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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1899)
/< M . :Z T ä v i / (Li. S q u ille VO L. J J R . J. C O Q U ILLE C ITY, O REG O N , TU ESD A Y, 18. BUUT b u r g e o n MOORE, a n d p h y s ic ia n . Coos Brcbaris aoi Dairiss COQUILLE CITY. OREGON. 'Y y 'I L L promptly respoud to nil calls, tty v or night. Moran's STATE OFFICIAL INSPECTIONS IN S. W. OREGON. BARBER SH O P BATH ROOMS, State Dairy Commissioner and O p p o s it e H o t e l C o q u il l e , Front Street, i r s t - c i . * s s Cuts at F apartments. Coquille C ity , Or. shaves living and President Horticultural Board Visit Coos County. iia ih raton; nice Bathing ________ [The Oregonian of the 3tl inst. gives the following as Buromarv re X h . moat modéra arranged BAHBER ports of the official visits of J. \V. SHOP in Coquille City. Bailey, state food and dairy commis M. M. McDonald, Proprietor. sioner, and H. B. Miller, president of the state board of horticulture, to Coos county and other points in southwestern Oregon.] IJ IH E c. C O M M E R C I A L s------ L. MOON, Attorney and Counselor at Law COQUILLE CITY, OREGON. Beal Estate find Collections a Bpeoiaity. John F. Hall, a t t o r n e y .a t - L a w , MARSHFIELD. OREGON. ---------- — — Deal, i iu R*Ab E stxtb o f all kinds. YR T L E CAMP, N' >. 1.17. WOODMEN o f the World, meets at Masonic Hall 1st and 3<i Monday nights of each month. A.. J. S hbrwoc ;, Consul. George T. Moulton, Clerk. OUltT COQUILLE, NO. 1«, FOKEST- ers o f America, meets every second and fourth Thursday evening, at Masonic Hall Coquille City, Oregon. „ G eo . O. L e a c h , C . R . C H. N. L obenz , It. 8 C ~N HADW IC.it L O D G E , NO. 611, A. F. J and A. M., meets on Saturday eveumg on or before each fall moon. Visiting breth ren cordially invited. ' , ,, H arry K birs , W. M. C. W. White, Sec. OHAPTEH. NO. 6, O. E. 8., meets Friday evenirg on or before B UELAH each full moon at o’ clock from April 1st to October ¿1st, and thereafter at 7:30; and 3aoh fifteen days thereafter at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. „ „ M r s . N ora A. M c E w e n , W . fyl. M r s . J e n n ie H o se , S b c ._____________________ OQUILLE LODGE. NO. 53, I .O . (). F., meets ovory Saturday evening. Visit ing brethren in good standing cordially Invited. . „ „ _ J. A. S e e d , N. G. C J. 8. L a w r e n c e , U. S.________________________ /C O Q U IL L E ENCAMPMENT. NO. 25.1. K J O. O. F., meets every first and third Thnrsdays in each month at Odd Fellows’ hall. Cordial invitation extended to all vis itin g patriarchs iu good standing. v U. E. B u c k , C. P. G. F. B o u t k l i », Scribe. _________________ _ a m i e u e b e k a u l o d g e , n o . 20, I. (). O. F „ meets ovory 2d and 4th Wednesdays in each month, at Odd F el lows’ hall. Mus. J ulith C ollier , N. G. J. 8. L awrence , 8 . ________________ C o q u il l e c o u n c il . N asos o f t h e \ J Fraternal Aid Association meets the 2d Tuesday evening o f each month. M rs . E lla P annknulbo , Pres. D. F. D ean . S e c . _____________________ M Central u Meat Market w&c. REPORTS ON DAIRYING. State Food and Dairy Commis sioner J. W . Bailey and H. B. Mil ler, president of the state board of horticulture, have just returned from an extended trip of 400 miles by buggy through Coos county and portions of Lane and Douglas. Mr. Bailey found two creameries in Lane county in successful opera tion, eight in Coos county, nnd one in Douglas county. He found Tilla mook butter passing through the Willamette valley on its way to the Bohemia mines. On the Coast Fork in Lane county, Mr. Bailey says, there are excellent advantages for the establishment of creameries, as the soil will produce clover and vetches in abundance, and by the use of the stream for irrigation, seven tous of clover can be harvested from each acre every year and much pasturage provided besides. Farmers in thnt section are mak ing poorer farms and poorer farm ers, he says, by raising about 10 or 12 bushels of wheat per acre, while they might make their land aud themselves richer by growing clover and making butter and cheese for their home market. The Reed creamery at Gardiner, together with the farm and dairy ad joining, is one of the most successful and complete in the northwest It is conducted by a nephew of the late Senator Reed, and is modern nnd scientific in every respect. The pres ent output of the creamery is 400 pounds per day. Willamette valley farmers could learn many valuable things by a visit to this dairy. The silo is the great feature here, where timothy, redtop,-clover, wheat, oats, peas and even wild swamp grass are put into valuable form for food through the silo. coos county ’ s dairying advantages . Coos county hns three great and growing industries— lumbering, coal mining and dnirying. Each of these is practically in its infancy. The dairy industry is the most Curran & Gass, Proprietors. valuable, having a greater socializ ing influence, and is therefore nearer a v in g b o u g h t o u t t h e c e n - trnl Meat Market, we will bo able to to the hearts of the people than the furnieh all kinda o f Meat—Beef. Mutton others. During all these years of and Pork, nnd will ptv the highest cash depression, the peoplo of Coos price for beef, hog « , » W g . e t ^ A G \sn. county have been sustained in com fort by the dairy, and it is now in a T h e L a o n e S t a r > — more flourishing condition than ever. The total value of dairy prod C. O. G I L K E Y , P R O P R I E T O R , C o q u ille C .ty , O r.— O p p o site D epot. ucts in Coos county will not fall below an average of $1000 per day, Keeps only Pure Wines and Liquors and and the distribution of this is so Fine Cigars. T he Americus Club Whisky is one of the extended and perfect as to send joy specialties served in thesa Clubrooms. and thrift into many homes. The natural elements upon which the industry thrives are climate, clo ver and water transportation. Cheap and quick transportation of milk and cream from the cow to the cream ^ ----------------------------------- ery constitutes the main feature of BANDON, O R , their advantage over most other sec K E E P S C O N STA N T LY O N H A N D tions of the state. The virtues of the silo and the growing of clover A F U L L L IN E OF and vetches on the hills are things thnt have yet to be learned by the Coos county dairymen. Improvement in stockbreeding is .A .T not as great as it should be, for many of their cows are absorbing the prof its of others. More thought is be Orders left w ith R . S. K nowlton , ing given in this direction, and good C o q u il l e C it y , w ill rece'.ve prompt results are sure to follow. One of the deplorable features of •ttenton. the industry is found in the size of 0008 BAY the rolls of butter, ranging from a pound nnd a half to a pound and three-quarters; none of the cream eries put up a full two-pound pack C. W. PATERSON, Prop. age. This is done at the instance And Manufacturer o f Marble Monument,, H eal. for the advantage of the retail dealer, atone*. Tableta, e tc. oemetery lota eneloaed with atone noping who is no doubt deceiving his cus or curbing. Iron railings furnished to or tomers. The creameries get no ben der. Oo Tree pond once aolicited from pn/tlea living in the oonntrv or other towns who efit, as they sell by actual weight, may wish anything in my line o f bnaineaa. but the retailer sells by the roll. As M . HBHVt.ro . O lio all of ¡the output of these Coos lunxta V IT A L IT Y county creameries is marketed in LOST VIGOR AN D M A N H O O D San Francisco, the Oregon consumer is not affected. Cures Impotency, Night Emissions and The creameries are models of clean wasting diseases, all effects o f self abuse, or excess and indis liness, and the dairymen, as a rule, cretion- A n e rv e to n ic and i keep their places in excellent condi- b lood b u ild er. Brings the j tion. The entire industry has an i\ w pink glow to pale cheeks and i air of prosperity about it that is W ig V t restores the fire o f youth. quite refreshing, and when all the By maiioOcperboxiOboxes marshes, swamps and hills, suitable for $ 2 .5 0 ; with a w ritten g u a ra n to the dairy business in Coos county, te e to cu r e o r re fu n d th e m on ey. ; are fully developed, it will be ten 1 times greater than today. N ER V ITA M E D IC A L CO. Clinton A Jackson Sts^ CHICACO, ILL. Butter from Coos county already i finds a market in Alaska, Japan, the For sale by Coqnille Pbarmacv H Best Billiard Table in Southern Oregon pETER LOGGIE,^ Burial Caskets Lowest Case Prices. Marble aei stone Worts UEmn Philippines, China and South Am erica. After a critical examination of the economic side of the question of butter and cheese production, under the most favorable conditions in Coos county, Commissioner Bailey is convinced thatmuny points in the Willamette valley have equal advan tages, and that butler and cheese- making should become the leading occupation in wostein Oregon. OREGON ORCHARDS President Miller’s inspection of orchards shows an almost entire fail ure of fruits iu the commercial orchards of the southern part of Lane county, and many trees dying from the effects of the winter’s freeze. The line of injuiy to trees seems to be the north line of Douglas county, as no case of winter killing was found in either Douglas or Coos counties. The fruit crop in these counties, although good, is not more than half what it would have been with a favorable spring. The large orchards of DouglaB county, as far as the trees are con cerned, are in good growing condi tion. The Italiun prune tree leaf is beginning to curl some and the board of horticulture recommends the splitting of the bark of the body of the tree, from the ground to the limbs, as a relief. The crops of French prunes in all the orchards visited in Douglas and Coos counties was remarkable, and the treeswere all in perfect con dition. COOS COUNTY FRUIT. in methods of caring for orchards will have to begin in Coos county if they succeed iu developing their horticultural industry to the extent that thoir soil, climatic aud mar ket conditions seem to justify. - - —r- -— Light on a Dafk Subject. There is a never, ending babble about “over production” among small potato tbeorikts, who trace all the miseries of life'k to the supera bundance of the guilds of life. W ell, there is overproduction of certain kinds. There is an overproduction of loafers, eating np other people's bread. There is an overproduction of gangrenous corporations, devour ing mankind’s substance. There is an overproduction of twenty-dollar-a-moath toilers aud million-dollar-a-month capitalists. There is an overproduction of blarney-mouthed politicians, whose politics are spoils aad plunder. There is an overproduction of hair-brained college professors, who always hate tho masses by whom they are fattened. There is an overproduction of dirty legislation in every state leg islature iu the country. There is an overproduction of literary picaninies, who have flooded the market by their overproduction of trumpery in books. There is an overproduction of corporation tools in both houses of congress and in all the legislatures of the country. There is an overfroduction of shyBters, heartless and brainless, at the bar, and of judicial mercenaries on the bench. There is an overproduction iu all quarters of suborned newspapers, and of subscribers ready to sell their souls for a job on them. There is an overproduction of clerical charlatans who preach lies for money; There is an overproduction of millionaires, drudges, monopolies, tram pB , cormorants, speculators, toadies, starvlings, coruercrs, mill children, factory women, bedizzened Jezebels of fa sb ioD , and painted wasps o f unclean “ society.” There is an overproduction of rent, profit, interest and cheating. There l- on overpn locuon of adulterate! articlf of toddy garments, ba-iarik ' ru • ' , bo gus jewelry, water'd ' and claptrap. But, if one may judge from the conditions of the masses of the peo ple everywhere, there is no over production of those things required for the life and well-being of man kind, such as befitting houses, cloth ing nnd food, or those things which tnnke the world pleasant, such as proper furniture, works of art, books nnd so forth, or those things needed by tho community for social growth. Moreover, the industry of the world’s workers, organized in the way most advantageous to those workers, would not, with the help of all the machinery yet invented, produce a surfeit of those things at. any time within the next hundred years.— Reno Plaindealer. There are no large commercial orchards in Coos county, aud none being planted, although 40,000 bushclB of fine apples were shipped last year. Most of the orchards are from one to five acres in extent, and were planted by the early set tlers along the river bottoms, and were intended for home consump tion. Coos county is becoming noted for its very fine apples, and apple-growing, on a large scale, could be made profitable by a ju dicious selection of land and varie ties. The Gravensteiu is the best of all varieties there, and reaches nearer perfection under the climate and soil conditions of this section than nay other place in the state, or on the Pacific coast. One mau mar keted 800 bushels of apples from a single acre last season. Good ap ple orchards, with fair crops, are to be found on both branches of Ceos river, and all places along the Co quille and its tributaries. French prunes do very well, and will thrive on all the hill lands where there is sufficient depth of soil. There is much more value iu the hill lands, both for the produc tion of clover and fruit, than the residents realize, and Mr. Miller would advise the more extended use of the hills for orchard-planting. There is some complaint as to the keopiug qualities of apples raised on tide lands, and this trouble can be overcome by planting on the hills. Orchards planted on the hills will not thrive without thor ough cultivation, nnd the fruitgrow ers of Coos county must not expect A Conclusive Example. the hills to produce a large crop of apples and several tons of clover to The Arkansas Hot Springs supply the acre during the same season. a conclusive example of the benefits Many hill orchards were found of government ownership of land abandoned because they would not and water. Instead of selling or perform this prodigious task. giving them away, four sections A few peach trees, quite thrifty, (2840 ncres) of land, of whioh 1)00 and well loaded with fruit, were acres has been laid out as a park, found on the headwaters of the Co have been reserved and held by the quille, and Mr. Miller would recom government. The water rents are mend the planting of enough used to improve the reservation, peaches in these sections to proyide The springs yield 950,000 gallons for the growing home market. daily. The receipts from bath-houses, The apples grown in Coos county etc., for the fiscal vear ending June are entirely free from the greatest 30, 1898, were $18,371; the disburse of all pests, the codlin moth. This ments for salaries, repairs, fuel, light feature makes apple growing a very and cold water were $12,388, leav attractive line of horticultural work ing a net profit to the United States there, as few localities in the world o f Dearly $6000. Indigent persons are now exempt from this disastrous supplied free and have also access insect. While there is no absolute to a free dispensary under a United certainty that this pest will not States surgeon. The resident popu eventually become acclimated and lation of Hot Springs is 8000, be thrive there, investigation proves sides 7000 visitors. How much that it has been continually intro better it would have been if all duced from California, but so far such natural benefits had been has not been able to perpetuate held by the state or the general itself. * government for the benefit of the There is no doubt but that some entire people?— S. F. Star. feature of climatic conditions bag so far proven to be a perfect cbeck to Will Burn a Valuable Library In the Street. the development of the moth. All other pests and tree diseases Chicago, Aug. 8 .— A special to the common to other sections of the Chronicle from Toledo, Ohio, says: state were found plentiful, the moet On the evening of August 15th, in disastrous to the apple being the the middle of the street in front of bark disease known as the apple the Memorial United Brethren canker, and persons planting apple church, this city, the elegantly orchard.', are warned to look out bound volumes which compose the carefully for this, as it often comes library of Marshall O. Waggoner, in the nursery stock. Orchardists formerly one of the moet pronounced not familiar with it should have agnostics in the world, will be their young trees examined by the burned. horticultural commissioner before He was recently converted to planting, as it is almost certain to Christianity, and made a public ruin the trees by the time they | declaration of faith a few weeks ago come in bearing. nnd became a member of the United President Miller finds that it will Brethren church. The library is be necessary to have a deputy in ; valued at several thousand dollars. - spector of ‘ nursery stock coming The professional musician works into Coos bay, to prevent the intro duction of scale and infectious dis when he plays and plays when he eases. Spraying aud improvement 1 works. A U G U ST 15, 1899. NO. 5 Oregon Troops Mustered Out. San Francisco, Aug. 7.— The Soc- ond Oregon regiment was mustered out of the service of Uncle Sam today; oach man received his dis charge papers from the mustering officer, and passed on to the pay master who gave each soldier what money was due him. As the men were assembled for the lost time previous to tlieir dis solution as a regiment, General Owen Summers addressed them with a few words of farewell and advice. He cautioned them not to do any thing, in the short time that remains before they are finally disbanded, to reflect on the excellent record they have made, and also to be on the lookout that no one should take undue advantage of them. General Summers, who is very popular, was enthusiastically cheered by the men of his command. Mr. H . N . Warner, o f Minden, The Man Who Lost Hope A Silkworm of the Sea. Silk is obtained from the shellfish known as the pinna (mytilidee), which is found in the Mediterranean. This shellfish has the power ot spinning a viscid silk wbich in Sicily is made into a regular and hand some fabric. The silk is spun by the shellfish, in tho first instance, for the purpose of attaching itself to the rocks. It is able to guide the delicate filaments to the proper place and there glue them fast, and if they are cut away they can repro duce them. The material when gathered (which is done at low tide) is washed in soap and water, dried, straight ened and carded, one pound of the coarso filament yielding about three ounces of fine thread, which when spun is of a lovely burnished golden brown color.— New York Herald. Dr. Williams’ Pink PillsYor Pal* People contain, in a condensed for in t all the ele ments necessary to give new life and rich ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance^ sciatica, neural gia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after-effects of the grip, palpitation of the heart, polo and sallow complexions, and all forms of wooknad* either in male or fedtole. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pals People art never •old by the dosen or hundred, but always in pack ages. At all druggists, or direct from tho Dr. Wil- Hams Medicine Company, Sobonectady, N. Y., 60 cants per box, 6 boxes S2.60. BIGGLE BOOKS A Trolley Accident. A F a r» Library of unequalled value—Practical, Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Hand somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrated. B y J A C O B B IO Q L B No. l-B I O O L B HORSE BOOK Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 7.— A trolley car jumped off a bridgo here yesterday, killing twenty-nine peo ple anil badly injuring twelve more. A ll about Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, w ith over 74 illustrations ; a standard w ork. Price, go Cents. No. 2 — BIGGLE BERRY BOOK ----------------_»««-•--------------- » A ll about grow ing Sm all Fruits—read and learn h o w ; contains 43 colored life-like reproductions o f all leading varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents. To those wlio may still be alarmed by the grossly exaggerated reports about the kissing bug-aboo, there will be relief iu the information from L. O. Howard, the government entomologist, that the application of ordinary household ammonia re lieves the pain and prevent» any serious effects of the bites and stings of all kinds of insects. No. 3 —BIGGLE POULTRY BOOK A ll about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existen ce; ‘ **-----------*** - * 1 life-11 tells everything ; with$3 colored life-like reproductions le principal princip o f all the breeds; w ith 103 other iUustrsUoiiO. Price, 50 Cents. No. 4 —BIGGLE COW BOOK A ll about Cows and the Dairy Business; having a great sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions Qt each breed, with 13a other illustrations. Price, 30 Cento. NO.U5-&KMLB SW INE BOOK Just out. All about Hogs—Breeding, Feeding, Butch ery, Diseases, etc. Contains over So beautiful half tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents. .TheBIQOLB BOOKS are unique .original, useful—you never saw anything like them —so practical. so sensible. They nre having an enorm ous sale— Bast, West, N orth ana South. Every one w ho keeps a H orse, Cow , H og o r Chicken, or grow s Sm all Fruits, ought to send right •way for the BIOGLB BOOKS. The Exchange: The true standing of an editor is appreciated after death, if not before. A lawyer sent the following words of consolation to the widow of an editor: I cannot tell you how pained I was to hear your husband had gone to heaven. W e were bosom fneuds, but can never meet again. FARM JOURNAL Is your paper, m ade for you and not a misfit. It is 22 years o ld , it is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the-head,— quit-after-you-nave-said-it, Farm and H ousehold paper in the w orld—the biggest paper o f its size in the United States o f Am erica—having over a m illion and a-half regular readers. Salem Statesman (R ep): Wheat will be more than a dollar a bushel this year— for the farmers who feed it to the right kind of hens. For those who sell it for shipment to Europe.it will probably be less than a half a dollar a bushel. Eugene V. Debs: Government ownership can be no worse than government receivership. The U. S. courts nre rapidly becoming re pair shops for wrecked rnilrc nde. N e b ., sa id : " In 1894 I was attacked with paralysis in m y left side. You might stick a pin to the head into my left hip and I would not feel It. I was unable to do any kind o f work and had to be turned in bed. I made up m y mind that I could not be cured as I had used all kinds o f medicine and had tried many doctors. I was ad vised to try D r. W illiam s’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and com menced their use last September. Before I had finished m y first box I felt better, and by the time I had used six boxes the disease had en tirely disappeared, and I have not been so free from pain since I was a boy. T h e paralysis also disap peared, and although two months have passed since I finished my last box, there has been no recur rence o f the disease.” — From the Gazette , M inden, N eb. A ny ONE o f the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL A R S (rem ainder o f 1899 1000, 1901, 190a and any address for A D OLLAR BILL. f l o YE 1903) w ill be sent by m ail Sample of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BIGGLE BOOKS free. W IL M E R A T K IN 8 0 N . Address, FARM JOURNAL CHAS. F . JE N K IN S . P h il a d e l p h ia A $65.00 Machine ft , "flr lln flt o if Threading $ 1 8 .5 0 T l i e Ile a l K in ie r t y l o r F l u x . --- - ---- » » -- “ May I print a kias on yonr lip«?” I asked. And she nodded her sweet permission— Then we went to press And I rather goes« We printed a largo edition. ------ - _ . ■>. ■» — ———— Little Willie had a mirror And be licked the backs all off, Thinking in his childish error Jt would core the whooping cough. At the funeral Willie’s mother Smartly «aid to Mr«. Brown, ’ Twa« a chill} day for Willio When the mercury went down. —— ------ - ■ » -------- — j Oood Man— Do you know what becomes of little boys who use bad words when they are playiog mar ble*? Bad Boy— Yep! Dey grows 1 up uu’ plays golf. ■ CST 10 y e a r s ’ written warranty w i t h each m achine. ------------- - <o> --------------- T h e N a llo u a ! (w in d L l i l , A little school girl of a neighbor ing town wrote the following com position on “Saw M ills:” “Saw mills is very useful. If it was not for saw mills we wouldn't have no sawdust for to stuff our dolls. If I was a doll, I would rather die than to be stuffed with straw. Stray is very ticklesome when you ain't got anything else on your inside. I know a good deal more about saw mills but my paper is all gone.” LATEST CHEAPEST Shipped to anyone, anyw here, on 10 days’ free trial, in y o u r ow n h o m e , without asking one cent in advance. Mr. John Mathias, a woll known stock dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says: “ After suffering for over a week with flux, and my physician having failed to relieve me, I was advised to try Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and have tho pleasure of stating that the half of one bottle cured me.” For sale by R. S. Knowlton. The only genuine real estate paper pnb- ished in America. It oironlatea in every ateta in the Union. Partlea interested iu buying, selling or exchanging land, mer chandise or other property will find what they want in THE NATIONAL LAND LIHT. It ia jam fall of speoial bargain* and oilers o f cxohnnge. Single oopiea by nisil 10 cents. Address The National Land Lint Publishing Co..Green Ridge, Miaaonri. Sewing machine NEW HOME STYLE Coupon, if •ant C. 0.0. or 0 * triai ARLINGTON.” A strictly high-grade Sew ing M a c h i n e , f i n i s h e d throughout iu the best pos sible manner. It possesses all modern improvements, aud its mechanical construction is such that in it are com bined sim plicity with great strength, thus insuring ease o f running, durability, and m uking it im possible for the m achine to b s put out o f order. It sews fast and makes a perfect stitch with all kinds o f thread and all classes o f m aterial. Alw ays reatly for use aud unrivalled I for speed, durability and qual ity o f w ork. Notice the fol low in g points ot superiorly* Tha Head o f the "A rlin gton ” sw ings on patent socket binges, firm ly heid dow n by a thum b ew. Strong, substantial, neat and handsome in design, and beautifully ornam ented in gold, bed plate bns rounded corners nnd is inlaid or countersunk, m aking it flush ^with top o f table. --------- — j - M lg ixst A fM - A pace wilder the arm is 0 % inch'« ..... --------- ----------- — Self-Threading—Absolutely no boles to put thread through tsrg«\st shirt«, and even nuiits. It is is P~ ; Jylim'.er. open on end, entirely sclf-tHreadine:, easy to put in or i x c ip t eye o f needle. Shuttle iscyli; Irke out; b o’ »btn »bin holds t a large amount amour of thread Mitch Regulator is on the bed o f the machine. lug the num ber o f stitches to the Inch, and can b c n -s lh ihe bobbin wir.d-jr, and has n scale sliowiti d is dtsible and extends ou both sides o f needle; b* clm nged from S to 32 stitch'-* to the inch. F'ced never fail* to Lake »rood# through, never stops at slam s; m ovem ent is positive; n o springs to •mstlc Bobbin W la d c r— Po. break and get out ot order; can be raised and lowered nt will. A u tom sti-------- filling the bobbin automatically and pe rfectly sm ooth without holdiug the thread. M achine does not m u w hile w inding bobbin. Light R u nning—M achine is easy to run, does not fatigue theoper- ator, m akes little noise and sews rapidly. Stitch i* a double lock stitch, the same on both sides, will not n v d , nit'lc.m be changed without stopping the m achine. Tension is a flat spring ten sion, and will admit thread from 8 to 1.7 ) spool cotton without changing. Never gets out o f order. H ie N '-d ta ¡ j 1 «t’ Tk'ht self-setting needle, flat on on e side, and cannot be put in w rong. Needle irom gettinj getting Oar i*round, m ade o f * ase-h a.dm cd st-cl. with oil cup at the bottom to » prevent oil from hardened steel and easily adjusted on th eg ood s. Adjustable Bearings—A ll bearings are case-hardened d H ve^ ^ A ll lost b * t m otion can be taken up, up. and the m achine will Inst last a lifetime. with a screw driver. All A ttachm ents— Each ma< bine is furnished with necessary tools and accessories, and in addition w e furbish an extra set o f attachments in a velvet lined metal box, free o f charge, as follow s: One ruflh-r and gatherer, one binder on e shirring plate, on e set o f four hemmers, different widths up to "i o f Nn f»'-h o n e tucker, otic under braider, one short o r attachm ent foot, and one thread cutter. W ood w ork o f finest quality oak or nnlm it, g oth ic cover and drawers, nickel plated rings to draw er ;, dress guard* to wheel, and device for replacing belt. ’T PAY HiCH rHiCEs FCR gyy directly _ cf . manufactupj [ rs and SAVE AGENT'S AND DEALER’S PROFITS Il I r M I SEWING MACHINES O U R G H C A T O r r t n . I I S .S O I f W W f i s l t « l i P rier, Iwt In o r d e ? » « introduce thlsfcigh-grade sew ing m achine, w em a k e a special cou- ery reader o f this paper a chance to get a first-class ma- pon o . k r. givtt ever offered. On receipt of S ami on,| coupon. c U M t t the —I-------- . ..-------------- - i ü .jo wish ,------- w c will ship the above-described m achine anyw here crated an 1 "itar ite. .*fe delivery A ten years’ written w arranty sent with each m achine, tlmiry refu m l«t I f n o t » . r^>iw en«*d nfter thirty fiyy»' l « l trial. V.’ e » 1 » li I p C .o .U f o r iV J C w ill, p r M l e f e o f tw enty fi‘ 7*JlriaW a receipt o f l-.fO n . n rna ranter . f Ro »1 frill, nnd charxe-. I f yon prefer thirty Say. trinl h. lore rm .ln \ .r n 8 for o-ir la r fr illtttftratnl ratal, gue v.lth tr a il- ■Hmtala. - x p ln ia i» « liifiy l i w t r r e h l p »-r»lt>s m achine* a n y w h e r e t o any. one at tlie lorreat m rnui.ctnrer'* price* without * .k jf on e cent in advance, T h e be»t plan i . io • .<1 nil ra.h w .lh orr.-r, ... von t! lieu save the $1.00 dis- count. Rcmarr.1 r 'h e ci.upoi. m u.t be .c u t w ith orti. ~ 3 £ -0 r make your order through'the IL rahl, witliont extra cost.