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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1902)
j March " April May Thpre is a best time for doing everything that is, a time when a thing can be Ione to the test ad vantage, most easily and most ef fectively. Now is the best time for purifying your blood. Why ? Because your system is now trying to purify it you know this by the pimples and other eruptions that have come on your face and body. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Are the medicines to take they do the work thoroughly and agreeably and never fail to do it. Hood's are the medicines you have always heard recommended. 'I cannot recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla too highlv as a spring medicine. When wo take it in the spring we all feel better through the summer." Mas. 8. H. Keal, McCrays, Pa. Hood' a Saraaparllla promlmmm to curw and keapm thm promlmm. In a Lighter Mood. She: "So man hasever kissed me." lie: "I wouldn't boast of my un popularity , if I were you." Philadel phia Record. CIYO Permanently Cured. No At or narronsnea II IO after lirt(aTnfof lr. Klie'sGret Nerr Xedtorer. Semi for FltEES'J.OOtrialbotUeand trea. isa. DB.R.H KLiE.Ltd..i(3l Arch St Philadelphia, Fa, No Doubt About It "Bridget, what did you eay to Misi Smith when she called?" "I tould her you were out this toime for sure ma'am." Harper's Bazar. Mothers will find Mrs. Wlnslow's Sooth ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. Snap-Shot Opinion. Ned Clara says you are a perfect gentleman. F red Why, she doesn't know me. Ned That's what I told her. CATARRH CANNOT BE OTJBID With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat o( the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutionaldiNeaae, and in order to cure It ou must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, and actsdirectly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting dl rectlyon the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what pro duces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Proprs., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. Halls Family Fills are the best. A Southern Poet "Here, Marie! Send up a peck or two of corn dodgers an' a hunk o' meat to Joseph." "Lan' Fakes! Why can't he come to table?" "Kase he's locked himself in his room, an' is expresein' of himself in poetry." Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used fur all affections of the throat and lungs. Wm. O. Emoslby, Vanburen, Iud., Feb. 10. 1900. A Reprobate. "Aren't you ashamed to go away and leave your wife in tears?" asked the near relative. "Oh, I don't know." answered the brutal man, "that's the way she has a good time when she goes to the theater." Washington Star. Why suffer yourself, or let others, when relief may be had at once by using Hamlin's Wizard Oil. Defined. "Paw, here's something in the paper about a 'junket.' What is a junket?" "A junket, my boy, is an excursion at public expense to which you are not invited." Chicago Tribune. i TESTED AMD TRUE-GUARAMTEEdX J MOW I la thm Tlmm to USE IT. Too Indigestible. "Hear Bromley is dead?" "No; what was the trouble?" "Splinter of wood in his stomach." "How in the world did that happen?" "Eating club sandwiches." New York Times. BAB BLOOD, BAB COMPLEXION. The skin is the seat of an almost end less variety of diseases. They are known by various names, but are all due to the tame cause, acid and other poisons in the blood that irritate and interfere with the proper action of the skin. To have a smooth, soft skin, free from 11 eruptions, the blood must be kept pure nd healthy. The many preparations of arsenic and potash and the large number of face powders and lotions generally used in this class of diseases cover up for a short time, but cannot remove per manently the ngly blotches and the red, disfiguring' pimples. Eternal vigilance fa the price of a beautiful oomploxlon when such remedies are relied on. Mr. H. T. Shobe, 1704 Lucas Avenue. St. Iouis, Mo., says : " Mr daughter was afflicted for yean with a disfiguring eruption on her face, which restated all treatment. She w takes to two celebrated health springs, but received no bene fit. Many medicines were prescribed, but with out result, nntil we decided to try S. S. S., and by the time the first bottle wss finished theeruption began to disappear. A doses bottles cured her completely ana left her skin perfectly smooth. She is now seventeen years old. and not a sign of the embarrassing disease hasever returned." S. S. S. is a positive, unfailing cure for the worst forms of skin troubles. It is the greatest of all blood purifiers, and the only one guaranteed purely vegetable. Bad blood makes bad complexions. purities and invigo rates the old and makes new, rich blood that nourishes the body and keeps the kin active and healthy and in proper condition to perforin its part towards carrying off the impurities from the body. If you have Eczema, Tetter, Acne, Salt Rheum, rsoriasis, or your skin is rough nd pimplv, send for our book on Blood and Skin Diseases and write our physi cians about your case. No charge what ever for this service. SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY. ATLANTA. fiA, GliRfS WfiLM ill RSi FiHS. Beat Ooush Syrup. Tastes Goo. TJsa I In tlma. Sold rv drnnrlsra. a. toia ftr- - .m ennon The bacillus of the grip is the small est disease germ yet discovered. The amount of blood In the human body Is one-thirteenth of the body weight.1 4 It has4 often been claimed that the presence of nickel in dust Is a sufficient criterion to distinguish It as of cosmic rather than terrestrial origin. It has lately been shown that nickel is found In soot, and hence that nickeliferous dust may be terrestrial. Gallium, also, Is found in all aluminous minerals, in many flue dusts, in many iron ores, in soot and in atmospherical dust. The cultivated oasis of Dakhla in the Libyan desert has a copious water sup ply, derived entirely from an under ground bed of sand stone which is nev er visible. The water rises to the sur face through wells, averaging about 460 feet in depth. , Many of these wells were made in ancient times, during the Roman occupation. They fertilize broad areas of cultivated lands, interspersed with palm groves. The success of this system of irrigation in Dakhla is inter esting in connection with the projects for supplying moisture to some of our Western plains which are similarly un derlain by hidden supplies of water. The continually increasing demand for India rubber, and the great interest manifested in all efforts to prevent waste of the trees from which rubber is derived, have led our consuls in coun tries where these trees grow to collect many valuable facts concerning them. Consul Goldschmidt at La Guaira re cently transmitted to Washington some highly interesting statements about the rubber, or caoutchouc, trees, of the up per Orinoco by Dr. Lucien Morisse, who has made extensive personal investiga tions in that region. Dr. Morisse makes the somewhat surprising state ment that the prohibition of the Vene zuelan Government against the felling of the trees is altogether unnecessary, because "it relates to an immense for est measuring upward of 74,000,000 acres, where caoutchouc exists in abundance, and which it would require millions and millions of hands to ex ploit, whereas it only contains three or four thousand Indians, not more than the tenth part of whom are engaged In the work." Some interesting details have lately been published concerning the use of ozone in purifying water. Ozone is oxy gen in a highly active condition and it occurs in small quantities in the air of the sea and of the mountains. Near Berlin an establishment has been erect ed for the purpose of experimenting on the effects of ozone in ridding water of the microbes it contains. Ozonized air containing from 2 to 3 grams per cubic meter (a cubic meter equals 220.09 gal lons and a gram is about 15 grains) is passed upward into a tower which is filled with flints and in its passage meets the water coming down and thus acts upon It It has been shown that, as regards water from the Spree, the number of microbes was decreased from 600,000 per cubic centimeter (.061 cubic Inch) to 10, which Is practically nil. The total cost is set down at 35 cents per 1,000 cubic feet. Ozone has long been known as "nature's disin fectant," and its application to the puri fication of water becomes, therefore, a matter of great interest If the cost can be reduced this mode of purifica tion may have a chance of widespread adoption. JUST AS GOOD. Backwoods Merchant Who Always Had What a Customer Wanted. Abel Judkins kept the corner store in Centerville, and it was his boast that no man who patronized him need lack for anything he wanted, provided he had the wherewithal to' pay. Occasionally seme unreasonable per son would ask for a commodity not in cluded in Abel's list; but if he did so. he was either provided with some thing which Mr. Judkins assured him was better than the article he had de tired, and served exactly the same purpose, or he was made to feel that it was, for some dark and mysterious reason, no longer "carried" by any progressive and self-respecting shop. When a carping summer resident, whose pair of ancient bellows, bought at an auction sale, had collapsed be yond repair, expressed surprise that no bellows were to be had of Mr. Judkins, the Centerville storekeeper turned upon her with a lofty smile. "Folks here, ma'am," he said, cold ly, "don't hold with getting so took up with old ideas, or being so narrow, as some of those that summer with us from below. The advances of civili zation are prized here in this town, the alr-tlghts with drafts are more thought of than old chinibly fireplaces that require constant feeding and have to be bio wed on to keep 'em a-going. He glanced at the summer resident. but could discover no special signs of weakening or humility in her face, With a briskness which always marked his mercantile proceedings, he changed in a twinkling from the advocate of progress to the upholder of primitive methods. "But folks will be folks, ma'am," he said, indulgently, "and if you like an open glow I don't know what's to hin der. And better than any bellows that ever were made, ma'am, is an onion- stalk. I can fit you out complete with three stout ones at this present, and when you've blowed them out o use fulness, all you've got to do is to come to Abel Judkins and get some more. CHANGE SECURED AT HOME. Value of New Surrounding's for an Invalid Shown. The doctor looked at his young pa tient with rather a dissatisfied air. "Why do you not get well?" he asked her, somewhat impatiently. "Your fe ver left you long ago, and you; have no organic trouble, and yet you stay just in the same state day after day. You will hurt my reputation if you keep on in this way," he added, jokingly; but on leaving the room, he spoke more seri ously. "She must be roused In some way. he said to her mother and the trained S nurse who was in attendance. - "What she really needs is a change, but she la too weak in her present condition to travel. I am going to try an experiment which will do no harm and may do good. "I .want yon to let me have another bedroom for her. and arrange it quite differently from the way it is now. Hang up new chintz curtains and put furniture in it she is not familiar .with. A, room with a fireplace. If possible. Light a bright little wood fire, and buy her a pretty new dressing gown. We will give her a radical change in her own house and see what that will do." A couple of days afterward the ciri was told that she was so much better that she was going to be moved into another room; and, despite her reluct ance, the changewas made. The next day she showed languid pleasure at her pretty and novel sur roundings, her diet was altered, ana she gradually acquired an appetite. In a pretty new dressing jacket, she re ceived the compliments of the doctor and nurse with complacency, and from that time on began to convalesce rap idly. 'All going to prove," said the doctor. "that absolute change is often an es sential toward recovery, and that the required stimulus may. be given, if nec essary, at home." Even to those who are In health the benefits of a home change should not be underrated, says the New York Trib- e. "I like to get a new cook because it is the only way we get different food." said a young married woman; but the more experienced housekeeper appreciates the imperative hygienic value of change, and varies the family diet accordingly. , Every woman has experienced the mental and even moral stimulus of a new gown (always provided it has been paid for), but not every one recognizes the fact that it is the same with domi ciliary surroundings, and that to occa sionally make a different arrangement of furniture is a good thing, while small novelties in the way of new books and periodicals, a change of dress, and particularly the menu, all go to bright en the home atmosphere and give a tired man the change he really requires. The Trade of Palestine. The account of the trade of Palestine during the year 1900, given in the con sular report recently issued, is fairiy hopeful, though neither the exports nor the imports reach the level at tained in 1889. The prosperity of. the country depends still, as it always has done, and most probably always will do, upon the fruits of the earth. Cen turies before the present era. corn and wine and oil were among the chief boons of the "promised land," and though we hear little now of the first. the other two are regaining their an cient reputation. To melons, which also were valued in ancient days, a new fruit has been added the orange. This, indeed, and the grape, are now the most important products of Pales tine, though the' exports of the former have declined considerably in value the last few years. t Jaffa oranges, however, maintain their reputation, so that it may be hoped that the depres sion is only temporary. Southern Pal estine has always been noted for its vineyards; it was Judah who "bound his foal to the vine and washed his clothes in the blood of the grapes. Is the Lion Intelligent? After prolonged experiment, M. Hachet-Souplet has reached the con clusion that there can be no doubt that the lion is the possessor of reasoning faculties. Of course this conclusion is based on observation, not on hypo thesis. Among the experiments was one which took place at the Museum of Natural History, within a stone-throw of the statue of Chevfeul, the scientist centenariau. A lion was presented un aware with a closed box containing an appetizing piece of meat. The point to determine was whether the animal would be smart enough to discover the secret, open the box "and secure' the coveted morsei through means of his own. The king of animals did not dis appoint the scientist who had faith in his judgment. After hesitating a little. the lion raised the lid of the box with his nose, and although he went at it at first in the wrong' way, he deliberately put the box in the proper position, ex actly as a man would have done. It took him exactly three minutes, and a written report of the occurrence was signed by the witnesses. A Pretty Broad Hint. An anecdote is told of one of the smaller South American republics which illustrates the methods which are adopted when it comes to a ques tion of. making war. The "navy" of the particular power referred to con sists of a single, old-fashioned, side wheel steamer, armed with one gun. In time of peace she is engaged in haul ing freight up and down the river which runs close to the capital. At the outbreak of one of the periodical wars, not so very long ago, the President of the republic took charge of the steamer and started up stream on a recruiting expedition, leaving' his senior general in charge f the military preparations at the capital. A couple of days later the steamer returned, and some sev enty miserable looking natives, each firmly bound with a strong rope, were marched off and turned over to the gen eral, with a note from the President which read: "Dear General: I send you herewith seventy volunteers. Please return the ropes at once." Small Population. Norway's population Is the smallest In Europe, compared with her area. Each of her inhabitants could have forty acres of land, while the Briton would have to be content with less than an acre. Fertility of Kgypt'a Soil. The fertility of Egypt's soil is illus trated by a fact that every one of 10, 500 square miles can support 92S per sons, whereas even in densely popu lated Belgium there are only 5S0 to the square mile. - Russians in Kansasv There are 4,000 Russians in Kansas, a thousand heads of families who do little beyond raising wheat. They vote in elections as one man, and attend strictly to their own business. Honestly now, if you were in the oth er fellow's shoes, could you do any better DESDEMONA'S FEET. They Quite Broke C the Scene for Elder Salvlni. From the sublime to the ridiculous is but a step, and in an anecdote recently, related by Clara Morris, the feet which took that step are Very conspicuous. It was when Tommaso Salvinl was in this country. The play of the evening was "Othello.' and the scene of Desde mona's death had been reached. Already the raging Moor had slain his innocent victim, -and disturbed by Emilia's knock, had let fall the cur tain's before the conch on which the body lay.- The draperies provided, al though rich and heavy, did not come to the floor. They missed it by a space of at least a foot, and this the deceased Desdemona unfortunately failed to observe. The audience, which had been held tense and breathless under the tragic spell of the great actor, suddenly ut tered a curious, long-drawn breath of amazement, followed by a bobbing -of many heads, a universal craning -of necks, and then, to poor Salvlni's be wilderment and dismay, by a burst of downright laughter. He could perceive nothing amiss, and there was nothing for him to do but to ignore the laugh ter and proceed with the scene. But no wonder the people laughed! The murdered Desdomona had risen and was evidently sitting on the side of the couch, for beneath the curtains her dangling feet were plainly seen, kicking cheerfully back and forth. Such utterly unconscious feet they were that the audience might not have laughed again had they kept still; but all at once they began a heel-and-toe step, and people rocked back and forth trying to suppress their merriment. And then swiftly the toe of the right foot went to the back of the left ankle and scratched vigorously. Restraint was ended; every one et go and laughed and laughed. From the box one could see in the entrance the outspread fingers, the hoisted shoul ders, the despairingly shaken heads of the Italian actors, who could find no cause for the uproar. Salvlni behaved perfectly In that dis turbed and distressed, he showed no sign of anger, but maintained his dig nity through It all, even when, In draw ing the curtains and disclosing Desde mona dead once more, the Incompre-j hensible daughter again broke out. The Butler Earl. In old days, when kings received per sonal service from their most trusted nobles, simple offices were created, such as cup-bearer, chamberlain, but ler, which have descended as titles of high rank. In a more complex world the service has been lost sight of, and only the outer circumstance and dig nity of the oflice remain. For instance, the Duke of Norfolk, earl marshal of England, is hereditary chief butler of the realm. A story of his youth, told in the New York Times, brings into curious rela tion the real rank of the man and his theoretic function. When he was a young man he was reticent, and at evening receptions used to paste himself flat against the wall and say nothing. - On one occasion a sprightly couple came by him, chatter ing and wrapped up in themselves. "I wish you'd bring an ice here," said the man to the silent black and white figure against the wall. The upright young man obeyed. As he came back with the refreshments the lady noticed the ungloved hand that reached her the glass. "I don't believe that man is a ser vant," she whispered. "Ask some body." Meanwhile the duke had met a friend, and with grim humor had told his experience. The man who had made the mistake was introduced to the duke, who said: "Well, I congratulate you. You had penetration to detect the hereditary chief butler of England when he was in plain evening dress. There isn't much difference between- a chief butler and a head waiter, you know." Intelligent Squirrels. A party of young people, who In last summer's holiday journeyed through the country gypsy-like in a caravan, witnessed in a grove near a glen the following incident, which seems to show a friendly understanding among squirrels: An al fresco dinner had just been finished and the party were still sitting at the table, when a red squirrel, with glistening, eager eyes, came creeping down a tree which stood near the ta ble. He crept nearer and nearer, and finally leaped upou the table. The lady who was presiding said: "Yes, help yourself to anything you want!" Upon this invitation the little fellow made bold to creep up to a loaf of bread from which only a slice or two had been cut. He seized it and dragged it to the side of the table, and somehow managed to scramble down the Bide with it to the ground. He then fixed his teeth in the crust, and dragged it away and down the steep sides of the glen. But when he reached the bottom and. confronted the rise on the other side, it was too much for him. Then he gave a sort of call, which seemed to be un derstood, for soon squirrels were seen coming from several directions. They crowded round him, and after a little conference all took hold, and with a tug and strain they managed to bring the loaf to the top of the hill. Then they disappeared with it in the woods beyond. Family Herald. Pleased with Hie Joke. ' Indignant householder (to the collec tor of gas bills) How is it that my gas bills get higher and higher every quar ter, when I am sure that we burn no more gas than we did formerly? Collector (meekly and deprecating) I am sure, sir, I do not know, unless something is the matter with the meter. Indignant householder (satirically) Something the matter with the meter, eh? Oh. yes; I suppose the meter has the gastrick fever! And the old man was so pleased with his joke that oe cheerfully paid the bill. London Tit-Bits. As people lose innocence they find experience. A word to the wise is often suffi cient to get a fool into trouble. The Ghautjo of Lite Is the most important period in a wo man's existence. - Owing; to modern methods of Jiving, not one woman in a thousand approaches this perfectly natural change without experiencing a train of very annoying and some times painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot flashes, sending the blood surging to the heart until it seems ready to burst, and the faint feeling that follows, sometimes with chills, as if the heart were going to atop for good, are symptoms of a d&n- Has. Jsannx Nobis. gerous, nervous trouble. Those not flashes are just so many calls from nature for help. The nerves are cry ing out for assistance. The cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound was pre pared to meet the needs of woman's system at this trying period of her life. It builds up the weakened nervous system, and enables a woman to pas that grand change triumphantly. ' I was a very sick woman, caused by Change of Life. I suffered with hot finches, and fainting spells. I was afraid to go on the street, my head and back troubled me so. Ic was entirely cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. " Mrs. Jennie Noblk, 6010 Keyser St., Germantown, Pa. Extravagant Mr. Fijjit I understand the deacons are going to cut our pastor's salary; they don't think that an extravagant salary harmonizes with the ethics of Christianity. Mrs. Fijjit How much is he getting. Mr. Fijjit Seven hundred a year. Ohio State Journal. Cave It Away. He looked despairingly into vacancy. "I have had my misgivings," he, said in a dull and passionless voice, "but now I am sure. Your laugh shows me you are utterly heartless." She turned pale. "Heavens!" she cried in terror, "did I open my mouth as wide as that?" His Last Visit "So yon met a frost when you called around?" said Tom. "Did you feel chilly?" "Not at all," respended Dick. "Her father made it warm enough for me." ST. JACOBS OIL THE ONLY CURE FOR RHEUMATISM And All Aches and Pains. 25c and 50c Sizes. Composite. Dashaway Quilldriver seems to be a fellow of extremes one who writes awful slush and sublime prose, and who is at the same time an idiot and a genius. Cleverton Where did you get such an idea? Dashaway I've just been reading the reviews of his latest book. Har per's Bazar. ' Ladles Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen's Foot Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cares swollen, hot. sweating, aching feet, in growing nails, corns and bunions. All drusr eists and shoe stores, 26c. Trial package FRE E bv mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, New York. Qualified. "Are you married or unmarried?" asked the theatrical manager of an ap plicant for engagement. "Unmarried," replied she. "I've been unmarried four times." Detroit Free Press. Thfl Kind Ynn Wavn Alwavs ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-STOod" are but Experiments, and endanger the Health of Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR I A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothinjr Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Jiarcotie substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatnlencv. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend, The Kind You to Always Bought Bears the W mmamwmmmswmw- In Use For Over 30 Years. entrails) eessMsrr. tt v Things arc Different in Bottom. Says the Boston Globe: "In taking her ont sleigh, riding, young man,, be careful of that vaccinated arm." That advice may do for Boston young men, but out here a sensible youth wonld rather forego the minor pleasure of the ride than be handicapped in that provoking manner. Cleveland Plain Dealer. ' Sister Ships. Mrs. Crimsonbeak I see by this wireless telegraphy, while at sea, one ship can communicate with another. Mr. Crimsonbeak One ship can talk back to another? "Yes." "Well, that's an additional reason why they should be called sister ships." Put His Feet On It "Did did your wife ever bake a chocolate cake?" asked Nuwed, cau tiously. "Loads of 'em," replied Oldwed, proudly; "why?" "Well, my wife baked her first one yesterday and placed it out on the porch to cool. I - came along and thought the dern thing was a hassock." Ohio State Journal. BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY Portland, Oregon. Founded 1874, I Rone School for Boys. Military ud Manual Training. - Write for Illustrated Catalogue. ARTHUR C. NEWILL, Principal DON'T WEAR OUT THE CLOTHES Rubbing them to pieces ; use my Wash ing Tablets. No Tubbing required. Send 50 cents for sample package and full di rections. W. O. POWELL, Box 606, Portland, Oregon. 11:1111: TESTED ID IE GUARANTEED. USED AND SOLD EVERYWHERE No Alternative "You admit that you area tramp, do you?" said the, eminent counsel to the witness. "Ys. sir." "Tell this jury, sir, why you lead such a worse than useless me. "The explanation is aim Die. I am too proud to work and too honest to Decome a lawyer.' Detroit Kreerress A Mean Restriction. "Oh, my!" exclaimed the young wife, reading over the insurance policy on her husband's life in her favor, "this insurance company is just hate ful." "Why, what's the matter? 'asked her husband. "Why, if you commit suicide they won't pay any money at all." Phila delphia Press (1 a i Superior Fodder Plants kSALl VICTORIA RAPE J,js1"Aa About io miles ahead bosuiness, in rigor makes it poeai oie 10 ktow swme ana sneep and cattle all over America at lc. a lb. It U 1 rmr,? . &rye&r ni&rveloualy proline Giant incarnate Clover J.j '.'"(..Vmi Produces a luxuriant within six weeks after seeding ana lots and lota of pasturage all summer long besides. Will do well anywhere. Price dirt cheap. Grass. Clovers and Fodder Onr n&taloena is brimful such as Thousand Headed Kale green fodder per acre ; r ea uat : and 4 tons of hay per acre, liiuiou ioiiar urass, etc., etc. Saber's Grass Mixtures Yielding 6 tons of magnificent hay and an endless amount of pasturage on any farm in America. Bromus Inermis 6 tons of Hay per Acre The great grass of the century, growing wherever soil is found. Our great catalogue, worth $100 to any wide awake American gardener or farmer, is mailed to yon with many farm seed samples, upon receipt of bat 10 cents postage. OS" Catalog alone 6 cents for postage. JOHN A. SALZER SEED lion lit lias borne the signa Signature of Mvauv snuxr, siaw tok err. Coughed " I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep tnd I grew very thin. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured." R. N. Mann, Fall Mill, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral wiil do. . We know it's the great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. There's cureineverydrop. Tires sins t He., Sc, SI. All dmrrlsts. Consult ytror doctor. It ha iT taka It, then do as ho says. If ha tolls you not to taka It, then don't take It. Ho knows. Leava It with Mm. Wo aro willing. J. C. ATKR CO.. Lowell. Mass. JOHN POOLE, Portland, Oregon, Foot of Morrison Street. Can give you the best bargains in Buggies, Plows, Boilers and Engines, Windmills and Pumps and General Machinery. See ns before buying. New Year Resolutions nv Keeiey Curo feerc relief from liqwtw, opium and taoMa ha bits. Bend lux particulars la fontaM Hint.. Moved to 430 Williams IB818J InSillUIB, Ave., Fortlaud. Orejjou We Will Give You 2 Hyacinth Bulbs CRCC Or 6 Tulips, rnLL Together with our Complete Catalog for 1902, 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. LAMBERSON Portland Oregon THE BEST POMMEL SLICKER i , IN THE WOULD r,, y , BEARS THIS TRAPE MARK THOUGH OPTEN NUTATED AS A SAME COAT MOWING rUka WINC Of GARMENTS ANB Ht A.aJ.TOWtft CO.. BOSTON, MASS. 44 3E3E 150 Kinds for E6c. ItlsafartthatSalzpr'sTwataMoiina flower fleeoB are lounu m mure Kiirut iib ! ana on Iliuns imun liu.ii any timer In America. There ir reason for this. We own and operate o?er 6wo aorea lor the production of our choice seed. In UlUfi Hi illume juu iaj .1 j .iiriu we make the f ollowinfi uupreo- eaenieaoner: For 16 Cents Postpaid A SO kind. f nmt Inaelon. rmdUhM. 13 affawceas Mnim melons, 10 sort, f lorloas tonttof-i. peer-leu lettuce varieties, IS splesdld beet sort., 65 f srs000'? beautiful flower seeds, In all ICO kinds positiTelv furnishing; bushels of charming flowers and . lots and lots of choieo Te(retablos,j together with onr jrreot catalopnei telling ail aoout reosmte ana rea Oat and Bromus and Soeltz. onion seed at 60c. a nonnd. etc.. all onl v lor 16c. in stamps, writeto-uajr. JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.. La Crosse, Wis. of Dwarf Essex Rape In ana nourwauig qnaiiiy. 1 1 baizers catalog tells. crop three feet tall Plants of thoroughly tested farm seeds ; Teosinte, producing 80 tons of peuz. witn us so uusueis 01 grain COMPANY, La Crosse. Wis. Hold hv 68 Douclas Stores and the oestshoe dealers everywhere. CAPTION I The genuine have w. L. Douglas' name and price stamped on bottom. Jfotice increase qf tola in table Wo' IStS3B74S,TOS rsin. 1900 1,259,754 Patrg. Business Mora Than Doubled In Four Years. THE REASONS I , , .. . W.l Douiflas makes and sellsmore men's $3.00and S8.50 shoes than any other two man'f'rs In the world. ".V. L. Douglas S3.00 and S3.G0 shoes placed side by .m. vit.h m and 1A.00 shoes of other makes, are found to be just as good. They will outwear two pairs f ordinary 13.00 ana sx.su snoes. Made of the best leathers, Including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo. fM Clttr Kelf. mm lprra BUek Hook. mrA. W.I.llngls Ss-00 "HI Itf tlulK b qlld. bocs by anil S&c. extra. Catalog free. W. . Ito-Jisrlaa. Bro.'httni ". N. P. W. V. Mo. 13-180. w BIN wrltln Jdjt t sdrertlMra plesw iiii I "I UNION MADE y! SHOES sS&g?V MT are the j JOIi L WORLD I f?y