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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1904)
4 THE OREGON DAILY JOUItK AL; . PORTLAND, SATURDAY- EVENING, JANUARY. ,23. 1904. 0 EXAMINATION HAD TIE! IS CTTT .KAZJi .TjaEpLOTES WHO ABB . SATO TO BlvjS TAXUCO TB1TM BAT HAT AFFEAX TO THJB KAYOS ' lOB - BEUXI1 QUXSTX0B8 ' 8VB tTntit the civil service commission fin ishes Us markings on the papers of those Twho took the tnuch-talked-of examina tion on Thursday, including the deputy auditors and clerks at the city hall, nath ing, further will be done about protesting the validity of the test. The right of the commission In the remises is not deubted, but the complaint Is generalAhat Vie lists or questions were not confined to the general duties of the incumbent and also that the problems In arithmetic were or tne-"catch phrase" order and not re quired to obtain the ends sousrht.- - , . So far as- can) be learned but two or three persons out of the entire number will secure ' the requisite percentage. Many er the clerks simply left the, ques tions unanswered and returned to their duties. Others struggled bravely through everything from fractions-to cube root and- left things In a hap-hasard way, but as there Is a special allotment, of 20, per cent for : handwriting and time,. & few may creep in the safety line with, this proviso. . " This Is the first time that the exist ence of the civil service commission has brought about such a serious, state of affairs, and as that body .is always a bone of eonten1on, it is lust now being Sample Cue of Wrinkles. Although aged' and every muscle of her face once distorted, this woman now -appears like this. She permits the use of her name when applied for by in terested persons. Her Hands and Arms Were a Mass Scabs talked about more than ever, pro' and con. ' Just - what method will be followed in relieving the condition If, as expected, so many of the present em ployes rail, is not known, but tte hopes of the majority seem to be pinned on Mayor .Williams. Tiey are mostly all old help and really caible and efficient employes, the results of the examination notwithstanding and It Is hardly likely that they cpuld leave the departments without seriously inconveniencing the business of the city. The questions which were submitted to the clerks were as follows: FirBt- Name, the principal officers, boards and bodies charged with, the gov ernment of this city. . Write A letter to the civil service commission applying for the position you desire,? - . 1 , 8. Give abbreviations for the follow tag: - The game. The present month. For the time. The next month. , ' Last' month. . 4. Sxplaln the uses in ordinary busi ness of a cash book, a journal, a ledger. Which Is the credit side of a ledger ac count? 6, If a certain number is Increased by one and three fourths, this sum: di minished by three eighths, this remain der multiplied by Ave and and two fifths, and his product divided by one and two sevenths, the quotient' will be seven and one half. What is the numberT 6. A man haa a piece of land SOI J-S rods long and 41 rods wide, which he wishes to lay out, into square lots of the greatest possible size. Uow many lots will there be? 7. "rlf the driving wheels of a locptno tlve are 18 feet inches in circumfer ence, and make three revolutions In a second how long will the locomotive be running 150 miles? I. At what times between '4 "and S o'clock, will the hour and minute hands of a clock- form a straight lineT A right angler an angle of 46 degrees? . 8.A and B own a farm together; A owns 7-12 of it and B the remainder, and the difference between their shares Is IS acres, 68ft square rods. What is B's snare 7 . , ; :v-7 ' 10. Find the cost of papering a room 25 feet long, 19 feet wide, 10. feet high. from baseboard to ceiling, with paper 4& yard wide, S yards in a roll, at 85 cents a roll, allowing for 2 doors, ' each 7 feet high, S feet wide, and for three windows, each 6 feet 9 inches high and SH feet wiae. , . . 11. Three men take an Interest in a coal mine. B invests his capital for 4 months, and claims 1-10 of the profits; C'S capital is in 8 months; and D invcfKs 16,000 for six months and claims 2-6 of the profits. How much did B and C put in? 12. A salesman asks an advance of 20 per cent on the coat of some goods, but was obliged to sell at 20 per cent-" lens than , his asking prloe. Did he gain or lose, , and what was his per cent of gala or loss? ' 13. A man wishing to sell his real es tate asked 36 per cent more than it cost him. but he dually sold it for 16 per cent less than his asking price. He gained by the transaction 1740.48. How much did the. real estate cost him? What was his asking price, and for how much did he sell it? 14. A man's property is insured at 2 Mi per cent premium, payable annually, In how many, years will the premium be has paid equal the policy. 15. A ferry company whose stock Is 128,000, pays 6 per cent dividends, semi annually. The annual expenses of the ferry are 22,950. What are the gross earnings?. 16. What, principal at 2 per cent com pound interest will gain 11,090 in. 2 years, and. what will be. the amount? Pi SCOTS 5usle Yezerskl, 384 Second Street, Cured of a Frightful Case of Eczema, After - Three years Suffering, by Madame Saxc Principal of the Saxe Institute of ' Dermatology. ' THIS TOUNfJ WOMAN HAD BEEN TREATED FOR THREE TEARS FOR ECZEMA. WITHOUT BENEFICIAL RE SULTS, UNTIL COMING TO MADAME SAXE. TWQ WEEKS AGO, AND TO DAY SHE IS SO NEARLY COMPLETE LY CURED THAT TOMORROW SHE WILL TAKE HER LAST f TREAT MENT. MISS ' YEZERSKI'S HANDS AND ARMS WERH ONE GREAT MASS OF SORES, SO AGGRAVATING THAT SHE HAD NOT SLEPT, EXCEPT WHEN OVERCOME BY FATIGUE, FOR NEARLY TWO YEARS. THE MADAME PROMISED TO CURE HER IN THREE MONTHS, HAPPILY SUR PRISING4 THE YOUNG LADY AND HER PARENTS IN PERFORMING WHAT THEY CONSIDER NEXT TO A MIRACLE, BY DOING THE WORK SO QUICKLY. THERE IS SCARCELY A HAPPIER FAMILY IN PORTLAND, AND THERE IS SURELY NOT A HAP PIER GIRL ANYWHERE IN CHRIST ENDOM. L ' ALL SUCH AFFLICTIONS AS ECZE MA, SMALLPOX PITTINGS. WRIN KLES. SCARS, POWDER BURNS, FRECKLES- OR ANY OTHER DEFOR MITY OF THE HUMAN FACE COR RECTLY AND SCIENTIFICALLY RE MOVED BY MADAME SAXE. THIS WOMAN IS RENOWNED THROUGH OUT THE BREADTH OF THE LAND FOR THE AMAZING OPERATIONS SHE HAS PERFORMED ON THE HUMAN PHYSIOGNOMY. HER SKIKL IS THAT OBTAINED AFTER TEARS ACKNOWLEDGED - Second to None on Earth AND NOW. THROUGHOUT THE EN TIRE MONTH OF FEBRUARY. JAN UARY PRICES WILL PREVAIL. THERE WILL' BE NO ADVANCE FOR THAT TIME, SO THAT THIS WOM AN'S SUPERIOR TREATMENT WILL BE AVAILABLE AT REDUCED CHARGES FOR THE NEXT TWO WEEKS. ' . ' She baa UXDOTfBTXS STOCXBS In her toraotioe. .'... :--., She has 2TSVX& made a failure, he guarantees all her work. 7 XOVST CHSSBTTOL MXTVWDXV XT TXS SXJOHTTST SISSATZSTAO- Tioir kebtots. IT 1UUU1 1 IV iJUAV rKtKCITAZ. SAZS . IKSTTTTJTB QT SE&UATOX.OOY, . Suit , Entrance 417 Ablngtoa Bid, Between Washington -wad Stark. Tele phone i attain 8893. CELEBRATE IN BINS' MEMORY E&OQTTXNT TBIBTTTB TO BOOT XiAJTB'S OBBATZ8T TOUT BT BOB- ibt urvurosTOKE rani rxo OBAM 07 MTSIO, DAlTCIItO ABB BIOITATIOK AT ABIOH BAXlV. With music, dancing and glowing trib utes to the life and works of Scotland's greatest' poet, the local Scotsmen cele brated " Bobby ' Burns birthday at Anon hall last evening. Rouert Livingstone. -who made the address of the evening, told of the achievements of the poet. hi works and Ufa, and made an eloquent acknowledgment of what the world owed to the genius whose songs and bal lads and melodies had made the land of kilt and broadsword the swseeter and better for his living. The complete program was aa follows Overture "Scottish Airs" ' Persona' orchestra Introductory remarks . Chief K. K. Baxter Baritone solo -"Scotland Yet" .... , Mr. Dom Zan Contralto solo "My Heart Is Sair" . . Mrs. Walter Reed Dance "Highland Fling" Miss Rosle Forbes Tenor solo "O' A' the Airts" ........... Mr. W. G. Hodsdon Soprano solo ""Jessie's Dream" .... , ..Mrs. Rose Bloch Bauer Address "Robert Bums" ; . , ...Mr. Robert Livingstone Bagpipe selections Pipers J. 8. Moon and D. P. McDonald "There, Was a Lad" , Quartet Danoe---"8atlor's Hornpipe" ;.. Miss Rosle Forbes Contralto solo "Wl" a Hundred Pip ers" ,. -. . .Mrs. Walter Reed Baritone- solo "Gae Bring to Me a Pint 0', Wine" Mr. Dom Zan Soprtino. solo "Bonnie Hills of Boot land" ........Mrs. Rose Bloch Bauer Tenor Solo "John Anderson, My Joe" Mr. W. G. Hodsdon "Auld Lang Syne" . . Miss Leonora Fisher, accompanist. lino Dusiiiss Famous St. Louis. Lawsuit, Exposing Awful Details of Soap Ingredients, Decided N. A. Baker, Chemist, To Give the World Something Clean. Chemist N. A. Baker, whose portrait appears herewith,- resides in his hand some home a short distance east of Portsmouth, overlooking the Columbia river. Mr. Baker has established a soap factory , near his residence, and strange to say, it is one of the most delightful places in, Portland in which to spend a little time. This Is not often said of such an institution.,: Usually a soap fac tory la about the most repulsive place on earth in which to sojourn for any time at all, but this is a different kind of soap factory, and a different kind of soap. Neither have any counterpart on earth, The atmoBphere of the factory is as per fume from the Garden of the Gods, Us product the purity of the lily or the morning dew. , There is not, on all the premises, an ounce of grease, nor does a particle of such enter Into the transpar, ent cakes. - Of what it is composed the writer does not know, and Mr. Baker is not accommodating enough to tell, be cause an eastern manufacturer has of fered 215,0.00 for the Secret which offer has been declined. 'Twenty-two or 23 years ago," Mr, Baker explained as a reason for his mak ing soap, "I resided in St. Louis, and the testimony taken in a famous lawsuit decided me to engage in my present bust ness. There was a large soap factory located in a prominent residence district. ilts noisome odors became so offensive to the .community that it was decided to drive It out of town. The necessary leg. islatlon was enacted, but the company refused to move. The courts were ap pealed to and a bitter lawsuit resulted. The fight was long drawn out, expert XSABBT-BTTTBEBTOBS widths q. (Journal Special SerTlce.) New York, Jan. 23. The marriage of Miss Emma Wallace Rutherford, younger daughter of Mrs. George Crocker, and Philip Kearny, son of Gen. John Watts Kearny of Washington, at tracted a large and fashionable gather ing to St Thomas' church today. The bride's attendants were Miss Alice H. Rutherford, maid of honor, and Miss Ella de Peyster, Miss Beatrice Wright. Miss Jessie Fanahawe and Miss Laura Swan, bridesmaids. The bridegroom had his brother, Thomas Kearny, as best man, sad the ushers were prominent young society men 'of New York and Washington. Following the ceremony at St Thomas' the ( bridal party and guests adjourned to the Crocker resi dence in East Sixty-fourth street, where the young couple fecelved congratula tions. The wedding of Miss Rutherford and Mr. Kearny unites two large for tunes. The bride, aa the daughter of Mrs. George Crocker, will eventually in herit several million dollars from the Crocker estate, and Mr. . Kearny, also, U heir o about a nUllon dollars. , V ' , T , 3 1 ' Vsnal Thing. . From the Springfield (Mass.) Union. The-Massachusetts legislature la about to meet to pass too many laws and take tootmuch time doing I. , - mm t N. A. BAKER. testimony on both sides being taken in lavish-quantities. That testimony re vealed such horrible truths relating to soap making that I decided to employ my skill as a chemist to produce some thing better and purer than had been known before. Witnesses swore that all the dead animals and carrion of the city were carted away by the scavengers to the soap, factory, and that the fats con sumed were seeking with every disease of every character known to materia med ica. It was shown that washerwomen were frequently ihnoculated with the most loathsome Infections, many losing their lives in consequence, and that nothing was too putrid or vile to be re jected by the soap factory management. This and hundreds of columns of matter descriptive of the frightful mixture of stuff, including the flesh of human bodies from the medical colleges, then so fla grant in their abuses of all decency, were published in the dally papers, and I read every word of the narrations. I found that my family and myself had been using this and similar productions on our hands, faces and bodies, the mere thought of which filled me with disgust. I then and there determined to use my knowledge of chemistry to produce something that would be absolutely free from filth and disease germs, and not only that, but possessed of curative properties as well. And now. after all these years, I am making a scientifically prepared pure glycerine soap in which there is not any fats or substances ex cept those possessed of health-giving and cleanaing qualities unlike any other sold In any market in the world. It is not a "cheap" soap, of course. It cannot be sold at prices that scavenge? fat soaps are sold for, because its ingredi ents are expensive, but we do sell at a low margin, thus placing our product on a plane with other high-grade soaps. The name I have given it is Baker's Seven-X Glycerine Soap, and you may de pend upon it it has no superior beneath the sun," Mr. Baker said many other things about soap, the which if printed would create a "sqneami8hness" in the human Innards beside which that originating from riding the foamy billows would be Joy Itself. And it would seem that he knows what he Is talking about Mr. Louis G. Clarke of the big drug firm of Woodard, Clarke & Co., writing to Mr. Baker says: "I take pleasure in stating that I have used your toilet soap for the past few months, and I believe it to be one of the very best toilet .soaps in the market My experience in the drug business has given me an opportunity to examine the various makes of soaps, both foreign and domestic, and I do not hesitate ton say that yours has no equal." '' . Dr. E. N. Crockett, Dentist W, 8. Drake and Dentist E. L. Lane, who have used the soap in their professions, eulo gise it equally as heartily as does Mr. Clarke, and Editor Wash of the Dallas Itemlzer. declares it " the finest my wife ever used." The base of the soap Is glycerine, and its combination pure vegetable oils, but the -kind of vegetables is a secret with Mr. Baker. However, out of that St. Louis turmoil and rank effluvium. Port land has acquired xu factory that prom ises to develop Into one of the big Insti tutions of the town. The seed is there; the foundation is laid;, the egg la hatched. The writer uses It for his home. He knows that the soap is all that the maker claims for It. It Is the best ever sold In thla market, by any body at any time. ' V There is no other toilet soap factory in Portland or on the North Pacific coast This one ought to be a little mint Argument Was Useless. From Judge. "But," protested the loving wife, "be fore I was married I always had a new bonnet every time I wanted one,' "Yes," answered the brutal husband, rtthout looking up fronj his paper, "and put fresh cheese in the mousetrap every night until I had caught thaf mouse in the pantry. .? f ROHE WAS NOT - Bill Ut; IN A DAY" " AND THE SCIENCE OF DERMATOLOGY CANNOT BE MASTERED BY A FLYING TRIP THROUGH THE OF FICE OF A SPECIALIST, HOWEVER FAMOUS OR BY A RAPID TRANSIT TROUGH THE FRONT AND REAR PORTALS OF A COLLEGE OF DERMATOLOGY. HOWEVER DISTINGUISHED FOR LEARNING. - , ' NOT WEEKS OR MONTHS - BUT', YEARS OF STUDY AND APPLICATION ARE REQUIRED BEFORE A CONSCIENTIOUS PRACTITIONER IN SKIN DISORDERS IS QUALIFIED OR JUSTIFIED IN' TREATING THE DELICATE SKIN TISSUES. ' TOO FREQUENTLY INJURED BEYOND REPAIR BY MALTREATMENT AT THE HANDS OF UNSCRUfU " LOUS "AND IGNORANT PRETENDERS. MADAME VAUGHN, THE ON LY GRADUATE ' DOCTOR OF DERMATOLOGY , ; PRACTICING IN THE NORTHWEST, DEVOTED FOUR YEARS . TO .HARD STUDY IN THE BEST SCHOOLS OF DERMATOLOGY OF NEW YORK AND CHICAGO, AND HER DIPLOMAS THUS EARNED MEAN SOME THING. THIS, AJDDED TO . . -S" YEARS OF PRACTICE JUSTIFY HER CLAIM, ATTESTED BY A HOST OF GRATEFUL PATIENTS, TO CORRECT OR REMOVE ALL FACIAL DISFIGUREMENTS, FROM VIRULENT SMALLPOX PITTINGS. BIRTHMARKS, WRINKLES. ECZE MA AND SCALP TROUBLES DOWN TO MINOR BLEMISHES. SUCH AS FRECKLES, PIMPLES. TAN, MOLES, SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, ETC. , ; MANY REMARKABLE CURES . HIGHLY PRAISED BY REPRESENTATIVE FAMILY PHYSICIANS, PROVE THAT THIS IS NO IDLE BOAST. BUT A TLAIN STATEMENT OF PROVED FACTS. ' 1 ? Ail ' jk J MAD AME VAUGHN Doctor of Dermatology Offices 301-302 McKay Bldg. Telephone Main 706 " Portland's Greatest Hardware Store" I 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 m "I ' n . f. '"' ' ' " . ' 1 1111 " " 1 ' " 1 - 1 ' - m a.- k "In rv I ! The History of Half a Century Tails the Story That ' smmm UNIVERSAL Stdves and Ranges BOTH WOOD AND COAL COOKERS AND HEATERS Stand peerless and alone at the front of the Stove family of the United States. They " never have had, an equal, and likely never will have.. It -doesn't look that way now. We have these Ranges, all made of steel, at from , $20 (o $55 And they are just as good when used fifty years as at the beginning. . HAMWABB, TTJTWAE, CTJTXEKT, O ABFEZT TUBS' TOOI.S, AXES, SPADES, 1BOTSU, WASHIHG MA CmWES, IUBW ACES, ETC.. All kinds of Kitchen Ware, lamps. ato4 may ha had In that department. A HOT BLAST (The following poem wis written by little Dorothy Petrle, 8 yean old. Bolae City, Idaho.) . . Granny knits so blithely now While my mama milks the cow, For we have a Cole's Hot Blast, And it's something that will last Mother, works from, morn till night, 1 And keeps the house so warm and bright, .'" .... For she has a Cole's Hot Blast, -And it's something that will last. Father never grumbles now; . ', Coal bills used to rale a row. But now he has a Cole's Hot Blast, And it's something that will last. Sister sings so cheerily, -And baby crows bo merrily, - For we have a Cole's Hot Blast, , , And It's something that will last i. . Brother studies in his chair. And is comfortable there, For we have a Cole's Hot Blast, And It's something that will last. Everything has brightened up, '' From our Granny to the pup, For wh have a Cole's Hot Blast, And It's something that will last. . ., . r j. J. KADDERLY, T5e Phone, Main 1383 Profit Merchant ODD FELLOWS' TEMPLE, F1KST and ALDER Small TELL TERRIBLE TALE OF ILL TREATMENT MIXERS WHO WENT TO WOBK XX . COAI. MUTES TB MEXICO COMB BACK WITH BEPOBTS ' OF EX TREME BRUTALITY" AND HTJUS TICE COMPACT STORE. . (Journal fipfclal Bcrtice.) Galveston, Tex., Jan. 2S. Allured by promises of big wages a number of min ers and their families' from Thurber, Tex., went to Cohuila, Mexico, some months .ago, but - have now returned and tell terrible stories of the treat ment they received. They were com pelled to sign contracts" by the owners of the big coal mines, and the company's store charged everything against them at outrageous prices. Armed guards. forced them to keep the company s rules. Attempts by some of the men to escape were punished by floggings, star vation diet and torture The federal authorities are Investigating the matter. SUPPOSED SUICIDE PROBABLY MURDER- 1 (Journal Special Service) Spokane, Wash.. Jan. 23. This city bids fair to develop a murder mystery in a few days. Tuesday morning of this week the body of Mrs. Helen Muffett was found hanging in the cellar of her home, 2130 Boone avenue, In this city. The case was apparently one of suicide and everything apparently was all right until suspicion was aroused by several little circumstances. When asked for the rope which was used by the husband he stated that, he had burned It The case will be probed by the officials. What seemed perfectly natural at first now seems . entirely improbable. The coroner has announced that he would hold an lnqueet and some strange things will have to be explained. A post mor tem has been made on the body by Dr. N. M. Baker and he found no trace of heart disease. All of the organs of the body were, in a perfectly normal posi tion with the exception of one kidney. The coroner says, in speaking of the noat mortem: "The post morten makes the cane still more perplexing. The stomach wag nearly empty. I have al ready sent the wtomach to a chemist to have it examined. I am satisfied that something besides strangulation caused Mrs. Muffett's death." BLUSTER, BUT HO BLOODSBED, From the Now York World. A young woman, secretary to a repre sentative, went to see the president a day or' two ago on some business for her employer, She was shown Jnto the president's office and sat down near the door while the president talked with a man ahe didn't know. The man asked the president about something. "No!" shouted the president, so em phatically that the windows rattled. There was a lively dlwcuselon, and the young woman thought the , two man were coming to blows. She arose and began to tiptoe ..out of the room. "Keep your seat, madam," tha presi dent roared. "There will be ho blood shed here unless I do It, and I will give you ample warning' A. V. FAWCETT WILL WAKE UP TACOMA WARM riQHT TOR BOMHTATIOlf FOB XATOB XX CITY Of DISTUTT -TOWN HAS QOZTE 940,000 TO THE BAB DURINO CAMPBELL'S AD MIHISTR ATIOH. (Journal Special Service.) Taconia, Jan. 23. Although the city conventions are still six weeks away, the political pot Is boiling right mer rily. A mayoralty election is in pros pect which will eclipse many previous campaigns In the fierce fight which Is promised on the floor of the Republican convention. At present there are but two avowed candidates for the Republican nomina tion, but others are in the background, and for the first time in many years the Democrats of Tacoma have organised and are confident of an even chance or better of success at the polls. Their confidence1 Is due to the fact that the Republican party seems to be hopelessly split In sentiment between the present mayor, Louis D. Campbell, and candidate for a third term and A. V. Fawcett, once a Democrat, now a Re publican. . The situation Is peculiar In this that the man who has headed the Democratic ticket in Tacoma in nearly every Cam paign since 1894. and who was the late Gov. John R. Rogers' strongest oppo nent for the Democratic nomination for governor In 1900, is now contesting for the Republican nomination for mayor. He has been an aspirant for that office ever since 1S92, and yet has never oc cupied the chair except for a portion of a year, being unseated by order of the court. Fawcett'a political record Is an inter esting one, especially as ne now seems to have captured one wing of. the Re publican party and promisee to beat Mayor Campbell at the primaries. In 1S92 Fawcett was defeated for the Dem ocratic nomination by Alexander Parker, now dead, who was defeated by E. h. Huson, the Republican nominee. In 1894 Fawcett, the Democratic can didate, was defeated by Ed 8. Orr, the Republican. In 1896 the same candi dates were In the race, and the returns showed Fawcett's election by a majority of two votes. He was seated and filled the municipal offices with his friends. Orr contested the election and was de clared the rightful mayor by the supe rior court. In ,, the meantime the ballots were stolen from the vaults in the city hall and never discovered, making It impos elble fcr Fawcett to appeal the case. He was unseated and Orr finished the term. In 1898 Fawcett was again an unsuccessful Democratic candidate. In 1900 Fawcett. again the Democratic! leader, was defeated In a joint conven tion of Democrats and Populists by the Popullat nominee, whom ne afterward publicly fought. Then Fawcett made his sensational fight for the guberna torial nomination und failed. That was his last appearance in a Democratic con vention. He camo home And announced j his intention of becoming a Republican, , Campbell was re-elected two years ago by a big majority, and now, wanta an other Indorsement of hi administration. Fawcett'a ward workers. - however, have undermined Campbells strength, except in what is known aa the Vsllk stocking" district. Campbell's own IE 4 The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been. in use for over SO years, has borne the signature of ' - and has been made under his per-V-afi sbnal supervision since its infancy All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children- Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA . Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Fare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It , contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic) substance. Its age is its guarantee. Itr destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and 'Wind ' Colic It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation " and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's PanaceaThe Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALV7AY0 Sears the Signature of Tie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ?mc eeimua oottMw rt aiiMiv murv, tin. v-o. orrv. i y-'v friends admit the inroads the former Democrat haa made in his campaign. There are threats that Fawcett'a per sonal record will be brought into the fight. r Campbell'a administration ha antag onized many voters during the past year, and at the same time there are many who will not stand for Fawcett's nom ination. A third candidate is therefore looked, for, and it is prophesied that both Campbell and Fawcett will be dropped by the city convention. 1 The Democrats are waiting to see whom the Republicans will nominate in March, and they promise to elect a Dem ocrat mayor of Tacoma for the drat time clnce Fawcett's election eight "years ago If either Fawcett or Campbell is nominated by the Republicans,; '. Fawcett's strength Is greatest in the down-town districts. Campbell's policy toward tte saloon and gambling men and hia effort to restrict, the social evil has made him enemies, while Fawcett la said to have promised ! to throw the town wide rvpn, or at least as nearly so as possible. Taenm.Vs revenue from the ' police court has dfcrrased nearly 110,000 In a year because of the discontinuance Of the fine system on disreputable houses and trie closing of gambling and slot machines. '". i.,, XUX ZH STEAD OF HOVETX0O2T. Juurnl ftpecUl Scrvlr..) Spokane, Wash.. Jan. 23. John R. Cook has postponed his wedding for the present. Cook was at the county audi tor's efflce in the act of obtaining a It cense to marry Miss Ore 'E. Tershsll when Sheriff Insker of Lincoln county walked, into the offlcs and placed him under arrest The young man la s cused of Jumping a board bill at Dsveri. port aftd waa taken there yesterday H await trial. Don't Scc!d Irritability la a n.rvmis sT-ti Strengthen the ' nerves with I n; .V. Nervine. 8ltp b?ttr, t.n r. w better, feel bmter tfrwl be ) 'r. Bold eo gur.nl. Uvii va ut-rvi i p. '4