0 M ATWOOD'S TONIC BITTERS A BOON TO OVERWORKED MEN A BLESSING TO WEAK WOMEN It Improves the Appetite, Aids Digestion and Relieves Dyspepsia -FOK SALE BY- Brock & McComas Company THE nODERN DRUQGISTS - PENDLETON e8 k ft of those who engage in any other, or permit it, should come off. WMle weyler, the butcher, was perpetrating his outrages the Amer ican soldiers were pursuing the lui mane course. They fought their en emy in the open field, were as brave ! as Hons, invincible and unrelenting The retirement of "Kill and Burn" in battle, hut as charitable and ten Smith from the army by President der-hearted as women to their fallen Koosevelt is in keeping with the mod- foes. FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1902. HUMANE WARFARE. The Americans won the applause of the civilized world and the respect of their enemy, while "Weyler and his advocates are without friends and are condemned by all mankind. OUTCOME OF THE SODE. TRACY EPI rn idea of conducting war. Civiliza tion will not tolerate inhuman war fare. In fact, such a warfare has al ways rebounded against the army re sorting to it and has done more harm than was over accomplished by it. It brought the sympathetic Lafayette to the aid of the colonists in the bit ter hours of the American Revolu tion and aided in the defeat of the British. It ended the career of the rf-eat Napoleon. It dampened the cause of the Confederates when they permitted the Raider Morgan to pur sue his course without remonstrance. 'W . ut- Whlje thQ W(jra js seejdng notori. '"S Ul iJJUIiy U11U -tYnUerSOHVlUO nil nHmlnnl olnac 1c nnf 1 n ,r,rl n ,r in this feature. In fact, the criminal has always loved notoriety. While The escape of Tracy and Merrill from the Oregon penitentiary and the chase which has followed for more than a month, it is suggested, will bring about a new phase in crime, a now method of handling prisoners, and a more desperate class of criminals. necessary to kill, and then left tho ! country ho would doubtless nave es caped, but ho robbed when it was not necessary to rob took meals by force when thoy would have been given him freely and by this means has created a terror wherever he has gone. If tho determined criminal of in telligence should start out as Tracy did in the future he will only kill when it is necessary to kill, and will kill with a method showing friend ship for those who befriended him. but convincing those who oppose him that it will cost them their lives. In this manner he will soon have many friends and assistants among those who have sympathy for a hunt ed man. and instead of being like Tracy not having a place to lay his head he will have a host of people who would aid him rather than take chances of getting his ill-will. Virginia Is considering an appro prlation of $50,000 for state repre sentation at the World's Fair. That state, the home of Thomas Jefferson, who bought the Louisiana territory, has more than ordinary interest in the coming exposition. The fact that all exhibit space is free at the World's Fair and that every reasonable laclllty will be ot tered to exhibitors to get their ex hibits in place at small expense, is stimulating the interest of manufac turers in the fair to a marked de gree. Six Physicians Said Diabetes. Bpiglit's DisciiHc und Diabetes Are Positively Cui-iible. prisons. The hangers-on of Sher man's army in its march to the sea, blackened the records of war and made wounds that are still open and charged to Northern arms. It arous ed tho world against the Spaniards and brought Uncle Sam's soldiers down upon them with unrelentini hands. It prolonged the war of the Boers and obtained for. them the ad miration of tho civilized world' and finally gained for and advantageous surrender. Cruel ty in warfare is the "Jonah" to the nation that attempts it, and th stamp of condemnation is upon it forever. The bloodiest of battlefields will ever be looked upon with pride by both sides who engaged in the con flict, and the surviving combatants maimed and aged may shake handf and forgive and love each other, and monuments may be erected from the same fund to tho dead on either side and the same hand may strew flowers on the graves of each of the dead combatants, and their posterity point with pride to the heroes of bothsldes; But in case of an inhuman warfare, not only do the combattants over har bor a hatred for it in their breasts which hatred grows with a magnify ing intensity from posterity to pos terity, but history and mankind re cords and condemns it It ever re mains a black spot on the pages of history and is an indelible blot against tho nation that permits it. In the heat of conflict men forget themselves and their duty to man. kind, unless thoy are above the aver age in coolness and self-control. Thoy aee their comrades slain and wrlth Ing In the agonies of death and hear of outrages being perpetrated upon them, and tho impulsive sentiment would bo to retaliate, and this is often done by those who are unable to weigh with reason "at all times But tho result is to forever place a stigma upon them and their country. People In the civil walks of life, and history, Judge from without the smoke of battle, away from tho blood and carnage of war, without the senti ment ongendered from Iosb of friends or dear ones, upon th cold rules gov erning the laws of nations and civil ization, and they must bo right. Wanton killing and burning will not pass without condemnation. Tho "wajer euro" and all other cruelties receive a like fate. Tho warfare may have been waged against those who resorted to all kinds of savagery and cruelties, but it will not justify retal iation. A humane warfare Is demand ed, and is tho only warfare that will .irJu In the ond, and tho ofOcial heads. Tracy is the worst hounded man in and the mark of every arm of the law, yet he is, in a sense, the most idolized hero in tho country, In the minds of many. There are those who would be willing to give their lives for half the notoriety which Tracy has gained. "Give me the notoriety that Gen. Lew Wallace received for writing them a peaceful Ben Hur," said an unfortunate author wlio nau tailed to eaten tne public, "and I would be willing to die." "Give me the notoriety of Tracy," say a hundred low-calibre criminals in ev ery state " and I would willingly hang." A few instances of crime have al ready appeared from the result of Tracy's success in eluding the offi cers. One only has to study the dis patches and compare notes to see tho courage inspired in tho criminal by the accounts of the Tracy reign of terror. In the slums of the cities, among the bullies of the villages and the criminal class of .the country ad mirors may be found for Tracy, and in many cases men who would gladly imitate this bloody hero. It will be done in thousands of cases. There are criminals everywhere who now only await the chance. They would have done it before If thoy had only thought of it. Convicts, Jail-birds men for whom warrants are out for arrest will plan for arms and resist anco and attempt to make a record such as Tracy has made. According to the dispatches it would seem that he cannot last much longer. But this has. been apparent several times before. Although ho has had the luck of one with a charm ed life, and he seems to still thus continue favored, there can bo but one result; ho must yield to the law and die liko a dog. Tho dispatches may announce It tonight, tomorrow, a week, a year or Jive yearB hence; It will ultimately come. No criminal will over adopt a plan that the min Ions of the law will not counteract. While tho criminals will follow Tra cy's method and will have some suc cess, yet the officers of the lawwlll more universally adopt a plan to counteract their work and bring them more speedily to Justice It will come to a life to life strug gle in many Instances, and this blood thirsty seeker after notoriety will bo tho catiso of much bloodshed ; the rules of the penitentiaries and pris ons and tho conduct of officers in making arrests will be changed, but criminal Intelligence will finally yield to that of tho honest and law abiding. While Tracy is not a man of in tellect, yet his foolhardlness and luck combined have given him suc cess, and tho intellectual criminal will tako advantage of what he has accomplished and uso his methods with an Improvement on them. If Tracy had killed only when It was John A. 1'hclps, of tho Hotel Itepelier, 781 Sutter atreot, au okl-tiine Sau Francisco busi ness inaii, Interviewed December 21, 1001: Q. It is hard for peoplo to believe Brlght'a Disease and Diabetes are curablo. Will you let us mention your case ? A. You may. I've Jold many about it. Q. Did physicians declare it Diabetes ? A. A half dozen did. For threo years I" de clined steadily till anally I had to soil my business. The last doctor thought I'd livo only about six Treoks and advised me to straighten out my affairs. Q- How soon did vou begin to mend under tho Fulton Compounds ? A. Tho speelUc gravity soon began to drop, but it was nearly a year beforo I was perfectly sound. Q. Did any whom you told of it take It 1 A. Several cases nf m.ihntps sinrt tlrlrrht'n Disease, upon hearing my experience, took It and recovered. Q. Can you recall the names t A. I don't like to mention thnm wlUinnt their permission. Ono was a friend in Collin wood, Ohio, who was pensioned off by his com pany as incurable. He recovered. Another was that of a well-to-do lady in this city, who was also given up by her physicians. Sho is now perfectly well. Q. What do jou think now of tho curability of chronic Bright's DIseaso and Diabetes 1 A. I havo known for soveral years that they are curablo. Q. Hut the books say that they are notf A. Certainly thev do. and fr that raasnn many wlltaot at first believe it, but thoy will gradually. Medical works agree that Hrlght's DIseaso and Diabetes aro iucurablo, but 8? per cent, are positively recovering under tho Fulton Com pounds. (Common forms of kidney complaint and rheumatism offer but short resistance.) Price, 81 for tho Hrlght's Disease nnd 11.50 for tho Diabetlo Compound. John .T. Fnifnn rv. 2 Montgomery St., San Francisco, sole com! pounders. Freo tests made for ti.itlnntn. rn. scripuvo pampniei mailed ireu. F. W. Schmidt & Co., Sole Agents contagious Blood Poison Is the name, sometimes given to what is generally known as the BAD DIS EASE. It is not confined to dens of vice or the lower classes. The purest anu ue.se people are sometimes infected with this awful malady through handling the clothing, drinking from the same vessels. using the same toilet articles, or otherwise coming in contact with persons who have contracted it. It begins usually with a little blister or sore, then swelling in the groins, a red eruption breaks otlt on Ton ytmrs nfro i contracted a bad case the body, sores and ulcers appear of Blood Poison. I was undor treatment in the mouth, the throat becomes of a physlolan until I found that ho could in till- i io uu, hrnws and do mo no Kooi' Thon began taking ulcerated, tho hair, eye brows anu s s s, i commenced to Improve at onoo lashes fall out; the blood becoming nnd In a vory Bhort tlmoull evidence of more contaminated, copper colored tho disease disappeared. I took six bot splotchesandpustulareruptionud ties and sores appear upon different parts of uua the body, and the poison even destroys the bones. S S S is a Specific for this loathsome disease, nnd cures it even in the 'worst forms. It is a perfect antidote for the powerful' virus that pollutes the bloou anu penetrates to aw pans oi tne system. Unless you get this poison out of your blood it will ruin you, and bring disgrace nnd disease upon your children, for it can be transmitted from parent to child. S. S. S. contains no mercury or potash. but is guaranteed a strictly vegetable compound. f Write for our free home treatment book and learn nil nbout Contagious Blood Poison. If you want medical advice give us n history of your case, and our physicians will furnish all the information you wish without any charge whatever. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, 6A. net)D&( Harvest Supplies j 6 fi T Vj iWI Ik. i Hem And Can s,. U Von ...r1?! for Coot We are Drenar.j . .1 nro l . d-il ob. i.. 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L, Wakefield & Co.'s Music Waeoom, Court St. SEVEN DIFFERENT MAKES of Seven of the Greatest Piano Manufacturers in the World are Here Displayed- Head this list of pianos : LUDWIG HARDMAN JEWETT SCHILLER SMITH & BARNES ' KINGSBURY We also handle such celebrated makes as Knabe, Steck, Fisher, Franklin, " & Co , Willard, Heller, Krell, Cable, Harrington, Ellington, Hamilton, Baldwin; rsusn a uerts, and others. This list includes the best makes for tone, style and quality, and the pn s lowest ever offered on strictly high grade pianos. A Regtda Harvest lot Piano Buyers I the www ywwwwwwywwwwvw vwvwwvvvvw wv wvwVv'O A Special Invttation to Yotf We most cordially invite you to call at our music woreroom on Court street, and we will take great pleasure m showing you the new stylos in pianos, as this list inciuues tne chic ideas. i inciuueR rnr nhtr- in not- i S. L WAKEFIELD & COMPLETE MUSIC WAREHOUSE CO.