company was organized last Jan
uary, Cox being the principal promoter.
Interested with him were R. E. Pace,
Chris Jacobsen Fauske, E. M. Childers
and William Matheson. Cox and Pace
bounght the store and capitalized the
firm for $7000, although the assets were
said to have been $1500 and on this stock
a mortgage of $900 had been given to
Joseph Maggard who sold the store.
When the company was organized. Cox
and Pace turned the store in for $4000
and took stock to that amount giving
them control. They then proceeded to
dispose of $3000 worth of stock to others.
The business was enlarged by the addi
tion of a meat market and eventually a
candy store. Cox, it is said, visited Seat
tle and succeeded ln securing a big line
of credit from a large wholesale house but
local creditors began to get insistent for
their money and evidently seeing the
crash coming. Cox left the city last week.
Fauske, who is said to be a man of
wealth, took stock in the concern to the
extent of $800 turning in ten acres of land
which he owned in Kitsap County. Now
he wants it back, claiming that he was
induced to part with it by fraud but the
others claim they are all in the same boat
and should take their medicine together.
MOUSE CAUSES $500 LOSS
Nest Built Near Chimney ' Sets
Building on Fire.
DATTON, Wash.. Feb. 16. (Special.) J
A mouse that persisted ln building a nest
near the flue in the home of Mrs. William
Baldwin, at Baileysburg, caused a fire
yesterday and the dwelling was saved
only after a desperate fight by a bucket
brigade composed of neighbors. .
When Mrs. Baldwin yesterday built a
hot fire in the stove, the heated chimney
set the mouse's nest afire. When neighbors-
arrived the upper part of the house
was in flames. The loss will reach $500.
COWLITZ FULL OF SMELT
Big Run May Presage Prosperous
Salmon Season Later On.
ASTORIA, Or., Feb. 16. The largest
run of smelt for years in the Cowlitz
River is now in progress. The river
has never been known to contain so
many smelt in tjte memory of the old
est fisherman.
This may bode good for the coming
fishing season ln the Columbia, as it
is said that a good run of smelt has
always been followed by a good run of
salmon.
SLOOP WITH MAIL LOST
Man and Boy, Constituting Crew,
Thought Drowned.
"VICTORIA, B. C, Feb. 16. J. Jensen,
aged 22, and M. Muller, aged 12, who
left Sea Otter Cove,. Vancouver Island.
January 17, in a small sloop carrying
the mail to Winter Harbor, have been
given up for lost.
A searching party has found at Top
knot Point a pair of blankets and part
of the woodwork of the sloop, leaving
no doubt that the man and boy were
drowned.
Chehalis Baptists Sell Lot. -
CHEHAUS, Wash., Feb. 16. (Special.)
The Chehalis Baptist congregation has
Foods
Can be made more
enjoyable with.
The little book, "Tid
bits Made With Toast
ies," in pkgs., tells how.
With cream or fruit, a
fascinating food for
any meal of the day.
Post
Toasties
WW A
W EE CO
his rara
I wrote you some time ago, giving1 you an account of my
sufferings with, an awful case of Catarrh. I had all the symp
toms which accompany this disease, such as mucus dropping
back into the throat, a constant desire to "hawk and Bpit,"
feeling of dryness in the throat, cough and spitting upon
arising, scabs forming in the nose which required much effort
to blow out, sometimes causing my nose to bleed and leaving
me with a headache. I had thus suffered for five years, all the
time trying different local treatments of inhalations, snuffs,
douches, etc., with no real goodeffect. Of course I was greatly
discouraged. As soon as I heard from you I commenced S. S. S.
as you advised and after using it a short while noticed a change
for the better. I, continued to take it believing the trouble was
in the blood, and S. S. S. made a permanent cure for me. I am
now entirely free from Catarrh. ' .
JUDSON A. BEIXAM.
224 Randolph St., Richmond, Va,
The symptoms Mr. Bellam describes in his case of Catarrh are
familiar to every one who suffers with this disease. For five years he
had endured the discomfort and suffering, and was greatly discouraged
as one treatment after another failed to cure him. When at last he
realized that Catarrh is a blood disease, he knew that the former
treatments had been wrong, and only a blood purifier like S. S. S.
could produce permanent good results.
Catarrh is not merely an affection oMhe mucous membranes; it is
a deep-seated blood disease in which the entire circulation and greater
part of the system are involved. It comes from impurities accumulate
ing in the circulation, and as the blood goes to every portion of the
body the catarrhal matter irritates and inflames the different mucous
surfaces and tissues causing an unhealthy and inflammatory discharge,
and producing the other well known symptoms of the trouble.
The failure of local treatment to produce permanent good results
in Catarrh is due entirely to the fact that such measures do not reach
the cause of the trouble. Temporary relief and comfort may often be
had by using some douche or inhalation, but no cure can be effected
until the blood is purified of the irritating cause.
S. S. S. cures Catarrh by cleansing the blood of all impure catarrhal
matter, and at the same time building up the system by its unequalled
tonic effects. It goes down into the circulation and removes every
trace of foreign matter or impurity. In other words S. S. S. cure3
Catarrh by purifying the blood so that the mucous' surfaces and linings
PURELY
VEGETABLE
cease, the stomach is toned up, the' throat is no longer clogged with
phlegm, but every annoying symptom of the disease is corrected.
There is but one way to cure Catarrh purify the blood, and there is
but one absolutely safe and sure blood purifier S. S. S. We have a
special book on Catarrh; we will send this book, and also any special
medical advice desired free to all who write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
sold its Chehalis-avenue property to
Cohn & Mintzer for JG000. The church or
ganization will build a new church on its
Cascade-avenue lota. It is probable that
a brick structure will be erected, to cost
$12,000. Rev. E. E. Duley is pastor.
a
Tide-Land Case on Trial Today.
SALEM, Or., Feb. 16. (Special.) In
department No. 1 of the Circuit Court
for Marion County, Judge Galloway
presiding, will be tried tomorrow the
case of the State vs. the C. & E. Rail-
Afraid of Ghosts
Many people are afraid of ghosts. Few people
are afraid of germs. Yet the ghost is a fancy and
the germ is a fact. If the germ ooutd be magnified
to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more
terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. Germs
can't be avoided. They are in tfae air we breathe,
the water we drink.
The germ can only prosper when the condition
of the system gives it free scope to establish it
self and develop. When there is a deficiency of
vital force, languor, restlessness, a sallow cheek.
a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the
sleep is broken, it is time to guard against the germ. Yon can
fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold
en Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, cleanses the
system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom
ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so
that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed.
Golden Medical Discovery " contains no alcohol, whisky or
habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside
wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine op known
composition and with a record of 40 years ef cures. Accept no
substitute there' is nothing " just as good." Ask your neighbors.
if dSi
curing hoarseness and tried
voice broke through and she
L. T. Benson, Weston, Ida.
LeXL LXLa4iL J.iLi..jg 21 A JLL
" Sloan's Liniment is excellent for sore throat, chest pains,
colds and hay fever attacks. A few drops taken on sugar
stops cdughing and sneezing instantly." A. W. Price,
Fredonia, Kans,
Prices,- 25c, SOc, and fl.OO.
BIOM
11 IV JUL H
or the body are all sup
plied ' with healthy
blood instead of being
irritated and diseased
from a continual satu
ration of catarrhal im
purities. Then the
infiammed and irritated
membranes heal, the
discharge is checked,
the head noises all
way Co. The case involves title to the
tide lands of Yaqulna, Alsea and other
bays on the coast.
Scliooi Bonds to Be Voted On.
INDEPENDENCE, Or., Feb. 16. (Spe
cial.) A special election has been
called for March 1 to vote on the ques
tion of issuing $15,000 bonds for the
purpose of building a high school. The
school population has Increased so
rapidly that the present facilities are
no longer adequate.
For
Cold in Chest
Sore Throat
and
Hoarseness
" My wife was hoarse
for over four months,
and in much distress
when she tried to speak.
She read a testimonial
about your Liniment
it. After two applications her
now talks with perfect ease."
B
I
1
No matter what
the language
Tood old
'Put's
Bottled In Bond
means the same to ever
tongue a pure, finely fla
vored, delightful old whis
key. Since 1857, the Govern
ment's Standard of Purity.
Pains or
Cramps
"I carry Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain
Pills with me all the time, and
for aches and pains there is
nothing equals them. I have
used them for rheumatic pains,
headache, and pains in side and
back, and in every case they give
perfect satisfaction."
HENRY COURLEN,
Boonton, N. J.
Pain comes from tortured
nerves. It may occur in any
part of the head or body where
there is weakness or pressure
"ipon the nerves.
Dr. Miles'
Anti-Pain Pills
Relieve pain, whether it be neu
ralgiac, rheumatic, sciatic, head
ache, stomache, pleurisy or
ovarian pains.
Druggists everywhere sell them. If
first package falls to benefit, your drug
gist will return your money.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
HAND
SAPOLIO
FOR TOILET AND BATH.
Delicate enough for the softest skin,
and yet efficacious ln removing; any
stain. Keeps the skin ln perfect con
dition. In the bath gives all the de
sirable after-effects of a Turkish bath.
It should be on every washstand.
UL GROCERS AND DRUGGIST.
THOSE BEAUTIFUL.
An bam Tlnta, to notlrMM" uooog inmi
toaftM woman, an produced oofcr bv
imperial Kalr Regenerator
th cleaaeet nd xnoet lasting Hatr
Awrmg s-uown, ic ia e&su y applied,
kbaoJutoly barmleM, unaffected by
atna AnT Bb&da DradnoML &&mnli
of hnironlnrfrl trn
VPEKLU.CHUUC40. ttKi.CO..US WJU StNsw lark.