Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1902)
Disfigured Skin Wasted muscles and decaying bones. , What havoc ! Scrofula, let alone, is capable of all that, and more. It is commonly marked by bunches in the neck, inflammations in the eyes, dys pepsia, catarrh, and general debility. It is always radically and permanently cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla Which expels all humors, cures all erup tions, and builds op the whole system, whether young or old. Hood'g Fills cure liver ills; the non-lrritatlng and only pthajtic to take with Hood's Sargaparijiau Tolstoy Independent ot Doctors. Count Tolstoy is not an obedient pa tient. Some time ago his physicians told him not to walk or ride on horse back, but he did what he pleased, re marking, "I know better than all phy sicians what is good for me." DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness ia caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed von have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflamma tion can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ot ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Iollars for any case of Deai ness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend for tirculars, free. - F. J. CHENEY fc CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c Hall's Family Pills are the best. Oil-Burning Locomotives. Locomotives to burn oil are appear ing in the Pacific states. They are built with the cab and furnace in front and the smokestack behind. The ten der is discarded, and the oil and water are conducted in pipes. CIT Permanently Cured. Ko fits or nervousness ll I V after first Ja' iifeof Yr. Klin.'s Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE S'i.00 trial bottle and treat ise. Da.R.11. Kline. Ltd.. Ml ArchSt..Philadelphia.Pa, Wire Gauze for Hay Fever. The newest idea for mitigating hay fever a disease which seems to claim more victims every year, in propor tion to the population is embodied in a small disc covered with wire gauze, which is inserted in the nostril. La Grippe conquers life Wizard Oil conquers La Grippe. Your druggist sells Wizard Oil. An Independent American Citizen. While riding in a Maine country road a traveler observed a field of corn which was overrun with rank weeds, and midway of the place was a large, consicuously displayed sign with the following: "Notiss! None of Your - Business if This Corn Ain't Hoed." Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth ing Syrup the best remedy to use lor their children during the teething period. Clean Persons Among the Lepers. In the leper settlement in the island of Molakai, there were 909 lepers and 164 "clean" persons. The general opinion was that the "clean" would in time become leprous. Nearly 1,100 people are housed, fed and clothed for about $80,000 a year. A New Billiard Ball Trick. '),' An entirely new performance with '?cue and billiard ball has been given by ijthe famous billiard player, Robert de Bremont, says the Peoria Herald. Mr. Bremont calls his trick "William Tell." f. He performs it on an ordinary billiard f table, upon which a lighted candle has t been placed. By hitting a ball with his S cue he sends the former over the flame, describing an arc. The holder or candle is not touched by the ball, but its motion extinguishes the light. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a couch cure. .1. W. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. Water Power is Mighty. Gigantic water power developments are projected in the Alps. There are now in the French Alps 48 factories supplied by 250,000 horse power, elec trically generated. Engineers estimate that 3,000,000 horse power is now run ning to waste in the Alps. Freddie Would Hve His Way. Little Freddie Mamma, doesn't Uncle Bob like plum pudding? Mamma Yes; but the doctor won't let him eat it. Little Freddie Well, if I was as big as him there wouldn't be any doctor big enough to stop me. Boston Her ald. Sores and Ulcers never become chronic unless the blood is in poor condition is sluggish, weak and unable to throw off the poisons that accumulate in it. The system must be relieved of the unhealthy matter through the sore, and great danger to life would follow should it heal before the blood has been made pure and healthy and all impurities eliminated from the sys tem. S.S.S. begins the cure by first cleans ing and invigorating the blood, building up the general health and removing from lne rnorht1 A CONSTANT DRAIN eiTctematter: "POM THE SYSTEM. When this has been accomplished the dis charge gradually ceases, and the sore or ulcer heals. It is the tendency of these old indolent sores to grow worse and worse, and eventually to destroy the bones. Local applications, while soothing and to some extent alleviate pain, cannot reach the seat of the trouble, b. S. S. does, and no matter how apparently hopeless your condition, even though your constitution has broken down, it will bring- relief when nothing else can. It supplies the rich, pure blood necessary to heal the sore and nourish the debilitated, diseased bodv. Mr. J. T!. Talbcrt, Lock Box 245, Winona, Miss., ays: "Six years ago my leg from the knee to the foot ws one solid sore. Several phvsicians treated me and I made two trips to Hot Springs, but found no relief. I was induced to trv S. S. S., and it made a complete cure. I have been a per fectly well man ever since." is the only purely veg etable blood purifier known contains no J-m poisonous minerals to ruin the digestion and add to, rather than relieve your suffer ings. If your flesh does not heal readily when scratched, bruised or cut, vour blood is in bad condition, and any ordinary sore is apt to become chronic. Send for our free book and write out physicians about your case. We make no charge for this service. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA. GA. 1 l"lKrS WHciit AIL list fralLS. Best Couch Syrup. Tastes Good. TJse in ttmft. to!cl rT tlrueeists. 19 SOME LARGE FIGURES NECESSARY WHEN SPEAKING OF OUR FARMING INDUSTRY, Wheat Crop of 1898 Would Have Made Nearly Ten of the Pyramids Our American Forefathers Were Poor Tillers of the Soil. Joseph, son of Jacob, had to ware house a good deal of wheat in the seven fat years to carry the Egyptians through the seven lean ones. . The American farmers produced enough in 1898 to make Joseph's little stock look like a pea in a tub. If it had all been piled in form on the plain of Gizeb it would have made nine pyramids the size of the pyramids of Cheops, and with the surplus another could have been rearer four-fifths as large. That was the biggest American wheat crop ever recorded. It amounted to 675,148, 705 bushels, grown on'44,045,278 acres of land. Next year the yield was light er, and the Americans only turned off seven and nine-tenths pyramids of wheat In 1900 they even fell short of that, producing only a paltry seven and a half pyramids. Still, that would have been a comfortable addition to Joseph's stock, and considering that it was grown on a smaller acreage than the crop of 1899 was a rather creditable performance. The deficiency was made up with a 2,000,000,000-bushel corn crop, and 210,000,000 bushels of pota toes. There was considerable ado over the Increase of the standing army to 100,- 000 men. If every man in such an army were a good fast milker, and worked at It ten hours a day, the whole force couldn't milk more than one-third of the cows that are now being milked in this country not to speak of the goats. And If they could milk them all, and if they did, and if they milked them into the Chicago drainage canal, be ginning with It entirely empty, they could milk it bankful in about two weeks. If all the hens in this country were to be consolidated, like some of our other manufacturing establishments, Into one hen, and that hen were to lay an egg with the cubic contents of all the eggs laid daily on American soil, that egg would be as big as well, it would be a very large egg. A chick hatched from it ought to be able to peck wheat off the dome of the national capitol. In 1890 there were 258,871.125 chickens In the country, and during the year 819,722,916 dozen eggs were pro duced and sold. When somebody deprecated a billion dollar Congress Mr. Reed, retorted that It was a billion-dollar country. It is. The millions period Is no longer ade quate to express the magnitude of our manufactures, our trusts, our fortunes and our farming Industry. The acreage of American farms in 1890 was greater than the combined acres of France, Germany, Austria, Italy and the British Isles. The value of their realty was $13,279,252,649, and the tools and Implements on them rep resented an outlay of nearly half a billion more. They produced over $3, 500,000,000 worth of food and raw ma terial. The value of their exports in 1899 was $792,811,733, or more than half the value of the entire exports of the country by $42,000,000. The growth of this industry had the most primitive beginnings, and has gone forward in the face of the most discouraging vicis situdes, says Frank M. Todd, in Ains lee's. The American of the revolutionary period was an extremely poor farmer. Looking back on his methods and his work, it is hard to say which were the more crude, his implements or his ideas. He used a wooden plow; he was afraid an Iron one would "poison the soil." He had not yet learned that glanders was contagious, and would work and stable healthy stock along side stock affected by it, and wonder what there was in the soil, air or cli mate that carried them off. He didn't understand the use of fertilizers, and instead of spreading his barnyard ma nure on his fields, he let it accumulate around his barn until the approaches were impassable. Then he dug the barn out and moved it. Instead of rotating crops to save his soil, he planted ac cording to the phases of the moon. There were few sheep In the country, and other like stock was poor and scanty. In Virginia the belief pre vailed that it would kill cows to house and milk them In the winter. Transportation was poor and contin ued so for a long time. The roads could not have been worse. Markets were scattered and far between. Each farm attempted to be self-sustaining !n as large a degree as possible. What the farmer couldn't grow r his wife make they went without. Wasteful methods of tillage eventually exhausted a soil originally rich, and in the reign of An drew Jackson agriculture had fallen Into such an alarming state of neglect and Inefficiency that the government had to come to Its relief. Through the efforts of Henry L. Ellsworth, Com missioner of Patents, a bureau was es tablished In the patent office which de veloped Into the Department of Agri culture. By aid of that department principally farming has been made a science. CURIOSITIES ON RAILWAY TRIP. Experiences Met With by a Man Trav eling Around the Globe. A globe-trotter sends some remark ably Interesting notes of a journey round the world to the Pall Mall Maga zine. He says: I traveled from Na gasaki to Yokohama, in Japan, without a break in the journey. The distance is 700 miles, and the best trains re quire exactly forty-eight hours for the trip. Of these six hours are occupied in crossing the Inland Sea by boat The first-class fare Is 2 5d, second class 1 4s and third class one-half of the sec ond. Only an occasional train has a dining car or a sleeping car attached to it Like everything else In Japan, the railway carriages are toylike, usually have only two or three compartments. In the dining cars you eat from tables hardly larger than little girls have for their dolls. At all stations, which are frequent, you can buy freshly made tea for three-halfpence pot, cup, tea and alL This yon take In the car, and the dishes are thrown out of the window usually. Europeans dislike the - pre pared luncheons sold in boxes. " They consist mainly of boiled rice and under cooked fish. Smoking is permitted in all compart ments, for all Japanese men and women smoke almost continually. A native lady enters the carriage, slips her feet from her tiny shoes which have wood or rice-straw soles, stands upon the seat and then sits down demurely with her feet doabled beneath her. A mo ment later she lights a cigarette or her little pipe, which holds just tobacco enough to produce two good whiffs of smoke. All Japanese people sit with their feet upon the seat of the car, and not as Europeans do. All of them have first removed their shoes; When the ticket collector attired in blue uniform enters the carriage he removes his cap and twice bows politely. He re peats the bow as he comes to each pas senger. More than 90 per cent of all the travel in Japan is third-class, and about 2 per cent only is first-class. Nearly all the locomotives are English. The British government conducts a turtle farm at Ascension Island. Janu ary in each year sees the commence ment of the turtle season, which does not as a rule last more than three months. All turtles caught at Ascen sion Island are the property of the crown and are only sent to England and other places for disposal a directed by the admiralty, in whose hands the government of the whole island prac tically rests. The particular species which favors Ascension with its visits is the green turtle, from whose green fat and portion of the fins that particu lar brand of soup is made which is pro verbially associated with the banquets of London's civic dignitaries. Many people still smile when they hear travelers talk of oysters that grow on trees, just as; long ago, sailors were laughed, at when they came home with stories of flying fish.- Both are real enough, however, and the tree oyster is of delicious taste, If voyagers through the tropics are to be believed. At a conference recently held in Barbados J. E. Duerden, of Jamaica, an economic scientist of some note, brought forward an interesting proposal for increasing and improving the cultivation of tree oysters, and as there is a rich field in nearly all the West India Islands and along the coast of Central America something may come of the scheme. These oysters cling to the branches of the mangrove. When the English rooks are building their nests frequently a rookery Is dis turbed by big quarrels over the plac ing of those huge bundles of sticks in the treetops. The trouble occurs most ly with young birds wishing to place their nests too near to an old nest. A council of rooks is called, with the re sult that the disputants' nests are soon scattered to the winds, and the claim ant and the defendant both have to be gin a new foundation. Sometimes there is a disturbance on a more limited scale when a pair of birds do their very best to pull the sticks from the nest of an other pair, each of the contending par ties doing all they can to prevent the other from building. Rooks are curi ously weather wise and they scent a coming storm and set to work to re pair and strengthen their nests before that imminant gale has been evident to the farmer. The rook's powers of sight and hearing are remarkable. When Baby Writes to Daddy. When baby writes a letter to her daddy far away, The occasion's most important, for she has so much to say. She sits up to the table, as grown-up folks all do, And then a pile of paper all around her we must strew. With grandma's golden spectacles safe perched upon her nose, She dips her pen into the ink, then straight to work she goes, And the onslaught fierce that follows would fill you with dismay When baby writes a letter to her daddy far away. "Baby sends her love to daddy, and hopes that he is well," Is the sentence baby first indites her methods I must tell For the sweet and simple message that expresses baby's love ' Is a dot and dash and big ink splash below and just above, She perforates the paper with many tiny pricks, And plays a tattoo on her chair with sun dry little kicks, And all the floor is scattered o'er with fragments of the fray, To tell us baby's writing to her daddy far away. . The letter is a long one, for scores of sheets are used, And every one bears witness to the way it's been abused. A page for every word she takes, she quite ignores the lines. While each one as it's written to oblivion she consigns; Then proudly for an envelope Miss Baby now will call, And she fills it full of paper, with no writing on at all. The address is so illegible, I much regret to say. It's doubtful if 'twill ever reach dear daddy far away. Woman's Home Companion. Hard to Make Right. A prominent Itgal light, whose office Is not a hundred miles from a 2d South street building, and a physician whose office is in the same building were waiting for the street car to take them to their homes. "There," said the doctor, pointing to a man who had recently emerged from the pen, "is one of your mistakes come back to face you!" "Granted," said the lawyer. "My mistakes do face me sometimes. Tour mistakes, however, are buried so deep that it requires Gabriel's trumpet to call them back." Salt Lake Herald. When you suddenly meet a man you hate, ever remark that you hope you are looking vrelV: Lack of sense is too often blamed on lack of confidence. : Did Goethe Hav PocfaMrks? The Goethe specialists have some thing: new to talk about A Breslau professor his discovered in a plaster cast of the poet's face, spots on the chin and the left cheek which look like smallpox marks. The savants are now discussing the important ques tion whether Goethe really had pock marks in his face, or whether the spots discovered indicate mere imper fections in the plaster. It is known that Goethe did have the smallpox when he was six years old. New York Post ; . " Good Price for Manuscript. The late Russian savant. Dr. Kulesh, made a translation into Little Russian of the Bible, which the censor would not allow to be printed. His widow has now sold the manuscript to the British Bible Society for 5000 roubles. Not Up to the Hark. Magazine Editoiv-Haven't you got a poem to go on this page? Assistant Here's one that I don't quite get the meaning of, but I sup pose many of our readers will under stand it Magazine Editor That wont do. I want something that will puzzle every body. Judge. Decen dents of Scotch Higlanders. Most of the people in Pictou and Antigonish, in Nova Scotia, and 1 great part of the neighboring counties, are descendants of the Scotch High landers who settled tnere about a cen tury ago. The Kaiser's Palaces. In the twenty-odd palaces of the German Emperor some 3500 servants are employed, about 2000 of these be ing women. A huge income is, of course, required for keeping up estab lishments on this scale, and the Em peror's total expenditure is estimated at some $25,000 a day. Sweet Revenge. Nebb You .must like to hear that dreadful grind organ since you pay the man to play under your window every day. Nobb No, I don't like it any more than that girl over the way who is taking vocal lessons. Boston Post. A Peculiar Wasp. One kind of wask found in Brazil and Guiana makes its nest of a bril liant white pasteboard suspending it from the highest branches of the trees, so as to escape the attention of the monkeys, which, in those regions, have a troublesome habit of investi gating everything, even a hornet's nest. Why Syrupy Fl4? tkfrbfest fcmily laxative It is pure. " - It is gentle. It is pleasant. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world produces. A New Milk Adulteration. A new milk adulterant has been dis covered by the dairy inspectors in use in Minnesota. It is called giscogen, and is composed of sugar, lime and water. It has the effect of making milk appear richer than it is, as the lactic acid in the milk turns the lime to a thick white substance that as similates with the milk and improves its looks while it does not injure the taste. 1 Hard Place to Build Railroads. The difficulty of railroad construc tion in some parts of Africa is illus trated Dy the fact that on the Free-town-Mattru line in Sierra Leone eleven steel bridges had to be built in a distance of thirty kilometers. The Truth of It "It's my opinion," said Mr. Medder grass, after complimenting the grocer on the fact that the store had been furnished with a new stove for the fall loafers, "that some o' these here navy officers is workin' for the coal trust. 1 b'lieve that's why they didn't tell Schley about their coal supply hold in' back on him till prices went up another half dollar on the ton." Bal timore American. Not Up in French. Willis I prefer to eat a la carte. Gillis Ah! I see you frequent lunch wagons. Boston Herald. Answered. "But how do you pass your time?" asked the lady from the city of the re tired business man who had settled on a farm. "Well," said the retired business man, "I spend a good deal of it in ex plaining to inquirers ho.w I get along; out here." Somerville Journal. . Old-time Droughts. The first great drouth on record happened in 678, and the two succeed ing years, when, according to the rec ords, there was practically no rain fall in England. In 879 the springs m England were dried up, and it was im possioie for men to work in the open air. In 993 and 994 the njuts on the trees were "roasted as if irr an oven." Tricking a Chronologer. President Pritchett of the Massa chusetts - Institute of Technology in relating his experience in college re cently said that the way boys had of finding a certain professor was to step into the middle of the college yard and call out a date in American his tory. Instantly the professor would came out from some window or door in the college and say that the date was incorrect. - - Brain-Weight and Mental Power. It is stated by an authority that the weight of a man's brain has nothing to do with his mental power. The colder the climate, the greater the size of the brain. The largest heads of all are those of the Chugatches, who live very far north,' and next comes the heads of the Laps. La Source. "Just look at Frauline Hilgeard's beautiful hair?" "Yes, she has it from her father." "But excuse me, he is quite bald!" "To be sure; but he's a hair dress er." Der Dorfbarbier. - Lee Chop's Fortune. With a fortune of $150,000, Lee Chop, a Chinese merchant of New York, is going back to Canton. Three children are born here anu one wiie will accompany him. He is said to have two other wives in China. Boiler Tubes of Big Steamer. The boiler tubes of a liner, if placed in a straight line would reacn nearly ten miles, and the condenser tubes more than twenty-five miles. The to tal number of separate pieces of steel in the .main structeure of the ship is not less than 40,000. Women as Bull-Killers. An experiment with women as tor eadors was recently made in the bull ring at Cadiz, Spain, and was far from satisfactory- The women proved very poor bull-killers, and the cheers turned to hisses before the day's entertain men was over. A Prehistoric Canoe. A prehistoric canoe was dug up re cently in a bog about five miles from Dungannon, County Tyrone, Ireland. It is scooped out of an oak trunk, is sit feet long, three feet wide, and eight een inches deep. It has a ring shape at the bow, evidently for mooring and haulage, and also two lugs at the stern. In the same bog a woman's body was discovered in a remarkable state of preservation. According to medical opinion it has lain there for 200 years, but the peaty soil had pre served it. a ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter's little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Simlle Wrapper Below. V"y mall and ma easy to take as augacv FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS fdr biliousness, for torpid liver, for constipation; fdr sallow skin. FOR THE COMPLEXION fie I Pnrely Teetle.v rasrasRrssw CURE SICK HEADACHE. Automobiles Scarce in London. Automobiles have become very scarce in the city proper of London in consoquerce of the application of an old ordinance forbidding self-propelle.1 vehicles from going faster than three miles an hour. Very Queer. "'It's mighty queer that Frank Tick leton should turn out to be a default er," remarked Tenspot. "That's what it is," added Bunting. "Nobody ever heard him alluded to as 'Honest Frank' Tickleton.' " Puck. CARTERS if IVES J mus. Visitors Help to Enrich Maine. The vacation visitor to Maine in re cent seasons has been so numerous and so generous in his expenditures that the prosperity of the Pine Tree State has taken long leaps, ahead. An Exhibition Stunt Mamma The whipping yon got yes terday doesnt seem to have improved yon; your conduct has been even worse today. "Willie That's what I wanted to prove. You said I was bad as I possibly could be yesterday an' I knew you was wrong. Philadelphia Record. 1 Anatomical Melancholy. First Bookworm What are you looking for, Jones? Second Worm Anatomy of the Mel ancholy. First Worm Just what I'm after. Have you got the blues? SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Founded 1B70 A Horns School for Boys Military and Manual Training Write for Illustrated Catalogue ...Columbia . University... Academic and Collegiate Halls. COURSES Classical, Literary, Scientific and Commercial. For particulars apply to REV. E. P. MURPHY, President, University Part. Portland. Oregon We Teach Bookkeeping, Stenography, Mathematics, English, Lan guages, History, Etc., By Mail For full information address Pari fic Coast Cor io- saondenco Institute Portland. Oregon. IN VOUR You Find the Difference 111 your pure. H iiien win you nave i Prnoprioof'f I ino Lfillor Is a liquid to paint or spray the roosts, quickly destroying all UlUCoUCuK O LIliG mlltJi lice. The price is nothing in comparison to the good it will do. Cquq Vnnr Phifilfonp Feed Groesbeck'a gg Producer and Health Food to the udlC lUllI UlllUnClIb, chickens-prevents mortality. Pullets begin laying when five or six months old. 25 to 50 per cent, more eggs produced. PORTLAND SEED GO., 13S Front Street, Portland, Or. Cosat Agent. Because Its component parts are all wholesome. It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the carminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste. All are pure. x All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounded. Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to the orginality and simplicity, of the combination. To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine. Manufactured by San Fra.rcisco, Cal. Louisville, Ky. New York. N. Y. FOB SALE B Y ALL LEADING VR UG GISTS. BEST FOR I CANDY 1 f CATHARTIC S SWEETEN THE STOMACH gxrx n C" inn will be paid vplvfU ILYyILJ port to us " something for, and furnish evidence upon which we can I afnTvonYin'ttv THE STOMACH ! ' rVWmmJ'mJmaa&mrarra mm1Wm1m1m1m1a1m1m11alaiXl I LIVER TONIC I SfeCG&Wta MwkWVWAniwvM ammmamaam 1 Mil n DMT 3 . i cure I (focGCWto CCjSTjPATJOJ pNEviiriibTb 3foco?igTj JOHN POOLE, Portland, Oregon, Foot at Morrison Street Can give too the best bargains ia Buggies, Plows, Boilers and Engines, Windmills and Pumps and General Machinery. See us before baying. Ferry's Seeds make good crops, good crops make more cus tomersso each year the crops and enstomers have growa greater. That's the secret of the Ferry fame. More Ferry's Seeds sold and sown than any other kind. Sold by all dealers. 1 ISO Seed Annual FJtMHi. IO.M. Ferry Co. i Detroit, mien. The Farmers First Profit Is made in his selection ot seed. Send tor Our Complete Annual Cata logue for 1902, FREE! It contains full directions for garden work and many useful tables for the farmer. No one sells better Seeds than LAMBERSOVS SEEDS. LAMBERSON - Portland, Oregon Holiday Resolutions TAKE 1HJ Keeley Cure Sore relief Bom liqaor, opium and tobaaM ; Keeley Institute, Ave.. Fortluud, Oregon. Patents Send no Money But a model or drawing with a description, and we will advise you. J. S. Duffle RIlRR &Co., (Dept. A) Washington. D. & TlxCC N. P. N. V. Ko. 21903. WHEN writing t advertisers please mention this paper. POCKET! Between sickly, lousy chickens and healthy, contented fowls. One brings no money to your pocket, the other means money THE BOWELS 10 35 SO ALL DRUGGISTS. taste good. Eat them like candy. They remove any bad taste In the mouth, leav ing the breath sweet and perfumed. It la a pleasure to take them, and they are liked especially by children, sweeten the stomach by cleansing1 tha mouth, throat and food channel. That means, they stop undigested food from souring in the stomach, prevent gas form- ing in the bowels, and kill disease germs of any kind that breed and feed in the en tire system. are purely vegetable and contain no mer curial or other mineral poison. They con sist of the latest discoveries in medicine, and form a combination of remedies un equaled to make the blood pure and rich, and make clean skin and beautiful com plexion. tone the stomach and bowels and stir up the lazy liver. They do not merely soften the""stools and cause their discharge, but strengthen the bowels and put them into lively, healthy condition, making their ac tion natural. never grip nor gripe. They act quietly, pos itively and never cause any kind of uncom fortable feeling. Taken regularly they make the liver act regularly and naturally as it should. They keep the sewerage of the body properly moving and keep the system clean. Increase the flow of milk in nursing moth ers. If the mother eats a tablet, it makes her milk mildly purgative and has a mild but certain effect on the baby. In t"his way they are the only safe laxative for the nursing infant. taken patiently, persistently, will cure any form of constipation, no matter how old or how often other remedies have failed. They are absolutely guaranteed to cure any case, or purchase money will be cheerfully re funded. cost 10c, 25c, 60c a box. Samples sent free, for the asking. We publish no testimonials but sell Cascarets on their merit under ab solute guarantee to cure. Buy and try a box to-day, or write us for free samples and booklet. Mm BTKHUXQ BE9EDT CO., CHICAGO or SKW YORK. to any reader of this paper who will re. any attempt of substitution, or sale of just as good" when Cascareta are called convict. .All correspondence confidentuL