Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909, April 16, 1901, Image 4

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    The Twentieth Cntiiry.
The twentieth centurv began January
1st, 1901. and will end with 2(100. People
did not bepin to reckon rime from A. D. 1,
but waited until about the 550 rear of the
Christian era. People who begin to take
the great health restorative, Hostetter's
Stomach Bitters, immediately after the
first outbreak of dyspepsia, malaria, rheu
matism, constipation, nervousness or kid
ney trouble will date theircure immediate
ly from then.
Why Men Fail.
Duty very often lingers and permits
curiosity to get there ahead of it.
Chicago Daily News.
Spring
Cleaning
You are made aware of the neces
sity for cleansing your blood in tho
spring by humors, eruptions and other
outward signs of impurity.
Or that dull headache, bilious, nau
seous, nervous condition and that tired
feeling are due to the same cause
weak, thin, impure, tired blood.
America's Greatest Spring Medi
cine is Hood's Sarsaparilla.
It makes the blood rich and pure,
cures scrofula and salt rheum, gives a
clear, healthy complexion, good appe
tite, sweet sleep, sound health.
For cleansing the blood the best
medicine money can buy is
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
It is Peculiar to Itself.
American Commission at Paris.
The cost of the American commis
sion at the Paris exposition was nearly
$1,000,000.
All diseased conditions of the
blood and skin are benefitted by
the well known remedy, Garfield
Tea; it purities the blood and
clears the complexion.
Good Subject Makes Good Talker.
McCarthy Old Brown declares you
are the most entertaining talker in
the club. What do you usually talk
about in his company?
McCommick Old Brown. Harlem
Life.
BfrA
This signature is on every box of. the genuine
Laxative BrotnoQuinine Tablet.
the remedy that cures a cold In on day
It Wouldn't Do.
Baron Munchausen had just writ
ten a letter to a friend.
He closed with a flourish, "yours
truly," and signed his name.
Then, with a melancholy smile, he
erased the word "truly."
"It would only move him to derisive
laughter," he said. Chicago Tribune.
Hoed the lied Flag of Danger !
Red pimples, blotches, boils, sores are danger
signals of torpid liver, poisoned blood. Cas
sarets Candy Cathartic will save you. All
druggists. 10c, 25c; 50c.
. Amending Shakespeare.
Her Escort Ise awful fond ob
music, 'specially dance music.
Miss Snowflake So's I. Doan' day
say dat music am de food ob lub?
"It am de very chicking an' watah
million of lub." Puck.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infal
ible medicine for coughs and colds. N.
W. 3amuel. Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17.
1900.
Not Completed.
Mrs. Darling You told me before
we were married that you had an in
come of $3,000 a year. What has be
come of it?
Mr. Darling Can't tell you until I
get an itemized bill from your dress
maker. Denver News.
SOU KNOW WHAT IOU ARB TAKING
When vou take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic,
because the formula is plainly printed on every
bottle showing that it is simply Iron and Qui
nine In a tasteless form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c.
For Keeps.
Ascum So you've got a political
situation? Do you expect to keep
it?
Rafferty Faith, I do, so, an' what's
more, I ixpict it to kape me. Phila
delphia Press.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth
inp Syrup the best remedy to use lor their
children during the teething period.
Serum for Diphtheria.
During a recent epidemic of diph
theria in a town on the Hudson, -205
cases were treated with serum, and
among these there were only two
deaths.
CITC Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness
W I I 9 after nrriar'pneofrr. Kline's Great Nerve
Bestorer. Send for FREE Si. OO trial bottle and treat
in. DI.R. 11. Kline. Ltd. .Ml Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa,
The Meaning in a Squeak.
Gus de Smith Those new boots of
yours squeak awfully; perhaps they
ain't paid for yet?
Johnny That's all nonsense. If
there is anything in that, why don't
my coat, and vest, and my trousers,
and my hat squeak, too? Exchange.
TO CUBE! A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Qninine Tablets. All
Aruggists refund the money if it fails to cure.
E. W. Grove's signature Is on each box. 25c.
Restoring a Medieval Castle.
At Hohkoninsburg, in Alsace, the
remains of an early medieval castle
is to be restored by the kaiser after
the manner in which Pierrefonds was
rebuilt by the architect Viollet le Due
for the Empress Eugenie.
(IjtEMNfJlOtwpURlhER
Composition of Sweetbreads.
Elsie (aged 3) Mamma, I want to
ask you a serious question.
Mamma Well, what is it, dear?
Elsie Are the sweetbreads made of
loaf sugar?
The Best Prescription for Malaria
l1!HlUln? Fever Is a bottle of Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine in
a tasteless form. No Cure. No Pay. Price 60c.
Little Alice's Description.
Little 3-year-old Alice stood watch
ing her mother baking pancakes. After
a few moments' silent observation she
said: "Put on back, turn over on
stomach, then eat."
Ill
ia best time to cure Catarrh,
Bronchitis and Consumption.
Oar remedy is guaranteed, $L
P. O. Box 973.
W. H.
SMI
H l CO., Buffalo, N. Y.
CURES WHERE ill ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I
in time. Bold by drumrlsts.
MODERN BOOKS AND PLAYS.
Their Titles Are Pictnreaqne and Snjrr
geatlve, if Nothing; More.
"Have you seen 'When Poached Eggs
Were on Toast?
"No I've read the book. Have yon
seen 'Under Two Breads?' "
"Not yet I've read the book. I
shouldn't think it would make nearly
so good a play as 'Unleavened Flags.' "
"I didn't read 'Unleavened Flags,'
but if it was as poor a book as it was a
play it wasn't worth reading. Still, you
can't always tell. You've seen 'In the
Palace of Harum,' of course.
"Oh, yes, indeed I wasn't half
through the book when I saw that"
"I didn't read the book. I was afraid
they'd put the last chapter first as they
did when they dramatized "David Mere
dith,' you know. I don't believe In this
dramatizing a novel by mixing It up
until you can't recognize it"
"Oh, I do. It's ever so much more ex
citing all mixed up. I like the kind of
dramatized novel where you can't tell
which novel it is until the third act at
least"
" 'To Shave and to Scold' ought to
make a good play don't you think so?"
"Oh, yes, indeed; much better than
'Carvice Janel' did. By the way, did
you ever hear of a play by the name of
'Hamlet? "
" 'Hamlet?" Why, I don't remember
any novel of that name. Really? You
don't mean it? Oh, if that's the case I
shouldn't care to see it. Have you read
Huxley's 'Life and Letters?' "
"No, there's not the slightest chance
of Its being dramatized, I'm told. I'm
reading 'When the Soup Grows Cold'
the advertisement says It's sure to be
dramatized." New York Evening Sun.
Balzac's Convenient Trousers.
In a little village In the heart of
Touralne lives a small, brown old man,
says the London Onlooker, whose great
pride it is that he once had the honor
of making a pair of trousers for Balzac.
The old tailor delights to tell of his
meeting with the distinguished French
man. When I got to the chateau where
Monsieur Balzac was staying, I found
him in the garden writing a novel. He
was so busy that I waited a bit Many
sheets of paper, covered with fine writ
ing, lay around him. He would write
a spell then stare wildly about, and
then go at It again as if he knew that
a world was waiting for his words.
After standing near and watching
him a while I had to Interrupt him to
get his measure for the trousers. Jon
sieur Balzac was very good-natured.
He smiled while I measured him, but
he spoke but once.
"No feet" he said, as I finished, and
returned at once to his work. ,
I didn't know at all what he meant
but some way I didn't have courage to
interrupt him again to ask, but I met
a servant and inquired of him what his
master meant by "No feet."
"Oh," says he, "Monsieur Balzac
wants his trousers made without any
openings at the bottom, so that he can
sit and write without having to put on
slippers."
Satisfied with His Job.
One of Cleyeland's leading business
.oncerns hired a new man thp other
1ay, and a little later, when the superin
tendent passed by, he noticed that the
new man was smoking a pipe. The rule
against smoking on the premises is a
rigid one.
"See here, my man," cried the official,
"you can't smoke here."
The new man looked up and nodded
and the superintendent passed along.
A half hour later he was back again,
and lo! the new man was still enjoying
his pipe.
"Say," the official cried, "didn't I tell
you that smoking was not permitted
here?"
"You did," replied the new man.
"Didn't you understand me?"
"I did."
"See here, perhaps you don't know
who I am?"
"That's a true word."
"Well, I'm the superintendent."
The new man looked up at the official
with an expression of deep interest
"Are ye, sure?" he cried.- "Superin
tendent eh? Well, it's a fine job take
care of It."
And he calmly returned to his work.
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Patriotism Versus Pounds.
Uncle Silas Penniwise had never
seen Boston Harbor before. "This is
the place, I suppose," he said, gazing
over its blue waters, crowded with
shipping, "where our Revolution fore
fathers threw that tea overboard."
"Yes," responded his city nephew, his
eye kindling. "I don't wonder it stirs
you to the depths to look at the scene
of that historic event It marked an
epoch in the world's history which no
patriotic American can recall without
a thrill of pride."
"Ye-es," replied Uncle Silas, musing
ly. "I I wonder how much the fellers
lost who owned that tea."
Appreciative.
"Yon have a fine pedigree," said the
American multi-millionaire to the
nobleman.
' Yes," was the nonchalant answer.
"And I want to tell you, I appreciate
such things. If there is anything I
take an Interest in It is a pedigree.
Why, when I was younger I could go
to the races and name over the ances
try of every horse at the track." Wash
ington Star.
Laureate Nonsense.
Tennyson is said to have been fond of
foolish fun, that ever delightful sort of
fun which is not wit but nonsense.
One day, at Burlington House, he ask
ed the guests a conundrum which he
had just made:
"Who are the greatest women in the
world?"
The answer was:
"Miss Ouri, the Misses Ippi and Sara
Gossa."
Pet.
The Princess tame tiger eat
The brave Prince, her suitor, and yet
She gave It out cold .
Or so it is told
That the Prince went away in a pet
Detroit Journal.
It comes as natural for a girl to like
her school teacher as for a boy to dis
like' his.
We will all have to face the runnier.
the funeral march some day.
Kirs. Watson's Message
Sha tells all suffering women how she was
-'f'
I
' Dear Mrs. Pixkham : When I wrote tr
ago I had been suffering from inflammation of the ovaries and
womb for over eighteen months. I had a continual pain and
soreness in my back and side. I believe my troubles were caused
by overwork and lifting some years ago. Life was a drag to me
and I felt like giving up. I had several doctors, but they did me
little good. I began to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound four months ago and am in better health to-day than I
nave been for years. All my pains are gone. Your Vegetable
Compound has made me well. I recommend it to all suffering
women.'' Mes. S. J. Watson, Hampton, Va.
When tbere is one remedy that Is sure, and
Hundreds of thousands of women know from ex
perience Is reliable, is it wise to experiment with,
untried and comparatively unknown medicines?
REWARD
The Key to the Situation.
First Detective How did you man
age to discover the scandal in their
family closet?
Second Detective Well, you see, I
had a sxeleton key. Smart Set.
WAS TORTURED
An Indianapolis Woman's Sworn State
ment of the Way in Which She
Was Saved From Death.
From the Indianapolis News.
Mrs. Mary K. Burns, of 505 Hia
watha street, Indianapolis, Ind., is liv
ing evidence of the wonderful powers
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale
People, the remedy that cures where
all others fail. For years she en
dured all the tortures of indigestion.
nervousness and female weakness, a
complication of troubles that five phy
sicians confessed their inability to
cure. Her story Is well worth the at
tention of every woman. She says:
"My illness commenced after my
first child was born., I was so weak
and nervous that it seemed I would
never get strong. For twelve years
I doctored for female trouble, com
plicated with nervousness and indiges
tion. My stomach was so weak that
for days at a time I could eat nothing
but bread and milk. I was also troub
led with palpitation of the heart and
was often so miserable that I could not
lie down. Five doctors prescribed for
me, and I took many kinds of medi
cine without being benefited. One
day I saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
advertised in the papers and I de
cided to give them a trial. I did so
and had not finished taking the first
box when I knew that I was getting
better.
"You can imagine the relief I felt
when I found that after years of suf
fering I was being cured. I continued
taking the pills, and the female trouble
entirely disappeared. Dr. Williams'
Pirik Pills for Pale People did more
for me than it was claimed they would
do. Since I first took the pills I have
not needed a doctor nor any other
medicine; they . have restored my
health, strength and happiness.
MRS MAR If K. BURNS."
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 19th day of October, 1900.
GEORGE H. SWAN,
(Seal) Notary Public.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale
People are sold by all dealers, or will
be sent postpaid on receipt of price,
50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50
(they are never sold in bulk or bv the
hundred), by addressing Dr. Williams
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
A Forehanded Lover.
"Shan't we elope, George?"
"Yes, if you think it will nlease vour
father. Financially I'.m not prepared
to get him down on me."
Slop thm Cough and
VUnmlrm tiff t .iTW
Laxative Bromo-Qninine Tablets cure a cold in
oneday.-.Nocure.NoPay. Price 25 cents.
Passing Fare.
Street car conductors -are never
beautiful. In fact, they are not even
passing fare. Philadelphia Record.
Tour Guide and Guard Is the famous Oregon Blood
Purifier, tested and true. Use it now.
Aluminum Bridges for Cavalry. '
The Austro-Hungary war office has
recently tried with success bridges of
aluminum for cavalry. They are the
invention of Captains de Vaux and de
Vail, and are easily carried on wagons.
I Beware of Them
I There are two afflictions which
X perhaps give the most pain ' S
X and trouble, viz: g
I Sciatica 1
x and r
Lumbago I
R Both disable and cripple, H
1 St Jacobs Oil I
5 is their beat cure. S
f-n : :
We have deposited with
the National City Bank,
of Lynn, $5,000, which
, -J
" " ' UC MMU UBBJ pCT
SOn who can find that the above testimonial
letter is not genuine, or was published before
obtaining the writer's special permission.
Lydia E. Pinkhak Medicine Co.
Woes of a Wife.
"Oh, that I should have married a
funny man!" she wailed.
"What is the matter, lovely dear?"
asked her most intimate friend.
"He came home and told me he had
a sure way to keep Jelly from getting
moldy at the top, and when I asked
him how he said turn it upside down."
Boston Traveler.
Garfield Tea is an excellent
medicine to take in the spring:
it produces a healthy action
of the liver; it cleanses the
system and purifies the blood.
To Play. "Shopping."
The leader says: "I' went shop
ping this morning, and everything I
bought began with A. From the gro
cer I bought (points to a player-and
waits for response), from the drug
gist (points to another), from the
dry goods store, from the baker,"
etc. The responses must be given
quickly. The penalty is to take the
place of the leader and start another
letter.
Poison oaR
v3B
Poison ivy
are among the best known
of the many dangerous
wild plants and shrubs.
To touch or handle them
quickly produces swelling
and inflammation with in
tense itching and burning
of the skin. The eruption
soon disappears, the suf
ferer Vim-W-C fnrmKu
j " . , uul v v
mmost as soon as the little Misters and
pustules appeared the poison had reached
the blood, and will break out at regular
intervals and each time in a more aggra
vated form. This poison will loiter in the
system for years, and every atom of it
must be forced out of the blood before you
can expect a perfect, permanent cure.
Nature's Antidote
FOR
Nature's Poisons,
i is the only cure for Poison Oak, Poison
I Ivy, and all noxious plants. It is com
posed exclusively of roots and herbs. Now
is the time to get the poison out of your
system, as delay makes your condition
i worse. Don't experiment longer with
salves, washes and soaps they never cure.
I Mr. S. M. Marshall, bookkeeper of the Atlanta
' (Ga.) Gas Xight Co., was poisoned with Poison
Oak. He took Sulphur, Arsenic and various
other drugs, and applied externally numerous
1 lotions and salves with no benefit. At times the
Swelling and inflammation was so severe he was
almost blind. For eight years the poison would
break out every season. His condition was much
improved after taking one bottle of S. S. S., and
f few bottles cleared his blood of the poison, and
all evidences of the disease disappeared.
People are often coisoned without
knowing when or how. Explain your case
fully to our physicians, and they will
cheerfully give such information and ad
vice as you require, without charge, and
we will send at the same time an interest
ing book on Blood and Skin Diseases.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, ATLANTA, OA.
Knew the Sort.
Eleanor's Mother You do Eleanor a
great injustice, my dear. She is not
idle, only delicate. She has no power
of endurance.
Eleanor's Father Humph! I know
all about her power of endurance. It's
the kind that'll let her dance all night
in shoes two sizes too small for her,
and make her too tired the next day
to dust the parlor. New York World.
usness
"I have used your valuable CASCA-
SETS and find them perfect. Couldn't do
without them. I have used them for some time
for indigestion and biliousness and am now com
oletely cured. Recommend them, to every one.
Once tried, you will never be without them in
she family." Edw. A. Mabx, Albany. N. Y.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
tiood, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 60c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Hwri; CoMy.ny. Clikay. Iwmil. S.w Twfc. SSI
Nfl.TA.Hlf! Sold and irnaranceed by alldrug.
nJ- U'DAb Kists to CVU Tobacco Habit
Springtime Resolutions
tbY Keeley Cure
Sure relief from liquor, opium and tobacco
habits. Send for particulars to
Keeley Institute, 314 Sixth St., Portland, Or.
0 I
&f JP CATHARTIC Jk
W TMAOI MAXK MUMUal
LONGEVITY IN I9TH CENTURY.
Professions Compared Philosophers
and Farmers in ths Lead.
"Has the past century contributed to
ward the Increase or the diminution of
auman longevity?" That was the ques
tion discussed the other day by a group
if French scientists. In comparing the
statistics of morality In the nineteenth
century with those brought out by Du
rillard at the close of the previous cen
tury it appears that the average long
evity since 1789 Increased by five or six
years. Therefore, the question put by
aur medical celebrity would seem to be
answered, the answer pointing to an In
crease of the average length of life.
But the present effort Is to reveal the
mirage, if mirage there is. In the figures
before us; and that is a thorny problem.
Dr. Vacher and M. Bertlllon fix the
average loisgevlty In the nineteenth cen
tury at 73 years. All things being
equal, the number of people who reach
ed the age of 73 was greater in the gen
erations of the nineteenth century than
It was in those of the eighteenth.
Vacher only arrives at approximations.
He tried to find out if professions pos
sessed any influence over the chances
of life, and be was unable to come to
a conclusion, because he found cen
tenarians in all professions, even the
most unremunerative. For all that, he
thinks that he can give the palm to
agriculture, because it was In the fam
ilies of farmers that he found the great
est number of persons who had reached
an advanced age. Here statistics are in
accord with the most rational previs
ions. The profession which presents a hap
py medium in the matter of longevity
Is that of the scientist. Among the sa
vants' one finds as many men who die
young as the number who die very old.
We know that Fontenello lived 100
years, and that Chevreul was 103.
Among those who reached ages quite
respectable, although their years were
fewer in number, are Humboldt, who
died at 90; Newton, at 85; Franklin, at
84, and Button, at 81.
The list of those who died very young,
like Bichat and Paschal, is just as long;
but It Includes, unfortunately, the mar
tyrs of science, those who fell upon the
field of honor in the effort to harvest
some new truth Jacquemont and Com
merson in France, Hasselquist and Abel
in Sweden, Solokoff in Russia and many
others. Such deaths are beyond the
reach of the massive rules of statistics.
It is noteworthy, however, that the cel
ebrated Cassini family is about the only
one In which the dual inheritance of
longevity and scientific genius lasted
through four generations. Courier des
Etats Unis.
A Boy's Composition on Girls.
Girls is things wat gets taken out for
nothing to theyatres and cirkusses and
parties and everything. I wish i was
a girl, my sister Mary was one and
she's got a soft thing of it too. Hank
Wilson comes to see her every knight
ana he talks her out riding and dans
ing, and everything. He never taiks
me out altho I'd like it just as well.
When duff Gordon was hear i heard
hank Wilson tell him that his girl was
an awful exkspense to him, and that
he had to treet her to oisters and ise-
kreem, and everything. Then Duff
gordon winked and sed, never mind,
ner oia man has got lots of tin.
Yes sed hank I'll have to Grinn and
barrett til we're Marred and then if
she wants chocklet kandie She'll have
rb get it herself. Then they Poked
each other in the ribs and laffed. Wee
had dinner rite after that and hank
Wilson and Duff Gordon was there too.
1 askt pa. Please pa won't you sho me
some ov your tin. Tin? Said pa what
do you mein? Wei 1 said hank Wilson
said Mary was an orfel xpens to him
and duff gordon sed never mind, that
the old man is got lots of tin and then
hank sed after he was Marry ed Mary
would have to bye her chocklet kandie
herself, and then evribodi skolded me
and kalled me naims and they got
fighting amnng thereselves and Mary
kried and hank looked like if he was
going to kry too and a after wile they
maae up ana kissed and said I wuz a
young liar and hank Wilson give me a
kuarter and tolled mh to keep quiet
and not to be 2 fresh. I never did like
girls anniehow.
The Away-from-Home Girl.
'Write your home letters remilnrlv
and keep in touch with vonr nnmnto
and old friends by weekly correspond
ence," writes Margaret E. Sangster, in
the Ladies' Home Journal, addressing
girls who have gone from home into
tne woria to seek their livelihood.
"Never let a Sunday afternoon drift
out without your hour spent in an inti
mate and loving letter to the dear
mother. This is a good occupation for
Sunday, and I can hardly tell you how
minute and confidential and affection
ate this writing should be. But there
Is no need. You know what you like to
hear from home, and what mother and
father most long for, when your letters
come. I follow those letters. Mother
is in the kitchen, washing the dishes.
She wipes her hands and sits down in
the low rocking-chair by the window
where the lilac is beginning to bud.
Father stands between the table and
the door, waiting to hear what you
have said, and aware that he must wait
until mother has satisfied her heart
with the first reading. Then it will be
his turn. To them both you are, and
you will always be, just their own lit
tle girl, and you can never send them
a line which they will not scan with
eagerness. So never put off your fam
ily at home with a scrappy, hurried
scrawl; take time; and tell them every
thing." Discordant Custom in Berlin.
Berlin is probably the only city of
any size in which there is absolutely
no attempt at anything like a general
dinner hour, or even at uniform busi
ness hours. Each circle of professions
has its own hours of business, which
naturally regulate the household meal
arrangements. Army and official cir
cles have certain hours of duty; bank
ing and commercial houses have their
own hours; writers, actors and artists
theirs, and the university and the
schools form another set with other
hours. If you have a wide visiting list
in Berlin you may be asked out to
dinner at any time from 2 until 7.
Hopeless dyspepsia is the penalty if
you do not keep in one set.
Auctioneers are an obliging lot; they
always attend to every one's bidding.
SEAFARING MEN
sZ7 KNOW THE VALUE OF
OILED CLOTHING
IT WILL
:keep you dry
IN TH
WETTEST WEATHER
100K rOR ABOVE TTJADE ttAW
UN JftLC EVERYWHERE:
CiTA I Al encs
0WIN5PULL !fNt OP fiARriENTJ AND HAT5
A J.TOWEB CO.. BOSTON. MASS
IESIED AND TRUE
N. r. N. B.
Jo. 15 llol.
w
mntion this Daner.
TP A XX I WW.
Machinery, Implements,
rarm
Bee Line Buggies
$65.00 AND UP.
HENNEY, $90.00 and up.
Iron corners on bodies of all our Henney and
Bee Line Buggies. Send for Catalog,
MITCHELL, LEWIS & STIVER GO.
First and Taylor Sts. Portland, Oregon.
NEW LIFE TO
HonwB?LifeByustag0ou5r Anchor
Great Combination of Strength and Beauty.
"Thb Tie That Binds.'
mmmmm j
See Our Anchor Clamp
You would be surprised it you knew
how little it would cost you to fix up
that old fence. Better send for some
Anchor Clamps and Uprights, and ft
pair of our pinchers, and make your old
wire fence look like a new one.
ANCHOR FENCE looks so nice and
is so strong that farmers sometimes
think that it must be high, priced. It
isn't, though.
Clamp Betobe Using. Cattle, Sheep
FARM, RAILROAD
Write for Prices and Catalogue.
Agents W anted in
Every Town.
MALTED LIVE AGENTS
In all towns of Oregon, Washington and Idaho,
LE ROY
Model 50,
$35.00.
f (JUTLAND DELIVERY.
TO SELL LE ROY BICYCLES
LISTED AT f30.00, J3.00 AND flO.OO.
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE, DISCOUNTS AND TERMS.
HENRY GOODMAN & COMPANY,
....12B FIRST STREET....
Jobbers of Bicycle Sundries. Portland, Oregon.
FAIRBANKS,
MORSE & CO.
. Wm.Jmmi ' IT, W. K .
JOHN POOLE, Portland, Oregon,
Foot of Morrison Street,
Can give you the best bargains in
Buggies, Plows, Boilers and Engines,
Winilmills and Pumps and General
Machinery. See us before buying.
HOME GROWN GRASS SEEDS.
A mixture of deep rooting grass seeds that we
will guarantee to grow on drv ground that will
not produce cereals or any other kind of grass
Will make crop of hay, and pasture all seasons
of the year. Vou never invested a dollar in
your life that will give you such results: price
$16.00 per 100 or 20 cents per pound. Send us an
order for 100 pounds; we will send instructions
for sowing. Address M. J. SHIELDS A CO.
Growers and Importers of all kinds of Grass
and Field Seeds. MOSCOW. IDAHO.
Northwest POULTRY News
If yon keep poultrysend lOc. for 8 mos.
trial to the Or. Fancier Monthly,
8a. 11, Port 1 d. r. Tells wbere
togetbestpotiltry inN.W. Sample free.
I i.i ill Vu i iii MtTtaama
mi Hi I
Good, Live Agents Wanted
In all unoccupied territory, for ths
Beat Wheels on L&rth, the 1901
deal
BICYCLES
$20 - $25 - $35 - $40
FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CO.,
105-111 Sixth Street. PORTLAND, Ore.
YOU DO
YOUR PART
which is. Bend us
your address, and
nrr'i i
tv . Li
mn niiDC
Which Is, lei 1 you iree how to make money fast
r, v p racmc loasc peiroieum
oil boom. Write imraolmlelv to Bankers and
Brokers Oil Co.; J. w. Heisner & C ., financial
aeenta, 215 Commercial Block, Portland, Ore.
scuu nameu in every town.
bupphes, Etc.
If You Need a
SAW MILL, ENGINE
RON PI? or any piece of Machinery, it
, , ' wiu Py 10 "rite us for cata
logue and prices.
RUSSELL & CO.,
Portland and Spokane.
OLD FENCES!
Clamps and Uprights.
Thb Old Fence. The Anchob Fence.
and Hog Tight, it never Slips after closing
AND LAWN FENCE.
Ssijiils
cV" r 1 i' "i "fr
Lw fl ft:
The Portland Anchor Fence Go;
743 Nicolai St., PORTLAND, Oregon.
LE ROY
Model 50,
$35.00.
PORTLAND DELIVERY.
GUARANTEED TO JANUARY 1, 1902.
1 H. P.
GASOLINE ENGINE
Pumps Water, Saws Wood,
Grinds Feed, and costs two
cents an hour to run.
Get full particulars from 310 Market
Street, San Francisco, Oal. ; First and
Stark Sts., Portland, Or.; Los Angeles,
Cal.
emit.
Ferry's Seeds are
known the country over aa
the most reliable Seeds tbat
can be bought. Don't save ;
nickel on cheap seedt and lose m,
dollar on the harvest.
1901 Seed Annual free.
D. M. FERRY A CO..
ninit Mioh ' tf, J
POULTRY NETTINC.
Buy from the manufacturer. Price in lull rolls
2 feet wide, ISO feet long 1.6S
8 . mm m 2.47
4 " , 3.30
g m t m 4,12
6 " 4.9
All Kinds of Wira and Iron Work.
PORTLAND WIRE A IRON WORKS
149 Front St., Portland, Oregon.