Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904, August 01, 1899, Image 1

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    (în c ju ilU *
C O Q U ILLE C IT Y , O REGO N, T U E S D A Y . A U G U S T
V O L . 18.
J J R . J. B U R T
8URO EO N AN D
O O Q U IL L E
P H Y S IC IA N .
C IT Y .
“ H onor thy father and thv mother that
Ihy day» may be long upon the lund which
the Lord, thy God, giretn thee.”
O itE G O N .
I hare honored ray father and mother;
I have kept the F ifth Command.
But tell me, ye learned doctors,
Where is my promised land?
I L L prom ptly lOEponil to a ll oall«,
day or ntatit.
W
S r n iT B 1“ “
1
Th e Lord, my God, he gave it,
For so yourselves you say;
Th en tell me, ye learned doctors,
Who took my land away?
B A TH ROOMS,
O
H
p p o s it e
o tel
C c q
u il l e
,
I knew the whole law o f Moses,
And in his booki I see,
That though 1 be poor and feeble,
Th e laud comes back to uie.
Front Street, Coqaille C ity , Or.
i b h t - o l a b s
F
apartments.
Cat*
ip tlE
Th*
shaves
at livin g
and
h a ib
rates; nice Bathing
H e meant the words he ottered,
When he said the land was mine;
But fo r you, ye learned doctors,
H ave they lost their sense divine?
_______________
CO M M E LIC I A L , ----
And when the landlord’ s agent
Keeps donning me fo r rent.
I wonder, wonder, wonder,
W hat the F ifth Commandment meant.
M olt m odem
arranged B AH B E Ii
S H O P in Ooquille O lty.
M. M. McDonald, Proprietor.
And when you speak o f heave*
And the harps the angels hold,
And the house made o f jewels.
And th e streets all pared with gold—
Ö. L . M O O N ,
A tto rn ey and
O ounaolor at L a w
I don’ t OAre much fo r the jewels
Nor the harps the angels play,
Bat I long indeed fo r a heaven
Where there’ ll be no rent to pay.
- E b n m t H. C bosut .
ooyciLLK orrï, ohkuon .
Baal Batata and Oollaotlon» a Specialty
The methods of taxation in the
Australan colonies are worthy o f
D ealei ia R i a l E s t a t i o f all kinds.
study. In South Australia there is
/ l O Q U I L L * G ra n ie No. 290, Patrons o f
^
Husbandry meet on the 1st Saturday a graduated income tax, with'an
exemption of small incomes, and
mi «n «k month at 10 o'olook a. m.
with a higher rate on incomes de­
N . L obhnz , Master.
■ . PaaneoberR, See.
rived from property than on in ­
Y B T L E C A M P , NO. 1»7, W O O D M E N comes derived from personal exer­
» , 1 o f the W orld, m eet, at M eeooio H all tions, and there is a tax on the un­
la t and Sd Monday n i«h u o f each month.
improved value of land. New Zea­
A. 3. K hkbwoc
Consol.
G eorge T . Moulton, Clerk.
land has a progressive income tax
and a graduated tax on land vulues.
O U R T C O Q D IL L E , N O . 1«, F O R E S T -
improvements are exempted
e r i o f Amerioa, meetn every secondhand All
fo a rth Thursday arynlaR, at Masooio H a ll from the land tax. I f the owner is
opon.
C oq aille C ity. Oregon
dissatisfied with the tax, the govern­
Oso. O. L eacil , 0. B.
O
ment will buy the land at its own
H . H. L obese , It. 8
_
This extreme step has
'
K N L Y T L E P O S T , NO. 27, O . A. M. valuation.
meets every first Monday n iebt o f been taken in only one case, with
aaoh month. Viaitimr comrades ia seed the result that there is a profit of 5
■•Ending oordially invited to attend.
per cent, and that land formerly
B. H , H a s e in , Post Com.
1. Q u ic k , Adjutant.
__ occupied by a few shepherds now
many thriving settlers.
E N . L Y T L E , W. H. C., NO. 9. M EETS supports
JT in C oqm lle C ity on the first and third The government has also power to
ednesday afternoon in each month.
purchase estates which are not be­
M bs . W. H it e , Pres.
M bs . Ida H abbimoton . Seo.
ing properly developed. The sys­
f'lH A D W I C K L O D G E , NO. « « « , _
A. F. tem is undoubtedly based upon the
' evening
teachings of Henry George, who
\ »n d A i f .. , ______
eets ___
on _________
Saturday
even
__ i or nelore
■ ' f ui| moon. V isiting breth-
traveled through Australia and New
i»u <K>rd.ally invitad.
Zealand, but there are modifications,
H abbt K bibs , W. M.
C . W . W h it ,. See.
chiefly the exemption of small pro­
A F T E R , N O . « , O. E. 8 ., perties up to £500, and a certain
M lâÀli
evenir if on or before exemption on larger
properties.
-------- ----------------
M
C
G
B
V u ^ v t-H IU M ,
Jlere n fto ra t 7 7 $ );*n
.th ereafter at 2 o’clock in
«lu ». a S oba A. M c E w en . W . M.
M m . J b m m ii Ito si, 8 bo .
/ O O Q U IL L E L O D G E , NO. AS, I. O . O. F.,
\ J meets every Saturday evening. V isit­
ing brethren in good standing cordially
:" r “ #d-
J. A. S eed , N. O.
J . S. L * whence , It. S.
f 'i O Q U I L L E E N C A M P M E N T , N O . 26,1.
O. O . F., meets every first and third
Thursdays in each month at Odd Fellows'
hall. Cordial invitation eiten ded to all vis­
itin g patriaroha in good atanding.
F
U . E. B o ok , 0 . P.
O. F. B o o tb ll , Soribe.
. 20,
I. O. O . F., meets »v ery 2d aud 4lh
Wednesdays in eaoli month, at Odd F e l­
lo w s'h a ll. M bs . J u l it h C o l l ie b , N . G .
3. 8 . L awbknce . S.
M
lo d g e
,
no
Central
Meat MarHet{(4£
Curran & Gass, Proprietors.
a v in g
bought out th e cen -
M e I M eat Market, we w ill be able to
fa m ish all kinds o f M eat— Beef, Mutton
and Pork, and w ill nay the highest cash
prioe for beef, hogs, sheep, eto.
C U ltH A N A GASS.
H
—
O. O. O ILK E Y. PROPRIETOR,
Coqaille City. Or.— OpposlU Depot.
Keeps only Pure W ines and Liquors and
Fine Cigaca.
Th a Americas Olab Whisky is one o f the
specialties served in th esj Clnbrooms.
lest Billiard Table in Southern Oregon
pETER LOGGIE,^
BANDON, O R ,
K E E P S C O N S T A N T L Y ON H AN D
A F U L L L IN E OF
Burial Caskets
Lowest Cash Prices.
A .T
Orders left with R. S. K n o w l t o n ,
CoqntLLE C i t t , w ill rece'.ve prompt
•ttenton.
________________
COOS B A Y
larMs ail Stone Worts
C. W. PATERSON, Prop.
M anafaotnrer o f M arble Monuments. Hen 1-
stonne. Tablets, eto.
eem etery lo t i enclosed w ith atone coping
or curbing. Iron railin g* furnished to o r­
der. Correspondence noli cited from parties
liv in g in the conntry or other towns who
m ar w ith anything in my line o f bnaineaa.
N iM o n r o
O mio .
w p a v l -A__i*.
a he
‘‘Flaming Sw o rd" Thrusts,
/ ^ tO Q U IL L E O O U N C iL. NO.298 O F T H E
I j Fraterna) Aid Aasooiation meets thè
Sd Tnesdav evonlng o f each month.
M bs . E l l a P annhnbebo , Pres.
D . F . D ean . Ben.
T h e L o n e S ta r
-*
exemption of improvements, which
is strictly Georgian. Mr. Walker
says that the Australians* have no
prejudice agaiust wealthy men who
parn their wealth, aud no sympathy
with loafers. He draws a most fa­
vorable picture of the social lifo of
the Australian people and leaves
the impression that the bold vent­
ures in government which he de­
scribes have bten eminently success­
ful. And those who are interested
in the welfare of humanity, whether
they like the laws or not, must hope
that it is all true.— Toronto Globe.
'he stternooi.
uebekah
San Francisco, July 24.— The Ex­
aminer today prints a detailed
story of the alleged evils of the
contract labor
system in the
Hawaiian island as practiced by the
coffee and sugur plantation owuers,
and quotes as its authority Rabbi
M. S. Levy, of this city, who lias
just returned from a tour of the
islands. I t says;
"Thirty-six Galicians, subjects of
the Austrian empire, are now con­
fined in Oahu prison, Honolulu, be­
cause they refuse to comply longer
with the onerous conditions imposed
on them by their owners. They
were convicted of ‘deserting con­
tract service’ and were sentenced to
indefinite imprisonment They gain
release only by buying their way
out of prison or goiDg back to the
cane fields.”
The war with Spain lasted only
M A B S H F IE L D , O U EOON .
a m ie
Either
Incomes and Land Valves Largely Bear the 114 day«. The war with the Philip­
Cosl of Government.
pines has now lusted 130 days.
A-ttomey .a t - L a w ,
Ut ( w o n
________
Mob
Afte
‘Where Are We A IT "— Your Neck
lo the Yoke or a Noose.
Our Two War*.
TAXATION IN NEW ZEALAND.
John F. Hail,
Investigations.
CONTRACT LABOR IN HAWAII.
The Fifth Commandment.
MOORE,
Prejudice fears the truth.
Empty heads are easily sounded.
Sense and science must go to­
gether.
The few are wise; the many are
otherwise.
Men die because they are too cor­
rupt to live.
The leaders of fho trusts have
become trustees of the American
nation.
I. Can’t is the name of a persist­
ent devil with a subtle influence
which disintegrates mental and
moral forces; he operates in millions.
The religious bodies are more
concerned about getting the word
God in the constitution of the
United States than they are about
getting the life o f God in the con­
stitution of man.
The one hundred and twenty-five
American trusts, with a capital of
over $6,000,000,000, absorb all the
wealth created by 3,500,000 men.
These millions of men are perform­
ing no other use in the world than
sustaining the gigantic corpora­
tions; and the only use made of the
capital thus created, is to enrich
and gratify a few thousand million­
aires. Suppose that the million­
aires were left out of the question,
and the laborers should receive the
benefit of all they produce? In­
stead of living in poverty now, they
would possess not only the neces­
saries, but also the luxuries of life.
Tbs only true prosperity is in the
equitable distribution of wealth.
The trusts are great syndicates of
co-operation- -co-operation not for
the benefit of the many, but for the
benefit of the few who persistently
steal the wealth, aye, the very life
of millions.
Oil Well Trust.
Los Angeles, Cal., July 24.— It ia
reported here that an oil well trust
is being formed to take in all the
oil properties thus far developed in
the Coaling and W hittier districts.
The new company will have capital-
1 izatiun of $20,1H)0,000.
Our army seDt to Cuba under
General Shatter consisted of about
17,000 officers and men, little more
than half of whom reached the
fighting line. General Miles took
to Porto Rico 3415.
Since Dewey accomplished his
mission in destroying the Spanish
fleet tweDty-three army expeditions
have crossed the Pacific and four
have gone by way of the Suez canal
to conquer the islands for which we
paid Spain $20,000,000. These ex­
peditions have carried 1299 officers
and 37,287 men, but nearly 500 ad­
ditional officers have gone to Ma­
nila, and nearly 2000 men who did
not accompany the regular expedi­
tions. Of the total force, up to
today, scarcely 1,000 have returned.
General Otis has, therefore, had
nearly twice a s many soldiers as
were required to conquer Spain in
Cuba and Porto Rico. His army is
twice os large as the force with
which
General
Scott whipped
Mexico.
Our losses in Mr. M cKinley’s war
in the Philippines are not bulletined
for the public by the war depart­
ment, but they far exceed our loss
in the war declared by congress
against Spain. Thera lias been
lighting nenriy every m y W dcb hos­
tilities were begun in Manila, and
our war department is now striving
desperately to send 5000 more re­
inforcements to General Otis. Com­
mander Ford, Admiral Dewey's fleet
surgeon, who has just returned
home, says: “ When I left we held
not quite so much ground as was
ours during the first part of August
lost year, and our liues were re­
stricted to the suburbs of Mauila.”
The splendid valor, dash aud
endurance of our soldiers is the only
redeeming feature of this unauthor­
ized, unnecessary, un-American and
apparently endless war of subjuga­
tion.— New York World.
The Standard O il tr i- t is again
investigated. This nipkse about the
fifteenth time. The Standard Oil
fellows seem to enjoy ¡L I t gives
tnem free advertisement No new
wickoduess has come to ligh t It is
like airing the devil. So far as
wickedness is concerned, the devil
reached his depth at tho first plunge.
After fooling a woman, the devil
could go no lower. Aft» r wrecking
every competing firm in the United
States, the Standard Oil Company
could go no lowdr. T ie outrage­
ous charges for oil ar» virtues be­
side driving honest men out o f busi­
ness, wrecking their fortunes, and
landing them in the poor house.
The Standard Oil Company is away
below highwaymen, bid so are all
the other trusts who are working
on the same line; and this investi­
gating business is on as low a plane
of stupidity aa the trusts are low in
dishonesty.
America will yet be a hissing and
a bv-word for having so much ras­
cality, and doing nothing but inves­
tigate. Tho United States senate
has had scores of investigating com­
mittees on the evils of trusts, rail­
road extortions, food adulterations,
economic conditions and various
other things. The United States
senate investigated things that were
so open that half th- people in the
United States knew all about them,
but it never passed a bill to remedy
any evil. The same may be said of
the house o f representatives.
Judging congress by the way it
acts, it is the most stupid body on
G od’s earth.
But it is
not
stupidity; it is corruption.
The
people are stupid for bearing with
so much tomfoolery.
I t is more than time that we
-i, t-r inveg-
elected men who hav<
. . 0 slamp-
tigations and a littk
ou t
liiat oil it
The dulleat <oun!.
iti} *tion is
to see th:,t all tbiBif-
<L vu g
done for the purpoa
' ref nvoJ-
dust Tuke tlft. it f.
; i * a’ iit ir
tigation i s a sa mple
, o.nee Pa­
sample, an 1 with tl>
ioli -linn
fore the conunitti
my
would have fo llo w *
ut i
honest jury in tha if
beef conti iciois w.qi/
fte>vs
The SU a bird Oil. it
the devil, asl.s for
is hardei
Inn
taken sec ire
court, »ac 1# . pp:e :V.tr rtl;
’
throwing ivealtn into the la},
men who are not v. rth.y to Uvei
because tb y have few r redeemable
traits iu tl «ir chinai or than ruu:|
who openly rob th ir ilio w s.—Kant
sas Agitator.
Kentucky Democrats Bolt-
Howling Green, Ky., July 24.—
The anti-Goebel Democrats met
here in large, numbers today and
adopted resolutions condemning
the movement, inaugurated by the
so-called
Democrats in eastern
states, to abandon the principles of
the Chicago platform. William J.
Bryan was endorsed for president,
The Class Struggle: There is a and the Louisville convention was
movement on foot to enlist nntives condemned as a fraud and its nomi­
of the Philippines to fight the na­ nees repudiated.
tives that are in arms against Uncle
Charged with Murdering Clara Filch.
Sam.
The British have long used
native soldiers in India to hold other
Portland, July 24.— The coroner’s
natives in subjection to British rule,
jury returned a verdict, that Clara
and now preparations are being
Fitch, whose dead body was found
made to ship Ghoorkas from India
in Cycle Park on Thursday, met
to fight the Boers in south Africa,
death by strangulation, and charg­
and there isn’t a doubt but what in
ing Frank McDaniel, who was with
an emergency the ruling class in
the girl when she was Iasi seen,
England or America would use these
with her murder.
alien races to protect their own
------------- i » » #------------
privileges.
A ll the armies of the
AG ENTB W ANTED — FO R “ T H E L IF E
world are composed o f the work­ End Achievements ot Admiral D ew ey," the
world’s erestest naval hero.
By Marat
ing class, and every battle of every Halstead, the life-ions friend and admirer
war is a battle between two sets of ot the nation's idol Biggest and best book;
600 pages, 8x10 inoheainearly 100 nogee
workers, urged on by two sets of over
halftone illustrations. O n ly $1.60. Enor­
exploiters.
The police, the con­ mous demand. B is commissions. Outfit
stabulary, the militia o f every coun­ free. Ghnnoe o f a lifetim e. W rite qaiek.
Th e Dominion Company, 3d F loor Caxton
try are composed o f workers, and Bids-, Chioaso.
are used when necessary to crush
A Balt Lake paper thinks the
their fellow workers into subjection
to the rule of the exploiting class. miniature ocean near that city is the
Fools or blind— or blind fools— ideal for summer bAthing. Its alti­
tude is higher than that o f the
which?
Alleghanies.
It is impossible to
Binghamton Independent: Hanna
sink in it, and there is neither tide
told the folks of London that there
nor undertow.
Several crowded
was not a man in the United States
trains reach the beach daily.
who wanted work but what could
On Monday, July 24th, an explo­
get i t He must have meant political
puppets who are to have the 10,000 sion in the coal mine of the Red
places thrown open by the president Stone Coal Company, near Browns­
when he suspended the civil service ville, Pa., killed three men outright
law. He could not have meant and entombed 70 others, many of
common workiDgmeD, for there are whom are believed to be dead.
thousands of them looking for work.
At Berlin, July 24th, daring a
I f any oi e doubts this let him ad­ thunder storm, 40 persons leaning
vertise for help-
agaiDst a wire railing at Charlotten-
Self Reliance: A good citizen is bnrg CyclS Park track were struck
a man who loves his fellow-men, by lightning. Three were k ill*)
and loves them so much and in so and 20 severely injured.
practical a manner that he is willing
The Oregon regiment will be
to give of his time, energy and mustered out at San Francisco, on
money to secure for them a govern­ August 7th, and may leave for home
ment under which they can live on the 8th.
righteously, honestly and happily.
.
West Plains
Quill:
General
Strike seems to be commanding the
arm] o f laboring men just now,
instead of General Prosperity, who
has been claimed to be the com­
mander of the army of workers for
r
the last year.
1, 1899.
SAM JO NES’ LOGIC.
Excerpt from HI* Lecture Last
Cltdstone Perk.
Week
Mias Cordelia Moore, o f Malone,
N . Y ., until recently, has been a
life-long invalid from palpitation
o f the heart and weakness o f ihm
blood.
Physicians were puzzled over
her case, their most skillful efforts
were baffled.
Various remedies
were tried without avail. T h e pro­
verbial “ change o f climate” was
advised, but the constant change
wore upon her until, to quote her
mother's words, “ she became a
living ghost.’ ’ Miss Moore said:
"U pon advice of-a friend I began
taking Dr. W illiam s’ Pink Pills
for Pale People aud before the first
box was used I noticed a great
change.
I began to regaiii my
appetite and felt better generally.
After finishing the first box I took
six more. The effect was wonder­
ful. I grew strong and gained In
flesh.
I never felt better in my
life than I do now. I weigh more
than ever before and I consider
myself cured.”
From the Gazette, Malone, N . Y.
“ I believe in the faith that looks
up and believes in God, that looks
around aod believes in humauity,
and looks in and believes in self.
I have a great contempt fur infidels,
or in-for-hells, those little arguiug
infiddles, who h&ye never been 500
miles away from home, and who
have found no God and no hell.
Why, you little fooll
B efo’ you’ve
been frying in hell three minutes
you’ll be crying out, “ O Lord! What
a mistake I have made.”
I believe
in God and the Bible, and I ’ll fight
for them until perdition freezes over
and then I ’ll fight on for them on
the ice. I believe in God and man,
and you muddle headed, agnoetical,
jackasstical fool, you’ll be fryia’ iq
h ell befo’ long.
But, d’ you hear
me. I ’ve got a good opinion of
myself. I won’t do a d;rty thing.
You see I live with Him, but out
heru in Oregon everything is back­
wards.
You pay Baptist ministers
more than the Methodists, when
every one knows you can get trans­
portation by water one-third cheaper
than by laud.
I ’d rather have a
good opinion of myself than that of
70,000,000 and know myself at heart
a rascal. It don’t pay to do wroug;
it pays to do righ t
The man who
thinks more of his character than
hie life ie the one who builds up a
true manhood.
Dr. W illiam «' Pink Pills for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, ail the eie
menu noceasarv to give new life and rich«
nesa to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing Bpecific for
each diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus' ilance, sciatica, neural«
rheumatism, nervous headache, the
after-effects of tho grip, palpitation o f the
heart, pale and sallow complexions, and all
forms o f weakness either in male or female.
Br. William«' Pish Pills for P t ls Pscpfs a rt sever
•old by the dozen or hundred, but always In path-
•pas. At all druggists, or direct from the Dr. WH-
llamf Medicine Compsnj, Schenectady, I k Y., B0
easts per box. B box«« 915 0 .
WIIkRE MANHOOD BUKAK8 DOWN.
“In the social world everything
is out of whack there. When man­
hood breaks down is in the failure
to maintain home authority. There
is nothing the children need more
than daddies and mammies. A man
once asked a good, old widow how
she raised her family so successfully,
aud she replied:
‘I did it with
prayer and hickory.’
I f you waDt
to raise a boy well, raise him ofteD.
I believe in corporal punishment
If you let the public educate your
kid, you ought to let the public lick
him.
There are four things you
ought to appeal to in a boy— his
sense of honor, his sense of con­
science, his sense of pride, aud his
sense of hide.
I f you can’t teach
him on tb f first three, go at his
hide and tan it well.
Fathers, you
bad better go home tonight, pull
your boy out of bed and tan his
H you dou’t, they’ll go to the
devil by tb*
“ The richest man is the one who
has the best wife, the noblest girls,
the purest boys.
A father with
druuken hoys aud girls he can’t
trust out of his sight is bankrupt
now.
Give me a fast horse,* but a
slow girl— one who makes a mile iu
about six minutes.
The noblest
boy is one who can look back to the
cradle and never remember putting ■
a cruel foot ou the heart of his
mother, and the noblest man is one
who has protected his mother, hon­
ored his wife, shielded his daughter
and kept his boys sober.
Boys, I
will give ypu three dou’ts:
Don’t
loaf, don’t go in bad company, don’t
drink whisky nor gamble.
And
threo dos: Look after your integ­
rity and die before you tell a lie;
honor the God of your father and
mother; aud, third, honor your pre­
cious mother. I never saw a boy
who honored his mother who didn’t
make a grand man, and I never saw
boy who didn’t that didn't go
straight to the dogs. Buys, a noble
good wife is the best g ift to a man,
nod a noble mother is the best gift
to a little boy or girl.
He is the
noblest man who honors his mother
most heartily, who loves his wife
most tenderly, and shields his
daughter most cLeerfully.”
Mr. Jones then related experi­
ences in his own history, and closed
with a parable of the angel visiting
the earth, and choosing a smile of
piotherly love as the most beauti­
ful and unfading memento of bis
earthly visit.
------------ - «# »■« t-----------
Roseburg Review: AlbertTozier
and his aids are still very busy with
the editorial association aftermath
of business. I t is doubtful even yet
if the majority fully realize the vol­
ume of actual advertising Oregon
has already received at the hands
of the visiting delegates. At actual
advertising rates it would mount
into thousands of dollars.
T h e B eaC M m * « /
l e r F ln x .
Mr. John Mathias, a well known
stock dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says:
“ After suffering for over a week with
flnx, and my physician having
failed to relieve me, I was advised
to try Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy, and have
the pleasure of stating that the half
o f one bottle cured me.” For sale
by R. S. Knowlton.
HIGGLE BOOKS
A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical.
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Hand­
somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrate«.
By JACOB BIOOLB
m
No. 1-B iaO LB HORSE BOOK
All about Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, with osbv
74 illustrations ; s standard work. Price, 50 Ceuta.
No. 3 -B K M L E BJ2RRY BOOK
All about growing Small Fruits— readsnd leant how ;
contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of aineadinf
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, jb Cents.
No. a-BIOOLE POULTRY BOOK
All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Boo % t n existence {
tells everything ; with23 colored life-Hkéreprodnctià
of all thc^rincipal tweeds; with iof-otfeer iUustra'J
Price,-
No. 4—BIOOLB COW BOOK
• and the Dairy 1
ery,
etc. Contali
tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Ce
The HIGGLE BOOKS are nnique.original.us !
saw anything like them—so practical, sc
ore having an enormous sale—Bast. Writ
South. Every one who keeps a Horse
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to
away for the BIQULB BOOKS. The
FARM JOURNAL
Is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It Is aa year*
old, it is the great boiled-down, hit-the-uail-on-the-head,—
lit nfter-you-hnve-said-it, Farm and Household paper in
e world—the biggest paper o f its size in the United States
o f America—having over a million and a-half regular readers.
S
Any ONE of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL
S YEARS (remalncWr o f iSqq.xqoo, iqoi, 1901 and 1903) w ill be sent by mall
to any address for A DOLLAR ÎÏ.L
1 7
Sample o f FARM JOURNAi and circular describing BIOOLE BOOKS free.
W IL M E R
A T K IN S O N .
C H AS. F . J K N K IN S .
Address.
FARM
JO U RNAL
P hiladelphia
KBSOS "flrllnQton”
A $65.00 Machine
JW $ 18. so
Threading
Sewing M i n e
LATEST
BEST
C H C A P IIT
Shipped to anyone,
anywhere, on Ml
d a ys' free trial,
iu y o u r ow n
h om e, without
a s k in g one cent
iu advance.
10 y e a r « ’ written
w a rra n ty
w ith
each machiue.
Coupon, if
••nt C. 0. D.
or on trial
“ ARLINGTON.'
A strictly h igh -gra d e Sew­
in g M a c h i n e ,
fin is h e d
th rou gh ou t in t n b est pos­
sible m anner. It possesses all
fiioderu im p rovem en ts, Audits
m echanical construction is
such that iu it are combined
sim p licity with great strength,
thus in su rin g ease o f running;
d u ra b ility, an d m a k iu g it im­
possible fo r the machine to be
put out o f order. It sews fast
and m akes a perfect stitch
w ith a ll k in d s o f th read and
nil classes o f m aterial. Always
read y fo r use and unrivalled
i fo r speed, d u rab ility and qual­
ity o f w o rk . N o tice the fol­
lo w in g points oi superiori*/»
T b s H ead o f th e " A r lin g t o n ” sw in g s on p aten t sock et hin ges, firm ly h eld d o w n b y a th n n ib
»?rew . fetroug, substantial, neat am i handsom e in d esign , an a b eau tifu lly orn a m en ted in go ld .
Led pla te lia s rounded corn ers and is In laid o r countersunk, m a k in g it flush w ith top o f table.
H l f l u s t Arm r—Snace under th e orm is b'A inches h igh and 9 inch es lo n g. T h is w ill a d m it th e
larr;eht s k ills , a n d even quilts. It Is S elf T h re a d in g —Absolu tely u o holes to put th read th rou gh
e x cep t e y e o f needle. S n u ttle is cy lin d e r, open on eud, e n tire ly self-th rea d in g, easy t o put Iu o f
ta k e ou t; lx>bbtn holds a la rge am ount o f thread. S titc h R e g u la to r is on th e bed o f th e m achine,
b eneath th e bobbin w in der, and has a scale sh ow in g th e num ber o f stitches to th e inch, an d can
be ch a n ged from S to
stitches to th e in ch . Feed is double aud exten d s on both sides o f n eed le;
n ever fa ils to ta k e goods th rou gh ; n ever stops at seam s; m ovem en t Is positiv e ; o o sp rin gs t o
break nnd g et out ot ord er; can be raised an d low ered at w ill. A u to m a tic tlubW n w in d e r — F o r
tillin g th e bobbin au tom atically and p e rfe c tly am ooth w ith ou t h old in g th e th read. M ach in e d oes
not m n w h ile w in d in g bobbin. L ig h t R u n n in g -M a c h in e is easy to n w , d oean ot A “ * ^ “ " * * * ^
stor, m ak es little noise and sews rap id ly. S titc h Is a double lock stitch, th e sam e on both sides,
w ill not ravel, aud esn be changed w ithout s to p p in g th e m achine. Ttn M on is a flat sp rin g ten ­
sion. an d w ill adm it thread from H to HO at»ool cotton w ith ou t ch an gin g. N e v e r r e ta o u t o f ord er.
T h e N eed la ia a straigh t, sef f-sM ting needle, flat on on e side and cannot be put j e w ro n g . Nesanj
B a r is round, m ade o f caae-haidcned steel, w ith o il cup at the bottom to t>revent m l
on th e g ood s
Adiuatabla B e a r Il* g s - A ll b e a rin g « are case hardened ateel a n d «B ally a«Mlisted
w ith a »c re w d river. A ll lost m otion can be taken up, aud th e m ach in e w ill laid a i d W i n s
A tta c h m e n ts Each m achine ia furnished w ith necessary tools an d acccseo^foa, and in
fu n d s!
ru filer
to 2« ol
to draweVsTdrcas gu a n U to w licci, and d e v ic e fo r rep la cin g belt.
DON T PAY
n f l i M T n | V HIGH PRIC ES FOR
D I I V DIRECTLY OF MANUFACTURERS„AN0
DEWING M A C H IN ES
SAVE AGEiiT’S AMO DEA LER ^ P R O F IT S
O U R G R E A T O F F E R . $ 2 3 . 6 0 1« our 3pcclal W h o le sa le F rlce .b u t
BUT
In o rd e r to Introduce this h igh -grad e s e w in g m achine, w e m a k e a sp ecial cou­
pon offer, g iv in g every reader o f th is p ap er a chance t o g e t a first-clasa m a­
in e a t th e low est o n c e e v e r offered . On receipt o f $ 18 .5 0 caah nndcoupon.
“ Mamma, what wouM you do if ch
w e w ill sh ip the a fore -d e s c rib e d m achine a n y w h e re securely packed an d
that big vase in tho parlor should crated, an d gu ar m ic e safe d e liv e ry A ten y e a r»’ w ritten w arran ty sent w ith
ea e ff m achine
M oney refunded i f n ot na represen ted a fter th irty d a y s test
get broken?’' said Tommy.
“ I tria l. W e w i' ship C O . 1). for Jlfl ..TO w ith p riv ile g e o f tw e n ty days f o j d on
receip t o f #f>.n0 a 4 a gu arantee o f gnud faith "n d c h a rg e s . I f you p r e fe r th ir ty
should spauk whoever did it,” said I d a ys' trial l»cf.»rc payin g, send fo r our la rg e illustrated c a ta lo g u e w ith ta s tl-
Mrs. Banks, gazing severely at her : m o n la l». e x p la in in ' lo lly h ow w e ship sew in g m achines a n y w h e re t o a n y .
on e at th e liw e s t 1 . too h e« n r r r s prices w ith ou t a s k in g o n e c v n t lft advance.
1 a ll cash w ith order, as you then save th e $1.00 dis-
j little son. “ Well, then, you’d bet- | T h e l>est plan Is to
it:» or<U*.
GUDon mu .t be se n t w it
« n i . ---------
B ei -.ember »T. SpXi
ter begin to get up your muscle,” j -----
said Tommy, gleefully, “ coz papa’s i
your onlof tfiron.o;li III? Herald, «¡Hbuit extra
' broken it.”
1
’
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