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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1902)
Hood's Sarsaparilla Has won success far beyond the effect of advertising only. The secret of its wonderful popular ity is explained by its unapproachable Merit. Based upon a prescription which cured people considered incurable, Hood's Sarsaparilla Unites the best known vegetable rem edies, by such a combination, propor tion and process as to have curative power peculiar to itself. v Its cures of scrofula, eczema, psori asis, and every kind of humor, as well as catarrh and rheumatism prove Hood's Sarsaparilla the best blood purifier ever produced. Its cures of dyspepsia, loss of appe tite and that tired feeling make it the greatest stomach tonic and strength restorer the world has ever known. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is a thoroughly good medicine. Begin to take it TODAY. Get HOOD'S. Generous. Mr. Newlywed (solicitously) And how did you get along with the butcher, love? Mrs. Newlywed Oh, splendidly. He is such a generous man, Mortimer. When I order a four pound roast he always sends me one weighing six 01 seven. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. His Quick Retort. Thejady Yes; it's only men that turn tramps. Why aren't women idie? The Tramp Because most of them are busy bodies, mum. Are Ton Using- Allen's Foot-Km-ef It U the only care for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corn end Bunion-. Ask for Allen's Foot-Esse. a powder to by shaken into the shoes. At all DrnrelBtj and Shoe Stores, 25c. 8am pie sent FREE. Address Allen B. einmed, LeRoy. V. Y. Cautious. Small Man Yes, sir; he's a con temptible scoundel, and I told him so! Big Man Did he knock you down Small Man No, I told him through the telephone. Tir' Hnre cannot be too hishlv spoken of as a couch cure. J. W. O'Bbibw. 323 Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. The Careful Sportsman. Jimson Where are you going? Bilson Only for a day's shooting. Jimson Great snakes! With that car load of freight? Bilson These boxes contain books the largest and most complete compen dium of the game laws of the state. don't want to shoot anything out of season. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of An Acceptable Neighbor. Blizzer How does your wife like that lady who moved in next door? Buzzar Oh. all right! She hasn't as many gowns as my wife. Stop guessing 1 Try a certain cure for painful ailments by getting at once a inhibit; ui uniuui a mmmu v. Cause Enough. Housekeeper Why did you leave your last place? Servant Faith, the lady and her husband was always quarrelin. "What did they quarrel about?" "Bekase I wouldn't lave till me two weeks was up." e44a44aeeeet X HOW I Im thm Time to USE IT. Not Noticeable. Willie Why, Uncle Jake, how you must have changed! Uncle Jake What do you mean, Willie? "Papa says the other morning you had a terrible head on you. AMI There is a certain disease that hat come down to ui throuph tnanv cen Disease tunes ana is . ' . older than hiatorr itself. yet very few outside of those who have learned from bitter ex perience know anything of its nature or lharacteristics. At first a little ulcer ot ant- arm9r ttltfMl trlnrnl nf the CCCS1 Ot rroins swell ; pimples break out on the Dreasi, nacx or some owcr pari m u body and fill with yellow pustular matter ; the mouth and throat become sore and the tongue is at all times badly coated. Headaches are frequent, and muscles and Joints throb and hurt, especially during in -r weather. These are some of the symptoms of that most loathsome of diseases, contagious moou. ruuou. in is strange pois ContCagiOtlS on does not affect Blood Poison "Iff' '3K u. ,, At If within a short time after being inoculated, while others show but slight evidence ot any uunc iot a long tim. ftr nnoiiuc. hut its tendency in every case is to complete destruction of the physical system, sooner or later. S. S. S. is a safe and infallible cure for this bad disease the only antidote for : 1 Tf .MrM fnntcrirma Blood Poison in every form and stage . . . . i c" o thoroughly ana permanently. s. o. o. contains no Mercury, Potash or other k.-mf.il min.rl hut is stnctlv and entirely a vegetable remedy, and we offer JI ,000.00 reward lor prooi mw v wwrA. whloh was estao- ww. llahedweara ao OKPAJTMSMTt i doing- noble work in relle-rlngr Buffering". Give out phyaiolana a abort history of your case " m , i Tha will eoat sua hu.u ... . won nothinjr, and what you say wffl ij halt in atriotest confidence.. With shelf help and a copy of our book oa .. i - t.y,A Pnlaoa en can snsmavsje your own ease and sure yonr. MU at borne. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlaata, Gfc I Heat Couch djrnix T&suss Good. Vm M. Floresco has communicated to w Academy of Sciences at Paris proof that there Is a fixed relation between the quantity of Iron in the liver of ani mals and the color of their skin and hir Animals of dark hair contain nearly twice the amount of Iron and pigments in the Uver and skin as those of white hair. Prof. W. W. CamnbelL the Director of the Lick Observatory. In summing up the results of the observations and photographs made by. the party sent from that observatory to study the to tal eclipse of the sun In Sumatra last May. says that the general conclusion to be drawn Is that the coronal struc ture surrounding the sun Is made up or matter, probably very finely divided, ejected from the surface of the sun with great velocities, just as we have matter ejected, now and wen, worn terrestrial volcanoes, with compara tively small velocities. Few persons have any conception ot the tremendous degree of heat repre sented In the sun, just as they are Ig- nroant, as a rule, that it is nyarogeu gas that, blazing in the sun, keeps tne universe of life existent. An astron omer has just given some interesting details respecting the temperature of the sun. He asserts that the mean tem perature is about 6,200 degrees centi gradeapproximately 11,200 degrees Fahrenheit. Of such a degree or neat one can form no adequate conception. Of the total heat the earth receives, of course, only a very small proportion. The rest belongs to space and is shared by other worlds than this. Men sometimes dream of enormous wealth stored in the earth, below the reach of miners, but according to the statements of Prof. C. R. Van HIse at the Denver meeting of the American Association for the Advancement ot Science, there is little or no ground to believe that valuable metallic deposits lie very deep in thejearth's crust Such deposits, he said, are made hy under ground waters, and owing to the pres sure on the rocks at great depths, the waters are confined to a shell near the surface. With few exceptions, ore de posits become too lean to repay work ing below 3,000 feet. Nine mines in ten, taking the world as a whole, are . . . i poorer in tne second tnousauu ibbv than In the fierst thousand, and poorer yet In the third thousand than In the second. In September the hunters and trap pers of the Yukon start out for their long winter sojourn in the midst of the snowy and pathless woods and along the banks of frozen rivers and streams. Bears, beavers, otters, mints, martens, foxes, wolves and wolever- ene all ran oerore tneir rines or are caught in their traps, and the man who can accumulate a good store of tne furs of any of these animals Is well re warded for his hard winter's work. But the greatest prize, which all seek and comparatively few get, is the rare black fox, of which only about half a dozen are killed in a season, whose soft robe is worth from $200 to $300 to the trapper who takes It From twenty five to forty silver-gray foxes are caught in a season; their pelts bring from f 100 to $200 apiece. The prices of bear pelts vary from f 10 to $25; or beaver, from $3.60 to $7; of mink, from $1.50 to $3; of marten from $3.50 to $12, and of otter from $4 to $8. NO CHANGE IN ALMANACS. Same Style, Same Subject Blatter in Them for Many Generations. What I'd like to see." remarked the druggist on the corner, "Is a family al manac filled with half-tone pictures, it would be a novelty to soothe the eyes and mind. We, who have gone through many years at this business and have had ample time to digest the countless free almanacs devoted to the relief of all bodily ills and 'sure guides to health,' know the average almanac from cover to cover. The wood-cuts that decorate some of them were made for our granddaddles and are as fa miliar to their fading visions as they are Interesting to our own children, recall perfectly the almanac of by boyhood. "After giving the church days and cycles of time, with the eclipses for the vear and the best time during that term In which to observe the planets, It had an address to the sick and a ta ble showing the mean time of diges tion of the different articles of diet Then followed a choice variety of an cient jokes. Interspersed with the sun and moon phases for every month, each day being marked with such phenom ena and Important events, such as Swedenborg born' or 'Kansas admit ted.' At the head of each month was a woodcut representing some timely re minder or scene of the month men tioned. For Instance, January was generally depicted with snow-covered ground and woodsmen felling huge trees. February showed the farmers threshing grain fn an open barn, March displayed the arrival of the seeds and April the sowing of them, For May we bad a woman and chil dren working In the garden planting potted flowers and in Jnne the farmers were gathering the first of their crop, July showed a boy fishing In a pond. with a stately house and fine-looking windmill at his back. August Illus trated the gra'n-cutting time and Sep tember gathering of apples, pears and other tree fruit Then came the har vest ef corn for October, a shooting scene for chilly November and a warm fireside with a giant Christmas tree for bleak December. "The odd thing now about this old fashioned almanac is this: Oo over to the next drug store you meet and pick up the first almanac you can lay hands to. You will be surprised to note the marked similarity between the old and the new. The latter Is made up of the features I have mentioned as being in the old, even to the "unsolicited testi monials selected rrom thousands re ceived,' the table for foretelling the weather throighout each year, and perhapa the latest postage laws. "It Is said that everything changes In this blessed world of ours." said the Mail and Express, "but I have never known the average almanac to shed Its old-time Ideas. .... That la why I sigh for a modern almanac with half-tone pic tures.' " r "- AT SHORT RANGE, Trn African Iiion Killed at First Shot. An Englishman who lived many years in Africa relates a thrilling experience which befell his family there. Hia home at the time was in the edge of the Transvaal wilderness, and it was there that the event occurred. One evening about dusk my wife and child were sitting on the veranda of the bungalow.. 1 was engaged a few rods away, putting the finishing toncn es to a bit of wagon-repairing. The servants were at the rear of the house. It was one of those peculiarly quiet evenings when nothing seems to break the stillness. Suddenly I felt, rather than saw. something moving near the veranda. I looked more closely, and to my horror perceived an enormous lion stealing along the ground In the direction of my wife and child. My wife saw the crea ture at the same instant and despite her terror, fortunately remained per fectly motionless and silent Scarcely knowing what to do, I hasti ly crept toward the side of the bunga low to the open window of my room, where I knew a loaded rifle was leaning azainst the wall. I cllmoed in at the window, seized the rifle and leaped by another window out upon the veranda. There was no time to think; the lion was within a few feet of my dear ones and crouching for a spring. -1 called softly to my wife not to move, and then fired. The ball passed directly over my boy's head and lodged in the forehead of the lion. Immediately above the eyes. and stretched him on the ground. There was an instant of fearful sus pense, men l nrea again, uui me sec ond bullet was not necessary, ror tne lion had been killed at the first shot MAN WHO WROTE G0 'WAY BACK AND SIT DOWN." "It is wholly inspiration," said Elmer Bowman, the author of "Go 'Way Back and Sit Down." Mr. Bowman is a negro. He was born Denver and lives In New York. "Ever since I could first remember I was humming live ly airs of my own and putting words to them which were funny everybody J laughed at them. anyway. And so when I wenf to New York I deter mined to make use of my talents, and I have done so. "When my mas terpiece, 'Go 'Way Back and Sit ELMEB BOWMAIt. Down, was incubating I practically ostracised myself from family and friends. Great subjects cannot be treated lightly. I felt the inspiration in me to compose something that would enter into and become a part of the lit erature of music, and I gave myself to it as only the artist can. I have, however, turned out some other compositions of which, I believe, have reason to feel proud. There Is, for instance, the lyric, 'I've Got Chick en on the Brain,' which has become so popular In New York. That came to me one evening after I had returned from a birthday party. I recognized in it at once as material for a classic, and I gave my whole mind to the production. The success it has achieved fully re pays me for the brain work I expended on It" A Genial Encounter. The tsar's last visit to France has filled the French papers with reminis cences of his former stay. One day he drove incognito to the house of Lou bet, then president of the senate, and while his companion went In to announce the visit, be amused himself by putting bis head out of the window and looking at the people who passed. A whistling street boy approached and recognized him, in spite of the plainness of his equipage. He stopped. took off his cap and said, cheerfully. "Good day, sir! How is the empress?" The tsar was naturally surprised, but he replied, with a smile: "Thanks, young man. The empress Is quite well, and has enjoyed the trip very much." The boy seemed glad to hear it, nod ded, and went whistling away. The tsar said, in telling the story, that he, thus cordially accosted, was the only one of the two to be embarrassed. Mrs. Whitman a Successful Rancher. Mrs. C. N. Whitman, of Denver, Colo., owns the largest ranch of any woman In the world. It is located in Texas,' near Tascosa, and Is called the L. S. ranch, after Lucien Scott, the first UIIUIW1 . i IW 'w lin owner. The rancn is winy miies to actj j gntgred the room hastily and square and Is devoted entirely to cattle j crled: QaiCk, quick! The fire extin ralsing. Mrs. Whitman makes her . -nj-h-rt where is It? Never mind home In Denver, Utbough she Is ab- sent a great deal, both at tne ranch ana In Europe. Mrs. Whitman understands the management of the ranch thorough- ly. When down there she rides over it from day to day on horsebacK, and keeps herself thoroughly Informed as to its needs. She knows both ends of the business; how to raise cattle and how to sell them profitably. He Tumbled. . "Ha! ha!" laughed Willie. "I chuck ed a bananer skin in front of de teach er." "I don't see any joke in that," spoke up his mother. "Don't you? Well, he tumbled all right, all right." Why He Excelled the Typewriter. "I can take 100 words a minute," said the shorthand writer. "I often take more than that," re marked the other, in sorrowful ac cents; "but then I have to. I'm mar ried." A man will talk for his interests, even If it Is necessary for him to say, that black la white.' - Why not bo eccentric by praising peo HIS MAJESTY'S AUTOMOBILE. Description of the Lvxarioaa Vehicle Ordered for Kins Edward. - In his majesty the King of England motoring possesses one -of its keenest supporters. . Since the days of the English-built Daimler, which was his majesty's In- j itial experiment in motor ownership, i quite a number of cars have passed through the gates of Saadringham for his use. but his interest In this form of locomotion Is unabated. ' The majority of his cars, ' however, have been Coventry ; Daimlers, in the selection of which bis majesty has set the very necessary example of encour aging the home Industry. The last car supplied him was a great roomy, com fortable vehicle, principally destined for nge at shooting parties and similar functions, and known as the beaters car. This, however. Is entirely over shadowed by the splendid carriage which they are building for him at the present moment' particulars of which are now published for the first time. The car. whjch Is a Coventry Daimler, will be fitted with a 22-horse power, four-cylinder motor, running at a nor mal speed of 720 revolutions. - It Is de signed to carry sufficient petrol for a run of 150 miles; is fitted with both electric and tube Ignition and is gear ed up to twenty-four miles an hour. The car is nnauestionably the most luxurious ever constructed, the body differing materially from the ordinary form. The tonneau. which is of the roomiest and most comfortable description, Is designed to hold . six passengers and the seats are built considerably above the two in front intended for the use of the mechanician and an attendant, in order that the passengers may ob tain an uninterrupted view ahead. The seats are rounded and are fitted with fine gauze curtains on either side, which may be drawn at will. While effectually protecting the royal party from the dust they are sufficient ly transparent to allow of an uninter rupted view of the scenery on all sides, At the back of the tonneau glass win dows extend from the door upward to the canopy and form a further protec tion against dust, that arch-enemy of the motorist, The whole of the coach work, says the London Mail, which Is of the fin est possible description, will be paint ed in the royal colors. DOGS AS SCOUTS Would Be Useful in Fighting- Native . of Jungle Countries. Captain Steele, of the Sixth Infan try, after an experience of the condi tions of warfare- in the Philippines, strongly urges that dogs should be at tached to the army. In the Army and Navy Journal he expresses the opin ion that dogs are the only scouts that can secure a small detachment against ambush on the trails hrough these tropical jungles. The bush is so dense that flankers are out of the question; and trails are so crooked and over such rough ter ritory that the point, at one or two hundred yards, is out of sight of the main party: The Insurgents, lying in ambush usually, or often, let the point pass and open With a volley upon the wagons and main body of the escort. They open from apparently impene- trable jungle, thirty to two ana at a range rrom hundred yards. They fire one or two volleys, then usually run awav. Sometimes never a man of them can be seen. The dogs, pointers or hounds, would need little training. Their instincts for hunting and sniffling in every hole and corner would be sufficient to jus tify their use. Captain Steele possesses a dog nam ed Done, and asserts that up to the date of writing no detachment with j which it has been out has fallen into an ambuscade. "He went with us last winter on General Schwan's long southern cam paign," says Captain Steele, "andj lived for more than a month on scraps of hard bread and bacon. He covered six times as much ground every day as any man of the column, and is the friend of every soldier in my battal ion." Expoeing; a Fraud. Dishonest holders of accident insur ance policies frequently put the com panies' physicians to needless trouble by claiming damage for trifling hurts, which under the law entitle them to nothing. Some deliberately practice fraud, says a physician quoted in the Atlanta Journal, and pretend to 'have ailments when they are sound in ev ery part. A few days ago, says the physician, I was summoned to a hospital to ex amine a man who pretended to have had his hearing totally destroyed by the premature explosion of a blast. I had an Idea from the start that the man was shamming, but all the tests that I could apply seemed to show that he was stone deaf. Still I was not satisfied, and resolved to try a little strategy. ! nnachinsr the nurse beforehand how i deaf mant Save yourself!" i hoth rushed to the door: . t t- was quicker than we d o out Defore us. He had j Bease however, to realize .. . was Dp anj he never appeared again. Safely Sailed Million Miles. One of the largest sailing vessels In the world is the California clipper Roa noke, which sails out of New York har bor. Her captain Is J. A. Amesbury, one of the oldest merchant skippers sailing the sea. but still hale and hearty and good for many years more. For nearly forty years he has been a cap tain, sailing under the American flag. Since first going to sea he has sailed in American vessels "l.uuu.uuu miles of sea. four-times the span from earth to moon." the record. It will be remem bered, of Kipling's "dour Scotch engin- oor" Me Andrews. Ana ne never once has been wrecked! First American Postoffice. The first postoffice in the country was that of New York, established by the act of Parliament In 110. You can get encouragement In many Sho tells all suf faring owed of Ovarian "Dbas Mbs. Pttkham: When I wrote to you a few months ago I had been Buffering from inflammation of the ovaries and womb for oyer 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- Eouna four months ago and am in better health to-day than I aye been for years. All my pains are gone. a Your vegetable Compound has made me well. I recommend it to all suffering women.'' Mrs. 8. J. Watson, Hampton, Va. When tbere is one remedy that is sure, and hundreds of thousands ot -women know from ex perience is reliable, is it wise to experiment with untried and comparatively unknown medicines? REWARD An Easy One. "Sleepless" wants to know: "What would you give a dog to prevent its barking at night?" "Give it away." In Doubt Bildad Did the size of her pile make you hesitate? Perkins Yes. For a long time I didn't know how much she had. A Plausible Theory. She I wonder why a man's hair turns gray before his beard. He Oh, that is easily explained. There is usually about 20 years' differ ence in their respective ages. Realistic. Grimes What do you think of Landsman'i marine novel? Hurley It is the most perfect thing I ever got hold of. It actually is sur oharveA with the sea. I was sick be- fore had read threo pagea 0f it. It Is Running Down. "I should advise," said th polite croupiler, as he raked in another stack of Tjord Rosslvn's blue checks, "that you take something for your system Grasshoppers In South Wales Grasshoppers are so great a plague at Hay. New South Wales, that they or genre all the street lamps at nignt, leaving tne town in total aarxness Woman in Responsible Position. Miss Belle MacKinnon, of Utica, N. I Y., has been admitted as a partner by her brother in his large knitting mills, and has charge ot z.uuu employes Worth Makes the Price. "Divorces," said the man who want ed to talk and philosophize, "cost more than marriages." "Certainly," said the practical man The Game of Fame. Scribbs Do vou think your new novel will sell? Stubbs Sell? Yes, sir-ee ; I've hired a Chicago man to come forward, and claim the plot. Detroit Free Press. Limited Ambition. He I suppose you wouldn't think of marrying a man unless he could anord to eive vou a yacht? She Oh, I don't know, it 1 really loved him I would be satisfied with a little smack occasionally. GATABBH CA5NOT, BK CUBED With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you most take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure la taken internally, and actsdirectly on the blood and mucous surfaces. U ail's Ca tarrh Cure Is not a quack medieine. It was prescribed by one of tha best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed ox me cost ionics Known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting; di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two inrredients is what pro duces raoh wonderful results In carina catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. JU., rroprs., loieuo, v. Sold by druggists, price 76c Balls Family HUs are the best. t 1 The Cynic. "The number of people who speak English," said the amateur statistician, "is now 116,000,000." "It is a wonder," said the cynic, "some of them do not . find their way on to the stage." Health " For 25 years I have never missed taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla every spring. It cleanses my bleed, makes me feel strong, and does me good in every way. John P. Heanette, Brooklyn, N.Y. Pure and rich blood carries new life to every part of the body. You are invigorated, refreshed. You feel anxious to be active. Youbecome strong, steady,courageous. That's what Ayer's Sarsaparilla will do for you. Ufaksttts. AJlsnnlsts. Ask mrKt what he thinks of ajeCa aansiarUla. Ha knew 1I abort this gran oloferatlr medicine. Follow bis adTlceaad w. will b. -ffifamm Co. LoweU. womoa how mho was Inflammation by We have deposited with tha National City Bank, of Lynn, $5,000, which will be said to ut oefw son who caa find that the above testimonial letter is not ireaatne, or was published before obtaining the writer's special permission. LYOU R. FrNKHAM StBDICIHB CO. The Part He Took. The Don And what part did you take in this disgraceful proceeding of holding Mr. Waters under the pump? Undergrad (modestly) His left leg, sir. r" Unexpected Happening. Caller Is the editor in? The Imp Nope. Gone home. "Not ill. I hope?" "Nope. Wife telephoned baby was asleep. Went home to see what it looked like. Simple When You Know. "I was up in the mill district today Frightfully noisy up there." "That's right. I've got a friend who lives up there. He can't hear himself talk in his house." "My! Boiler shop next door?" "No. He's deaf and dumb." Prostrate With Rheumatic FeTer Six Times Within Twenty Tears. This was the case of Mr. Eli Wilt shire, of Landsdowne Terrace, Calne, Wis., who, during this time, suffered the most intense agony. He writes: "I heartily endorse the testimonials which you publish of St. Jacobs Oil as a pain killer, for I have been a sufferer from xheumatism and kindred com plaints at different times during the last twenty years. I have been laid prostrate with rheumatic fever six times during that period, therefore I consider I know something about rheumatism During all of these twenty years I have tried various advertised rheumatic rem' edies, oils, ointments and embrocations None of tLem gave me relief, but when I tried St. Jacobs Oil I found it eased the pain almost immediately, and has done for me what all other remedies Dut together never began to do. "I could give you several cases that have been cured, which have come un der my notice, and through my recom mendation : one of toothache, one of faceache and one of sore throat. "I have recommended St. Jacobs Oil and shall continue to do so by every means in my power, as I consider you deserving." Trying to Explain. "Josiar," said Mrs. Corntassel, "what is these neglijay shirts I see advertsed in the bargain sales?" "Well, they ain't quite so prim an' scratchy as a b'iled shirt. I reckon a neglijay is what you might call a soft b'iled shirt." M. P. N. V. Ho. 13 108. WUKS writing te advertisers please mention this paper. Cure Your h PRUSSIAN HI Af DEALERS n (J r yes IEAVE POWDERS. neat mzoo ata. . Btf Urn It CTJKED THIRTY-FOUR HORSES. T ha-m fMM rt miner -Mie DSK9 the past eight months, and in that time have cured 1 1 horses I of heaves. 14 of distemper and 9 of chronic Congo. Your Prussian 1 Remedies hare gained a great reputation in this section. I BOWED IEKD STOBE, Coast Agents Portland, Ore., and Seattle, Wash I HrVZ f Uk.ltmi Mrtfc. SIer'a !l.w SSta ir "h I ff S lirYfai M Ceatary f tle n I IW Jf ljyj Sllwi tliii1 jlillrr i i j - TfeftM uiwiTWWtffi rJjSr&tr a,hiiiMtiKtknMrn4M. Tk..a.BjM. X jrVSt v jrkTVl. g antir lirtmlMmUist MiMMTm Mm,la u4 VXMki Z-rAsamm f Idas tMtod. Salser'. vm tb. fce. Hr s jra Ilk. tkt, v2Vj!3hN I EjCST I Vr.lintrt Ooi nr-XXk 0iiir7 0 1. boo t etpl.tlf 58LS"54tW aarfTV 1 tmUmOwmiw, m frmrt.f m4 w. mt aim' f ffcrmm M TMf SMW I ytokl 1. 10J rnulBf from SO te SOO bashels pw m. ran -to ??Vt3 rs?fy4 X dirt ,tn, Bahltentm u tajihU rhljtUi ifrinlUnU a JvvSqSVi I j$2vV. I "W" s o" "a inrtUMtrtrporr'"'- W8rXV K3p Saber's Marvel Wheat 42 bus. per Hera f .Mul iiniTT n.u 1 tb. Uni. W.U.bM. Mo 1 5bV rJgwp I vbMt, jWdUs mt r Ikta 63 mummlm per men. dfadl. m&!Srl I Th matt ism ! iwwl A toyWSw isrth. pwdadsf ns SO to 10 farts I fQjiiVV fVS" 1 VEGETABLE SEEDS ygf Zr,SS nMuruUasnembto. (..oonnraa. rrtw. sr. nrj tow. OatosMdSS I r4VJSrjL lfi'CSv For lOc Worth $10 .stff'JTi f a IK Qwr put -T-- -"---- " JM.rt.thm ot- w Btmr&Un BarUy. aAvfltNa f. T r, fJlS. VlTldlV. 10S knlMU; nr Trip I. Iom. Oor. flat 4M ah.U; g QrJf NA f?& Jt tamer, wnk IS Sum mi mmIm, rta tTjtVU Ifl ' f2ff 4 wtosWytoTaMUto fr CmiASALZERSEEPCO TESTED AND TRU -GUARANTEED. USED AND SOLD EVERYWHERE 1870 A Hrnmm SeAewf for Bmy milttmry mnd Manual Training WrUm far Ulmmlratrnd Catalogua We Will Give You 2 Hyacinth Bulbs Or 6 Tulips, FREE Together -with our Complete Catalog for 190a, if you will send us a mail order, no matter how small. Write us, and make your selections from our Cat alog. Springtime is here and it is time for planting. UTOERSQN Portland Oregon JOHN POOLE, Portland, Oregon, Foot ot Morrison Street. Can give you the best bargains in Buggies, Plows, Boilers and Engines, Windmills and Pumps and General Machinery. See us before buying. New Year Resolutions ilia Koetey Cure bus relief bob llqat, opium and tooaeaa habits. Send bar particulars i Uf&VI iBSlitotB, Moved to 430 Williams STS., Portland, Oregon WEATHERWISE, r - amd X OTHERWISE! -. . WnT D0NT YOU WEAJfc SUCKER bLACK OA YCIUW " " yAND KEEP DRY? BC WARE OF IMITATIONS. LOOK FOR A60VE TRADE MAS I CATALOGUES FREE i Showing Full Line of" Garmentj and H&tV ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Garter's little Liver PUls. Must Bear Signature of See Facsimile Wrapper Below. YA3hyt mmmx mm. mmm TeCT MBaU aavd as easy to take as sagas. n-rTVrnlr0R HEADACHE UAKl tru FOR DIZZINESS. rnjfkWfV FDR BILJQUSRESS. 1 fl VFk Fim torpid uver. I I Dill FOR CONSTIPATION. J l"Vt FON SALLOW SKIN. " 1 Ire THE COMPLEXION CURE SICK HEADACHE. WASHING MADE EASY By using my Washing Tablets. No acids. Send 50 cents for package sufficient for 3 months, with full directions. Agents wanted. W. O. POWELL, Box 606. Portland, Oregon. Of Heaves, Cougb or Distemper wiut amm TWTTRTAT POW- , . - -- rm ... 'J IB Hint. a pt anwwi druggist according to the New York ple? a town where you can t get a dollar.