And many other painful and serious ailments from which most mothers sutler, can be avoided by the use of —“Mottafl Friert." This great remedy Sr L T *s a God-send to women, carrying f I them through their most critical ““■WW ■ ordeal with safety and no pain. No woman who uses ‘ Mother’s Friend” need fear the suffering and danger incident to birth; for it robs the ordeal of its horror and insures safety to life of mother and child, and leaves her in a condition more favorable to speedy recovery. The child is also healthy, strong and good natured. Our book “Motherhood,” is worth its weight in gold to every nieiiii* MOTHER’S vornan, and will be sent free in plain ■■ Bfe ■ ■■ envelope by addressing application to L I k R L B m Q M Bradfield Regulator Co. Atlanta,Ga. | iBki LlVU LICENSED BY SOCIETY. FRIDAY. JANUARY 22. 1904. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ • ♦ ♦ Love took up the glass of ♦ ♦ Time and turned it in ♦ ♦ his glowing hands; ♦ ♦ Every moment, lightly shaken. ♦ ♦ ran itself in golden ♦ ♦ sands. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Love took up the harp of ♦ ♦ Life, and smote on all ♦ ♦ Its chords with might; ♦ ♦ Smote the chord of Self. that. ♦ ♦ trembling, pass'd in mu­ ♦ ♦ sic out of sight. ♦ ♦ - Tennyson. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Another year is passing and the banner wheat and livestock county of Eastern Oregon looks forward to a street carnival, instead of an ele­ vating county fair. While it is humiliating to acknowl­ edge that a woman witness was wrong, it is a pleasure to know that the minister arrested for burglary st Hillsboro has been acquitted of the crime. Patti took just as much money out of the country as she would have taken with a voice 40 years younger. That's the only point in the "farewell tour" that interested the Baron, her husband, who was saying "hello" and "good-bye" on the same trip. If the state irrigation commission can find any head or tail to Oregon irrigation laws, it will do better than lawyers or courts have ever done. There is some tall searching ahead of the commission if it expects to find a starting point inside the cov­ ers of the code. _____ It has ceen the policy of the gov-; ernment to deny federal buildings to | cities not able to furnish two or j more government institutions. Pen­ dleton can't dig up anything but the postoffice just now. She hasn't even got a weather bureau man with his elaborate equipment of rain guage and barometer. Wanted, by Russia, an excuse >o back down. Where in Hague has ar­ bitration gone to? Can't some one suggest an honorable way to let Rus­ sia out of this scrape? A declaration of war signed by the czar would be a terrible decline from a literary standpoint, compared to that note calling The Hague conference. Whoever is interested in doing away with political conventions and in giving the common man a voice in the nomination of the candidates for whom he must vote, should see that the direct primary nominating amendment carries in Oregon this year. It is a step a century in ad­ vance of delegate conventions, pack­ ed to the brim, nine times out of ten. While a week's repertoir is being played at one of Pendleton's thea­ ters, it would be perfectly proper to practise a fire drill as the audience passes out. Everybody should know about such things. Because this is a small city and has always been for­ tunate, does not excuse ignorance and carelessness. The city officials should assist the management of the theaters in carrying out rules for public safety. Senator Bailey, of Texas, is incon­ solable over the prospect of the suc­ cess of the Panama canal. .Mr. Bai­ ley has become impressed so firmly with the wisdom of Senator Mor­ gan's plana for a Nicaraguan cana! that anything else seems empty of results. There are others in the same state of mind, but they must become resigned to the fact this is Roosevelt's administration and he is running it to suit any popular fancy which will work votes for himself in the nominating convention. There is more in diplomacy than there is in opening both eyes to the interest of the whole people, at times. With the Influence of the great Hearst papers fighting the trusts in every corner of the United States; with a Hearst boom sounding in the ears of the largest list of readers reached by a single newspaper syn­ dicate in the world; with the honesty of his purpose and the popularity of his platform making friends daily by the thousands, it seems that Wil­ liam Randolph Hearst is going to l-e a hard man to beat in convention. And once nominated, his Immense engines of publicity and the influ­ ence they carry in the highest cir­ cles of business, politics and person­ al friendship, will make even the popularity of Theodore Roosevelt hard to catch in the coming cam­ paign. Young, vigorous, enterpris Ing, a leader of matchless skill, as evidenced by the success of his great papers, achieving stroke after stroke of triumph under his direction, there is no more logical man for the demo crats to nominate than Hearst. It will require a Hearst to offset the indefatigable energy and irresistible popularity of a Roosevelt. A thrilling picture of hell was flashed upon the canvas in Portland yesterday. It was one to make men remem­ ber. It was one that burned Into men's brains and hearts indelibly. A little, stooped woman came in­ to police court, with three ill-clad babes following her There were traces of refinement under the lines of misery in her face There was something elevating in her voice and a startling intelligence in her speech, compared to the be­ grimed garb she wore. She was a washerwoman with a worthless husband. She had saved up her earnings until there was enough to buy a small home.. The little store of money was her own. wrung from the steam of the tub and the pangs of exhaustion, little by lit­ tle and day by day. a state containing such creamery possibilities as this state contains. The establishment of a 10.000 |s>un. ooo to 300,000 pbunds of butter each year and imports this entire amount. To those who see the idle land and idle water of the West, side by side, and touching elbows, it seems but a short step from the wilderness to the alfalfa field. But the tedious and wearisome progress of the govern­ ment would lead to the belief that the route between the desert and the reclaimed land is long and doubtful of iiassage. Caution and carefulness are all right. The people don't object to the exercise of these virtues. But they do fret, and justly so. at unnec­ essary delay in determining the worth or worthlessness of the irrigation propositions under government su­ pervision. The government should either act or get off the land and '<1- low it to be reclaimed by private en­ terprise Circuit court in Pendleton, this first term in the new year, lasted about six hours Judge Ellis can grind out fines and sentences just as rapidly as criminals can break into jail. THE BLOODIEST OF BATTLES. Every housewife and every dys­ peptic husband in the state hopes that the creamery business will ad­ vance fast enough in Oregon to drive the oleo and "process" butter out of the markets. It is a burning disgrace to know that some of the stuff shipped into Oregon as butter should And place in ue markets of The fight for Sunday closing of the St. lAtuls rail has begun in congress by a bill to that effect being intro duced by Senator Platt, of Connect! cut. Eight hundred hack aud carriage drivers In St. lx>uls have struck fol a 12-hour tlay, and $12.50 per week pay and 25 cents per hour for over­ time. Geographical and other reasons will induce enough democratic sena tors to vote for the Panama canal treaty that its passage is practically certain. Harry 8. Huff is dead at San Fran cisco. He was au interpreter and could speak more Chinese dialects than any living man. Caucasian or Mongol. The Alameda (Cal.) high school has 2,096 pupils. San Francisco 2.158. and Ix>s Angeles 1,591. The first named is financially best off and finest equipped. Alterations to make their bulldin ’s conform with the law. will cost Chi- < ago theater managers $500.000. This is entirely outside the cost of te building several. Professor George E. Hale, of Chi­ cago, has been awarded a gold medal by the Royal Astronomical Society, of London, for the invention of the spectro-heliograph. Private L. Warren, of Co. G. U. S. R , held for desertion, attempted to escape at Detroit. Mich., Jan. 18. He was shot twice in the back by a guard and was allied. Steel (.nd railroad stocks are strong and promise much in all the money centers for the coming year, but textiles and provisions securities are uncertain and weak. The courthouse of Adams county. Colorado, burned January 19. Lona $40,000 on the building All the rec ords were burned, including the com pie ted assessor's returns. M’»s Fannie McNabb, of Chicago has been sent to an insane asylum, the victim of cigarette smoking She is said to hare smoked a pack age every day for 10 years. Preferential tariffs and steamship subsidies between Australia and Can ada, to cripple the trade of the United States with both countries, is one re suit of the American tariff policy. Americans have contracted Io fin ish in three years a 60-mile railroad from the Gulf coast directly west in­ to the interior of Guatemala: Its completion will revolutionize Guate­ malan commene. John Oldham, a Utah mining mil­ lionaire aged 72 years, on 10-days' acquaintance married Jennie O'Neill, a 20-year-old penniless chambermaid, first transferring to her a large amount of his property. There are 100.000 destitute people in Macedonia this winter. All tore casts are to the effect that next spring will witness either a success­ ful rebellion of the Balkan ptovin- ces or virtual extermination of those peoples Dr. Gustave Rosenk died lately :*t Oakland. Cai., leaving no will or di rections concerning bis effects. Since, however, money, bank books and deeds representing $50.000 have be-rn found secreted in the room in which he died. There is great chagrin at St. Pet­ ersburg over the new American-Chi­ nese commercial treaty, as indicai- ing possible anti-Russlan sentiment in America, and as being an obstrue- tlon in Russia's march of oriental conquest. What proved to be a false alarm of fire was tnrne-- in at the Chicago postoffice January 19. One hundred tons of mail and _12 canceling ma- chines weighing 1.100 pounds each. were carried out of the building in four minutes. gerous by the fire committee of the city council. I wo highwaymen lu-lq up a saloon I at Tenth and Gllsun streets in Port land at 11 o'clock Wednesday night, securing between $5 atitl $<> from 'lie cash register. The fire < ommittee of the Spokaue city council has declared the building occupied by the telephone offices to be unsafe and has recommended Its improvement at pnee. A Polish colony has purchased 10.- Otst acres of land near Portland, will erect a sawmill at once, and bring out from the East a large Polish im­ migration this spring. The accommodations committee for the Lewis and Clark fair in Port­ land. has already secured over 1 2oo rooms that will be available for guests during the fair. The Ministerial Association ena the ¡>0 lice to testify against the women Osmund Heise, the youthful horse­ thief of Portland, who has been con signed to the boys' and girls home, has been dressed in girl's clothing to prevent him from escaping so easily, San Francisco police have discov- ered a deep plot by which several persons were first heavily insured and then murdered. Leon Boeder, one of the arch-flends In the plot, has been arrested. The Portland Ministerial Associa- lion has passed resolutions asking congress to grant an appropriation for the Lewis and Clark fair, only on the grounds that the fair be closed every Bunday. The Portland Chamber of Coin- nterce has begun an active < ampaign to secure one of the plants of the Independent Packing Company. as soon as that company is ready to ‘lo­ gin building its central packing plants. Three Chinamen were arrested in Portland on Tuesday for running a lottery, An Idea of the business these lotteries do. contrary to law may be judged by the repott that ;n one concern over one million tickets have been sold. British ship captains who have lost heavily from their crews in Portland, by desertion, say .-e reason tor wo many desertions is that wages paid on shore are much higher than on the vessels, and that men tire of the cheap salaries and ;>oor fare of •he sea. The battle of Borodino, fought be­ tween the French and Russians near Moscow in 1812. was the most murderous fight, not only of the last century, but, perhaps of the last 300 years. The records show that Borodino engaged armies of from 120.000 to 130.000 on each side; that theer »as but one day of vigorous fighting; that the French after pouring a most murderous cannon fire upon the Russians, advanced upon the Rus­ sian position, were repeatedly re- ’pulsed with terrible loss, and finally TYPHOID EPIDEMIC. rushed the soldiers of the czar off their feet and out of their vantage Heppner, lone and Lexington. Not ground. The French won. but lost Are Affected — Condition Exists. 12.000 killed on the field and 28.000 wounded. Fifteen thousand Rus­ Though Local Authorities Are Re­ sians were slain and 30.000 wounded. ticent — Eleven Persons in One Out of about 250.0OU men who made Family Were Sick — Sanitary up the contending armies. 83.000. or Fund Was All Expended on Hepp- 34 per cent.— more than one-third— ner. were struck by bullets, bayonets er For some time report» have come swords. out of the Heppner valley to the ef­ At Waterloo about 45,000 men fect that there was an epidemic of were killed or wounded out of per­ typhoid fever at Heppner, but the haps 2'al.O'O engaged. At <;• • efforts of the health authorities have burg about 160.000 fought and each been unavailing in determining the army had, approximately. 3.000 extent of the sickness. killed and 14.000 wounded In the The cases have been confined to Wilderness probably 200.000 men lone and Lexington for the most were in action, and the fight—which part, and the spread of tiie disease lasted a week or more— resulted in and the number and seriousness of a combined loss of about 8.000 the taxes have been kept a seer.t killed and 40.000 wounded. by the local authorities as tar as Borodino, a fight now almost for- ha» been possible. The state board got ton. which had no Influence on of health has heard c» the condition of things there, and asked that Dr. history of the world, and which so Smith of this city make an invesu- far as actual resu'ts went, need not gation. but owing to pressing busi t even have been fought, was the ness here it has been impossible j 'or bloodiest of modern battles. Na­ him to make the trip, and it I is poleon's victory availed him noth­ thought that the conditions I have ing. for he was burned out of Mos changed a little for the better ' by cow anyway, and the Russians sim­ this time ply sacrificed men in a vain attempt The epidemic Is traced directly to at a triumph which the snows of debris of the Heppner flood which winter soon brought them anyhow left the valley strewn with the con­ The most gory of battles «as also A letter written in 1893 by Herbert the most useless, and is now one of Spencer to a high Japanese official, tents of the water closets of the up­ per valley and the city of Heppner, the least remembered. — Chicago has just been published, in which >.e dead animals and all sorts and con­ Journal enjoins the Japanese to keep Amer­ ditions of filth and refuse washed icans and Europeans at arm »-length, down and mingled with the silt of the and to absolutely prohibit Inter mar­ stream This has lain through the HARSH, BUT JUST. riage of Japs and Caucasians. summer and now is being mingled n Health Commissioner O'Hage this »'Ater used by Ione and Lexing- A I^ambeth. England jury finds ‘ evening began a f a salary he hurried away to drop it into the fingers of a "gpod fellow" wearing diamonds. Finally this brute oi a husband "reformed" one day. He got down on his knees and blubbered and promised his wife he would quit all his bad habits. She believed him. trusted him. would have died for him if called up on to do so. and life took on a bright­ er hue. He hurried out next day and hunt ed up a house to buy and closed the deal for a small place. His wife was happier for a few hours than ever before in her life. The prospects of a home of her own. a sober husband, some of the comforts of life and the refinements of civilized society filled her heart with joy. All the little hoarded store was scraped together, arrangements were made to move out of a hovel into a home, the proud little woman sung as she thought of the happiness that had come to her and kissed her hus band lovingly as he started out tha< morning to pay for their new home and take possession. But it was only a rift in the clou-is. He didn't come back that day, nor that night. Words can't picture her misgivings in that time. Next morning she went to find him and she had guessed aright With a pocketful of money he had surpris­ ed his friends with being a richer prize than usual. When she reached the den where be sat. her savings belonged to the proprietor of thr game. All around her in that hall of shame were the records of other sor­ rows as deep as her own. Tinsel and gold gleamed from the mirrored room, orchestras flayed, drunken men sung maudlin songs, brazen women peered through the curtains of the boxes, white-liveried men, ten in a rank, stood behind the polished oaken bar and smiled as she led her wretched spouse away. She hunted up the proprietor and told him her story. He was arrayed in white vest and silk hat and his diamond studs mocked her. He brushed her aside with a remark that would have cost a man bis life In Oregon 40 years ago. and joined in some half drunken crowd at the bar. Her money now belonged to him. No matter how she got it, it was now part of his property. The American Eagle edged over The chapter closed when the court toward the Russian Bear with real told her she had no recourse. sorrow in his blcod-red eyes. "I feel keenly the disgrace you ha.-e The municipal water system owned brought upon modern civilization," by the city of Pendleton, returned he said, as he scratched the clothes the people profit of $7,063.61 for the off his Filipino children and shook "It's a beastly year 1903, an increase in profits of out the chan-e. shame you know to ci.ow such out $992.10 over 1902. This money is the rages in your kingdom. Hi- e you fruits of municipal ownership of no sense of shame?' public utilities. No city in the land "None whatever," said the Rus­ should ever sell, barter or give away sian Bear curtly; "I am bit fulfill­ a franchise that belongs to the peo­ ing my destiny. "Well" said the Engle, as she ple. If a well regulated municipal swooped, down on two colored men water system will pay, well conduct­ and put them slov'ly out of their ed municipal electric light and tele­ misery, "you might at least be hypo­ phone systems will pay in equal pro­ critical about it and preserve appear portion to the amount invested. Pub­ ances."—Life. lic ownership is successful here. No scandal has been connected with the water system. *ine same success would attend the management of light and telephone systems and the aim in maintaining the municipal systems would be good service and comforts for the people, advance­ ment to keep pace with the age and not altogether profit-gettfhg. This is one of the coming issues in Pen­ dleton. The people know where their interests lie and some morning not far distant, the city will wake up to find a set of ouicials in power ready to buy or construct every pub­ lic convenience used by the people. Public ownership is not a dream GENERAL NEWS. PATIENCE. The dreariest road that ever wound between Steep mountains, with their gorg­ es dark and deep. At last will reach the plain, and lol a scene Of peaceful rest will lull each fear to sleep. Then wait; and let your heart still sing. Though every hour new dangers bring; The longest day must end at last. And joy shall smile o'er sorrows I>Mt. The darkest hour of night, when not a star Is seen to give one ray of prom­ ise bright. Will end at last in joyous morn, and far O'er hill and dale the sun will send his light. Then wait; nor lose all hope of dawn Because the hours drag slowly on; The darkest hour still brings the glow Of golden morn o'er every woe. j Cattle Outlook Favorable. William Fleetwood, the Hereford sheep and cattleman, who Is at the Antlers, says that the cattle outlook for the coming season is much bet­ ter than it was two months ago. and from present indications ne thinks there will be a great demand for stock of all kinds. "It is poMible that the prevailing prices will not equal those that have been paid growers during other years." ne says, "but the general status of af­ fairs is very encouraging to growers, who would rather have a steady market at fair prices than a finnlcky demand at high figures. Further­ more, 1 believe that stockmen this year will be able to find a market this year for all kinds of cattle, while heretofore »or a number of years it has been difficult to sell anything but prime beef in the very pink of condition." Those who have handled cattle during the past seasons are already in receipt of inquiries from eastern buyers regarding the cattie outlook, which is intrepreted by some to in­ dicate a greater demand and bettor prices for all kinds duung the com­ ing year.—Baker City Herald. Spokane Chief Police Out. Chief of Police E M. Woydt has been summarily deposed from com mami of the department by Mayor Boyd. The mayor acted under the provision of the charter which al­ lows him to take personal charge of the department. He named Police Captain James Coverly as his repre­ sentative. and directed the men '.o take their orders from him. Chief Woydt refuses to re’-pgnize the mayor’s right to depose him aud there may be a sharp conflict •>( authority. The mayor gave as his reason for deposing the chief that the de; ait mc-nt is disorganized and demor­ alized. The chief has the enmity of the sporting element and Boyd favors a liberal policy. The may it is a republican and the chief is a demo» rat.—Spokane Telegram. ' «! >■ Li^- The best known and most popular blood purifier l©T tonic on the market to-day is S S. S \ There is hardly a man, woman or child in America who has not heaid of •• S. S. S. for tboblood.” It is a standard remedy, a specific for all blood troubles and unequalled as a general tonic and appetizer. S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable, the herbs and r»xAs of which it is composed are selected for their alterative and tonic prop­ erties, making it the ideal remedy for FROM all blood and skin diseases, as it not CONGKES8MAX LIVI9ÍGBTOM, only purifies, enriches and invigor­ OF GEORGIA. ates the blood, but at the same time I know of the «ucceestui use of tones up the tired nerves and gives 8. 8. S. in many «.asee. It la the beet strength and vigor to the entire blood remedy on the market. system. FROM For Chronic Sores and Ulcers, EX-GOT. ALLE« D. CAVDLEK. Catarrh, Rheumatism, Blood Poison. H S. B. is unquestionably a rood Malaria, Anaemia, Scrofula, Eczema. blood purifier, and the beat tonic 1 Psoriasis, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Acne ever used. and such ether diseases as are due to a polluted or impoverished condition of the blood, nothing acts so promptly and effectually as S. S. S. It counteracts and erwdicaU-s the germs and poisons; cleanses the system of all unhealthy acct.mul.it 10ns and soon restores the patient to health. Write us and »/ur physicians wiU give your case prompt attention without charge. TH£ SWIFT SPCCIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. The new principle» employed in the DE LAVAL machine» randtr them unapproachatiie by any ether mine c< separator Ewery targe dairy and factcry concern in tae United States uaea exclusively the l»E LAVAL «REAM SEPARATOR Espec.ally valuable m Send for new catalogue and Supples DE LAVAL DAIRY 9 and 11 Drumm Street. San Francisco. Cai The Diet That Made a Man Strong. Gilman l^rwe. a New York ath­ lete lifted l.f*>6.tx»i pounds in 34 minutes and 35 seconds. The scale was so arranged as to bring the arm. leg. and back muscles into play Each lift of the beam under which be stood raised 1,000 pounds dead weight During the two months’ training Mr. Lowe lived on only one meal daily, consisting of three eggs. .nehalf loaf of whole-wheat bread, fruit, either oranges. gra;>es. apples or bananas, cereals, and nuts, and one glass of milk after the meal. also plenty of cooled distilled water during the day. The Crook County Journal esti­ mates that 10.u0O.cXi0 pounds of freight was hauled into Prineville from the terminus of the Columbia Southern during the year 1903. aud this Is only a part of the ingo>ag freight to Crook county. The Journal makes a very g'»>d showing of the amount of traffic that country offers to a railroad that will invade Its territory.—Antelope Herald. I»i'4«»»4»»4 »♦♦♦♦»♦»»♦»♦♦< » « »♦»»« »♦«♦«♦<»»♦♦»♦»» » »»» • > Twenty-five feet of ground 100 fe-t deep, on Fifth street. |n Portland, was sold Monday for $1.000 per foot, a raise in price of about 30 per cent in a year. W. S. DeArmand, a prominent hop­ grower of Grant's Pass. Is under ar­ rest for maliciously shooting his neighbor's cattle, because they broke Into his fields. The North Yakima theater haH been ordered supplied with a new exit as It was consiuered to be dan- »♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦»♦»»♦, I £ » t f t I ' All persons knowing themselves to be in debted to me will call and settle their their accounts as 1 need the money, ; . : Continues all this week « « « Ì 4 > Who Does • » Yoor Watch and Jewelry Repairing? ♦ t « ♦ Many of the Pendleton lad.es have taken advant­ age of this great mnne>-saving sa e. 'I her- are many more we are will ng to supply with shoes at a saving of from $100 to $2.25 on a single pair Don’t overlook this chance to secure a $5.00 Shoe for $3.25 and $3.50 It means money in yoor purse. : : If we do not we want to. and assure you you will be pleased. Good, guaranteed work at lowest prices ♦ HUNZIKER BIG STORE, COR. MAIN AND ALTA : » . .................................................................................... ♦♦»»999 The Advance Jeweler 4 CREAM OF TARTAR We have to keep the chemically pure kind for medicine. The same kind is none too good for cooking. Many good cooks buy this article here —10. 15, 50 and 60 cent packages. Our aim is to sell drugs and chemicals that just a little better than you find tn every drug store. I ¡I * ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ DIFFERENT EYES Even th'-ugh similarly troubled must have d'fTervtit glawes 8pecta<*)ea fittted to any Indi- virtual will only suit him or her. ♦ therefore a thorough test is necee- BAKING POWDER wary in every ease. My optical |«rk>r is equ p|>ed with every in- Th« remarkable increase in con­ ♦ •trument ne<-e»sary to make an sumption demonstrates kane will be the headquarters for the new Northwestern Baseball League, comprised of the teams of Spokane. Butte, Salt 1-ake and Og­ den. Dairying Dairy Apparatus : : ♦ « ♦ ; • J « ♦ J • ♦ J « • GLENN WINSLOW : Jeweler and Optician J Post Office Block ♦ KOEPPENS "■ I A. C. KOEPPEN A. BROTHERS » • W O o e ‘ ** ♦ ♦♦ ♦ Clearance Sale On Ladies’, Men’s, Misses’, Children’s, Bovs’ and Youths’ SHOES. » We are giving Big Reductions on all short lines of Shoes. These are rare and genume bargains—no better goods made at the regular price, and our Clearance Sale pnees make them cheaper than the rubbish. On all the full line« we ate giving a big reduction -scent on the Ut*T♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦' Phone Main 1181. GOOD SHOES CHEAP MIESCKE’S \ MEAT MARKET ♦ ’ J ♦ I Will meet the lowest prices quoted by anyone on meals You always "GET (1OOI) MEAT when Mieseke tills your order. ..... . ............ *—•—■■ I 316 COURT ST. . MEN Don't miss the place. The I>R. LIEBIG STAFF only Specialists for men. con tinuetocure all chronic, pri­ vate A nervou« allmeni«, Impotence ________ akin D*KT, Pb O , for 27 rear« mwllcal dlra-V r 71 Huth »treat. Portland. Oregon ; til Yaaltr Way, Seattle, Waah. Call or write BEYOND CONTROL Away «pin lb<-hor(M. round «pint ths run • bout Stnxxh: fUngt Crsshll! if it isn't ■ total wreck, bring the remains of your vehicle h< re and we will do a good ;ob of repairing lor you and cbartie you no more than Is right­ using good materials and putting In good . Fur Sale by A. C. Kocppcu & Mrva. .Kgu for Fendl'a.