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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (March 17, 1903)
V :t1' ) March, April, May There is a best time for doing everything that is, a time when a thing can be done to the best 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 highly as a spring medicine. When we take it in the spring we all feel betterthrougrb the summer." Mrs. S. H. Neal, McCrays, Pa. Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to cure and keeps the promise. His Load With Him. Da Tanque Gnzzler s.iys he doeen't believe in carrying other people's bur dens. O'Soaque No wonder; he is gener ally carrying a pretty good load of his own. Philadelphia Record. TWO REASONS. No One Need Neglect Their Teeth Any More No Pain, Small Cost. The two great reasons why people nsed to neglect their teeth were: Fear of being hurt, and the expense. . When you come to think it over now, it is truly remarkable what a revolu tion has taken place in modern dental methods. Wise Brotheis, the famous Portland dentists, are among the fore moBt in the United States in this re Bpect. Their announcements that there is not a particle of pain connected with any dental work done in their office is literally true. And it is also literally true that every person who goes to these dentists is greatly surprised at the small cost of having the teeth put in fine older. A whole set of teeth now costs less than some time ago it cost to have one pulled or filled. There is no excuse whatever for anyone to ne glect his, rr her, teeth. Even the man or woman receiving the lowest wages paid in this Northwest can well afford to have the teeth looked after and be gin to enjoy life. Again, a word about the children. When a young person has second teeth, fathers and mothers should see to it that their son or daughter goes to the dentist and has the teeth examined. Oftentimes just a little work before it is too late saves the teeth pure and beautiful for a lifetime. Take time by the forelock and consult Wise Brothers, Failing Building, Portland, Oregon. Back Talk. "I shall never marry," said Miss Ann Teek, with an air of determina tion. "Perhaps not," replied Miss Pert, "but everyone admits you have made a brave fight against the inevitable." Brooklyn Life. If You Don't Know How much different a can of Monopole peaches or pears or corn or other vari ety of fruits and vegetables taste fiom the ordinary brands we hope you will instruct your dealer to send you a can of Monopole today. We know Mono pole brand is better than any other be cause we have compared them with all other so-called high class ones.. Most dealers handle Monopole goods. If yours doesn't send us his name. Wadhams & Kerr Bros., Monopole Grocers and Dry Coffee Roasters, 81-83-85 front street, Portland, Ore. That Would Never Do. She Why don't you go out occasion ally, dearest, and enjoy yourself, say at the club? He But I don't want to get into the habit of having a good time. Life. White Tailed Eagles. Although the golden eagle has dis appeared from Wales, white tailed eagles are still to be found in ncrth Wales and Shropshire. When the cold wave flag is up, freezing weather is on the way. Winter la here in earnest, and with it all the miserable symptoms of Catarrh return blinding- headaches and neuralgia, thick mucous discharges loin the nose and throat, a hacking- couerh and pain in the chest, bad taste in the mouth, fetid breath, nausea most sickening and disgusting of all complaints. It causes a feeling of per lonal defilement and mortification that keeps one nervous and anxious while In the company of others. In spite of all efforts to prevent it, the filthy secretions and mucous mat ter find their way into the Stomach ind are distributed by the blood to every nook and corner of the system; the Stomach and Kidneys, in fact very organ and part of the body, be come infected with the catarrhal poison. This disease is rarely, if ever, even in its earliest stages, a purely local iisease or simple inflammation of the nose and throat, and this is why sprays, washes, powders and the various in haling mixtures fail to cure. Heredity is sometimes back of it parents have It and so do their children. In the treatment of Catarrh. ani septic and soothing washes are good for cleansing purposes or clearing the head and throat, but this is the extent of their usefulness. To cure Catarrh permanently, the blood must be purified and the system relieved of its load of foul secretions, and the. remedy to accomplish -this is S. S.-S. which has membrane and is carried through the circulation to all the Catarrh infected portions of the body, they soon heal, the mucous discharges cease and tha patient is relieved of the most offensive and humiliating of all complaints. S. S. S. is a vegetable remedy and contains nothing that could injure the most delicate constitution. It cures Catarrh in its most aggravated forms, and cases apparently incurable and hopeless. Write us if you have Catarrh, and our physicians will advise you without charge. THE SWIFT SPEQTFIO QO.. ATLANTA, OA Millions in a Mantle. One of the marvels of the recent Dur bar was the display of jewelry and pre cious stones worn- by the Maharaja Rfllkwar of Baroda. who wore his state mantle of woven pearls, with its arab- , esque border of diamonds, rubies, eme ralds and sapphires, whose value, esti- J mated by a famous London jeweler, is fd,000,OUU. 1 The Importance of Steel. the emblem of power. bteei, in me use j of peace and civilization, is just as important as it is in war. The country which is pre-eminently endowed with steel, or with coal and iron, of 'which and by means of which it is made, will stand at the head of the civilized world. A Pessimist. Rev. Thomas R. Slicer, during a re cent discussion with - a friend, asked him if he knew the definition oi a pes simist. "Of course," replied his friend, "he is one who is sor$ oh himself and the world in general. Is not that your definition?" "Hardly," replied Dr. Slicer. "A pessimist, in my opinion, is a man who has just left an optimist." New York Times. Loquacious. The family was discussing the high prices of provisions generllay, when tho tinal 1 boy butted into the conversation. "Jam has gone up, too," he re marked. "Ma keeps it on the top shelf now." And then it suddenly dawned on his youthful perceptions that he had in jured his case by talking too much. batavia News. The Hotel of 2003. Clerk Michael, are you about through moving those trunks?, "Yes, sorr; in a few minutes." "Well, when you've finished, stretch the life net over the front pavement. Mrs. Hibawl has just telephoned from the top floor that her husband has fallen out of the window." Smart Set. At Delhi. Posterity will look upon the picture of a vast and utterly barbaric popula tion numbering nearly one-fourth of the . human family, subdued, governed, ed ucated, Christianized and led up to the dignity of self-government by a handful of strangers who come from an- incon siderable island 15,000 miles away. An old prophecy about India. New York Press. Geographical. Kentucky Teacher (of infant geogra phy class) Tommy Blood may tell us what a strait is. Tommy Blood It's jes' the plain stuff 'thout nothin' in it. Ohio State Journal. His Theory. "There's no doubt that colored men often make good soldiers." "Course dey does," answered Mr. Erastus Pinkley. "You put a cullud man along of a purcession an' he's gwine ter foller it to de finish, no mat ter whut de danger is." Washington Star. The Influence. Jerry How do good clothes make a. man a gentleman? Joe They make him feel as if he was expected to act like one. Detroit Free Press. To Break in New Shoes, Always shake in Aliens Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures chilblains, damp, sweating, aching, swollen feet.- Cures Corns and Bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 2oe. Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed FREZ,. Address Allen S. Olmstead, LeRoy, N. X Ending the Dissertation. "Would you call a cat herbivorous, or carnivorous?" asked the man who is learned but tedious. "Neither," answered the man who yawns, "merely vociferous." An Ingenious Clock. -Brussels has a- church clock wound by atmospheric expansion induced by the heat of the sun. Won In a Walk. Say, how did you get off in the glee club try-out? Made first bass on four bawls. and all that makes Catarrh the I Manchester, Va., March 6, 1901. Gentlemen: I had all the symptoms that accompany this disease, snoh as mucus dropping' in the throat, a con stant desire to hawk and spit, feeling of dryness in the throat, cough and spitting- upon, rising in the morning, scabs forming in the nose, which re quired mnoh effort to blow out, some times causing the nose to bleed and leaving me with a sick headache. X had thus suffered for five years. I commenced to take S. S. 8. and after I had taken three large bottles, I notioed a change for the better. Thus encouraged, I continued to take it and in a short while was entirely cured. JTJDSON A. BELLAU. Main and Vine S.ts., Richmond, Va. no equal as a blood purifier. It restores the blood to a natural, healthy state and the catarrhal poison and effete matter are carried out of the system through the proper channels. S. S. S. restores to the brood all its good qualities, and when rich, pure blood reaches the inflamed BREAKFAST FOR ONE.' There I No Accounting for the Wie dom of the Woodchnck. That keen observer of nature, John Mulr, tells In "Our National Parks" a pretty story of a woodchuck. In the spring of 1875 he was exploring the peaks and glaciers about the head of the middle fork of the San Joaquin, and when passing round a frozen lake where the snow was ten feet deep, was surprised to find the fresh track of a woodchuck. What could the animal be thinking of to come out so early while all the ground was snow-burled? The steady direction of his track showed he bad a definite aim, and fortunately it was toward a mountain thirteen thousand feet high that I meant to climb. So I followed to see if I could find out what be was up to. From the base of the mountain the track pointed straight up, and I knew by the melting snow that I was not far behind him. I lost the track on a crumbling ridge partly projecting through the snow, but soon discovered it again. Toward the summit of the mountain, In an open spot on the south side, near ly enclosed by disintegrating pinnacles among which the sun heat reverber ated, making a isolated patch of warm climate, I found a fine garden, full of rock cress, phlox, silene, draba, and a few grasses; and In this garden I over took the wanderer, enjoying a fine fresh meal, perhaps the first of the season. How did he know the way to this one garden spot, so high and so far off, and what told him that It was in bloom while yet the snow was ten feet deep over his den? He must have had more botanical, topographical and cli matologlcal knowledge than most mountaineers possess. CREDULITY OF THE HINDU. Sample of the Delusions Which He Occasionally Harbors. Here Is a remarkable Instance of the credulity of the Hindu, and the wild kind of delusions which he occasion ally harbors. The writer Is described as a Hindu gentleman of standing and reputation, and this extract is taken from a letter written to a gentleman in England: "We are having awfully -serious news circulated In the papers here. Extracts purported to be from the Morning Leader, of London, and La Bon Guon dla of Spain, impress us that the em peror on the coronation day was dan gerously ill, and was never really crowned, for the ministers caused him to be personated by a beggar of White chapel. We are. really very concerned to hear It, and we firmly believe the news to be a false creation, but won der why the government is still inac tive as regard to taking any steps to punish the author of so foul a calumny."' The gentleman who sends me the above extract gives some other quaint examples of the amusing fictions which gain currency among the natives . of India, says a writer in London Truth. The bigger and the more preposterous the lie, he says, the more readily it is believed. When the Jubilee bridge over the Hooghly was being built, the story got about that the government required a thousand heads of natives for the foundations of the bridge, and had given orders that all natives walking over the maidan after dark were to be seized, and taken to the "Shaitan Khana" the native name name for the Masonic lodge where their heads were to be cut off for use in this uncanny en gineering operation. The natives, it is said, Tvere afraid to walk In that direc tion after dark for this reason. Again, at the time of the last Indian frontier war, a fat Babu clerk disappeared from one of the government offices and could not be found. It was firmly believed, says my correspondent, by his fellow clerks and neighbors, that he had been seized by order of the government, to be made into ointment for the benefit of the wounded soldiers. Happily, the fat Babu turned up again safe and sound; so no serious consequences resulted from this delusion. If an idea like this can be seriously accepted, as my In formant says it was, by the class of na tives who pass examinations and hold public appointments, nothing that may find acceptance with the "lower "orders" can be wondered at. RETORT TO THEATER TALKER. Showing How a Little Wit Suppressed an Intolerable Nuisance. They had been reading a Rolfe an notated edition of the play, and there was nothing in "Julius Caesar" that they were not perfectly familiar with. Before the performance was half through there was nothing that they knew which everybody within half a dozen rows did not hear about; for among the three of them a man and two women there were such capaci ties for conversation as are met with nowhere except in a theater. In tones that alternately hissed and brayed and rasped till spinal columns all around them ached they told one another that Anthony was much bet ter done than Brutus; that Portia would come on in a minute in the gar den scene; that Casca was supposed to be a gruff old Roman: that Caesar actually did have fits think of it! that it was a pity (this in a whisper that shivered far down the aisle and splin tered at least a score of vertebrae) Roman ladies didn't wear corsets. So on, ad nauseam. At last the ghost and the distraught Brutus met and there was a thrilled silence in all the -crowded house save in row Q, where a strident voice com plained: "I can't hear a word the ghost says. Why doesn't he speak louder?" A man 'behind the querulous dis- . turber, quite beside himself with rage. leaned forward and said, in tones as courteously sweet as the sting of a honey bee: "Perhaps the ghost Is a genfleman and does not like to annoy people." Which, of course, was very rude, says the New York Mail and Express, though it did fill many hearts with an unholy joy. We have noticed that in a book or magazine article entitled "The Confes sions of a Wife," or "The Confessions of a Doctor," or "The Confessions cf a Lawyer," that not much is confessed.' CHANGE OF LIFE a WiiAf r I s Some sensible advice to women passing through this trying period. The painful and annoying symp tom3 experienced by most women at this period of life are easily over come by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is espe cially designed to meet the needs of woman's system at the trying time of change of life. It is no exaggeration to state that Mrs. Pinkham has over 5000 letters like the following proving the great value of her medicine at such times. " I wish to thank Mrs. Pinkham for what her medicine has done for me. My trouble was change of life. Four years ago my health began to fail, my head began to grow dizzy, my eyes pained me, and at times it seemed as if my back would fail me, had terrible pains across the kidneys. Hot flashes were very frequent and trying1. A friend advised me to try Lytlia E. 'Pinkham's Vegetable Com poundA I have taken six bottles of it and am to-day free from those troubles. I cannot speak in high enough terms of the medicine. I recommend it to all and wish every suffering woman would give it a trial." Bella Ross, 88 Mont clair Ave., Roslindale, Mass fsooo for feit If original of about letter proving genuineness eannet be produced. Her Call. "I ran into town today to do seme shopping, dear," said Mrs. Subbubs, entering her husband's office, "and I " . "I Bee," he interrupted, "and yon just ran in here because you ran out." "Ban oat?" "Yes of money." Mothers will Sna Mrs. rTlnslow's Sooth, tog Syrup the best remedy to use lor their Shildren during the teething period. The Time To Retire. Ex-Senator Jewett, of St. Louis, is ninety-four years old. Someone asked him not long ago how old he thought a man should be before retiring from business. The old gentleman gravely responded: "I don't really think a man should keep on after he has reached the age of ninety." Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mefcury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous sur faces. Such articles should never be used ex cept on prescriptions from reputable physi cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &. Co. Testi monials free. . Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the ben. Something Equally dood. Teacher Johnny, have you been vaccinated: Johnny No'm; but mamma made me put my flannels on this morning, and they itch just as much. Chicago Record Herald. Austin Well Machinery FOR Oil or Water any Depth. Write for catalogue. BEALL & CO., Oen'IAgts. 313 Commer cial Block PORTLAND, OREGON. AMERICAN CREAM SEPARATORS Are sold subject to. ap proval and at a price that will enable you to make a good profit on a few cows. The - v cleanest, fairest ma chine in all the vorld. Strongest in ALL. these points thai', any other, viz: ' Close Skimming'. Easy Cleanh g. Light Running. Durability. Write for free catalogue. MITCHELL, LEWIS & STAYER 10. PORTLAND, Ore. SPOKANE. Wash. . BOISE, Idaho Won Medal, Paris, 1900. DR. G. GEE WO WONDERFUL - HOME TREATMENT This wonderful Chi nese doctor is called great because he cures people without opera tion that are (riven up to die. He cures with those wonderful Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, barks and vegetables that are entirely un known to medical sci ence in this country. Through the use of those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over 500 different remedies, which he successfully uses in different diseases. He guarantees to cure - catarrh, asthma, lung, throat, rheumatism, nervousness, stomach, liver, kidneys, etc.; has hundreds of testimon ials. Charges moderate, ('all and see him. Patients out of the city write for blanks and circulars. Send 4 cents in stamps. CONSUL TATION FREE. ADDRESS THE G. GEE WO CKIHESE MEDICINE CO. 132 Third St.. Portland. Oregon. a-Hfan t"inn nnnar j v " ; EH riiDcc WHERE AIL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I tri time, sola py crnggmm. swmess2sesibi lit -ya Chicken Foil p. After plucking a foul carefully, clean the skin with a wet cloth, remove the pin-feathers and singe off the hairs; then wipe the bird with a wet cloth, and cut the flesh In small pieces, sep- ' arating the bones, but not breaking : them so fine as to endanger their re ! maining'ln the soup after straining It. The head and feet are to be skinned and scalded after cutting off the beak and claws, and the heart, liver and gizzard properly cleaned and put into the soup. Allow a quart and a pint of water to each pound of chicken, and season rather below- the taste, be cause the quantity of soup will be less ened by boiling. Cover the soup ket tle, place it at one side of the . fire where it will boll gently for several hours until the meat falls apart; the soup will then be ready to strain, re moving the bones, and finish for the table by the addition of some delicate dumplings, such as batter-flakes or egg-barley dumplings. Floor Stain. Floors that are stained and oiled are easily kept clean. The material costs very little, and any one can apply It. For an oak stain, take raw sienna, add a little umber to it, and mix half a pint of linseed oil and one. quart of turpen tine. A tablespoonful of Japan dryer put into the turpentine will make it dry quickly. A cheap dark brown stain, which is better for old floors than a lighter color, is made by mixing one fourth of a pound of permanganate of potash In one quart of water. Apply with an old paint brush, and give the floor two coats If one does not make it dark enough. After the floor is stained, give it a coat of boiled linseed oil. If the oiling is repeated every spring or fall, your floor will always look well. Whole-Wheat Bread. Dissolve a cake of compressed yeast in a gill of lukewarm water. Four into a bowl a pint of milk and stir into this a pint of boiling water, add a teaspoon ful each of salt and sugar, and when the mixture is bloodwarm add the dis solved yeast. Stir in a quart of whole wheat flour or enough to make a bat ter. Beat for ten minutes, adding to ward the last enough whole-wheat flour to make a dough that can be kneaded. Turn upon -a floured board and knead for ten minutes and set to rise with a towel over It. At the end of three hours knead for five minutes, make Into loaves, knead each of these for two minutes and. set to rise for about an hour before baking in a steady oven. Care of Lamps. Buy the best oil. Fill the lamps by daylight. Lamps should be kept well filled. Never attempt to light a lamp that Is only partly filled. Keep the oil can closed and in a cool place. See that any hanging lamps you may have are securely hung. When buying lamps select those in which the end of the burner is consid erably elevated above the body of the lamp. Watch your wicks closely, and change them before they become too short. If burning oil gets upon the floor, smother with woolen blankets or rugs. Eggs a la Creme. -Boil twelve eggs fifteen minutes. Line a dish with very thin slices of bread and fill with layer of eggs cut in slices, strewing them with a little grated bread, pepper and salt;, rub a quarter of a pound of butter with two tablespoonfuls of flour, put It in a saucepan with a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, a little onion grated, salt, pepper and half a pint of milk or cream; when hot pour over the eggs;, cover the top with grated breadcrumbs and put it in the oven, let It heat thor oughly and brown. Simple but Good Furniture Polish. One of the nicest furniture polishes you can have, la made of equal parts of salad oil and vinegar shaken up to gether. Apply very sparingly with a soft flannel and polish thoroughly with soft cloths till not the faintest trace of oiliness remains. Remember that an important adjunct to this polish is "elbow grease,!' and that without It the. polish Is worse than useless, for any oiliness left on will only gather the dirt and make the furniture, dull. Corned Beef Hash. Put In a large frying-pan one ounce of butter; when hot add four ounces of potatoes and six ounces of corned beef, both cut -in three-sixteenths of an inch squares. Season with pepper and nutmeg and fry, slowly Inclining the pan so that the hash assumes the shape of an omelet. When a fine color drain off the butter, and turn it on to a long dish the same as an ome let. Prune Souffle. Mince very fine one dozen stewed prunes and the kernels of six and add them to the whites of five, or six eggs which have been beaten to a stiff froth with a small cupful of powdered sugar. Whip all well together, add vanilla flavoring and - bake in a hot oven for fifteen or twenty minutes. Chill, then serve with whipped cream. This souffle will not fall. Chocolate Caramels. Put together ln"a porcelain-lined saucepan two pounds of brown sugar, a half-pound of good chocolate broken Into bits, and a cup of cold water. Boll until a little dropped in cold wa ter hardens; stir in two teaspoonfuls of. vanilla and two tablespoonfuls of butter, turn into buttered pans and cut into squares. Lemon H titter Fance. Put a large Jablespoonful. of corn starch, two heaping tablespoonfuls. of granulated sugar, a pinch of salt, the grated rind of a lemon and the Jqice of an ounce of butter and the yelks of two'eggs In a saucepan and beat thoni together until smooth and light: thfii add quickly a pint of boiling water; and cook . until it begins to thicken. Asth ma ' "One of my daughters had a terrible case or asthma. We tried almost everything, but without re lief. We then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and three and one-half bottles cured her." Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville. O. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral certainly cures many cases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping-cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Three ilzes: 25c, 50c, SI. All dregfists. . - Consult your doctor. If he says take It, then do as he says. If be tells you not to take It. then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J. C. AYEK CO., Lowell, Mats. Mike's Poodle. Hogan An' is he a blooded dog, Mike? "Blooded? I sh'd say he wuz. W'y, when he wuz a pup th' doc had ter bleed him to fcape him from bein' a blood hound, faith!" CITC Permanently curaa !fo flts or nervonsnea after first day 'ae of Dr. Klin.'s Great Nem Jtastonr. Send for FK BE S'.OO trial bottle and treat. Is. Dr. B. H. Klin I. Ltd. (I31 Arch St Philadelphia, Fa Home Discomforts. "No," grumbled the husband in a -4nKm nf rnnfi1ana tn o (rioiol T have no place at all for iny hooks. The ' storage room is kept exclusively for ' my wife." "And what does she use it all for?" "Oh, she puts away the things that are a trifle too good to be destroyed, yet scarcely good enough to be of use." For bronchial troubles try Piso's Cure for Consumption. It is a good cough medicine. At druggists, price 25 cents. Strange Case. A woman has sued for divorce be cause her husband "gives too much at tention to the church." This will puzzle a lot of women who heretofore thought they knew something about man. vegetable Preparalionfor As similating theFoodandBeguIa ling the Stomachs and. Bowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness andRest.Contains neither OpiumMorphine nor Mineral. "Hot Sarc otic . a JbqpeofOUJk-SAMIELPnCHKR Pumpkm. Seal' jtbcSauut ippermixe - BiCMatwkSUd i 4 Hirm-Seed.- Aperfecl Remedy forConsBpa Tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. ft 1 lLMiI'J EXACT COPyOF WRAPPER. a WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS THAT ACHE WIS WOME BROMO -SELTZ .'TAKE TRIAL BOTTLE lO CENTS McCAULEY & BURBANK, General Machinists S Mine, Mill and Marine work.' General repairs. Printing Machinery repaired and rebuilt $ PROMPTATTENTION TO OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS. i.S Poole Bide., Foot of Morrison St. PORTLAND, OREGON PRUSSIAN STOCK FOOD The Great Conditioner and Stock Fattener. HORSES do More Work on Less Feed. COWS give More and Richer Milk. HOOS Fatten Quicker II given this Food. Package, OOc and $l.OO. MAKES PIGS BOW GOOD FOB STUNTED CALVES. PKtrssiAit Remedy Co.. St. Paul, Minn. Gentlemen : I have been feeding your Prussian Stock Food to my thoroughbred swine. It gives them an appetite, and makes the piga grow. I also tried it on stunted calves with satisfactory results. F. W. Gboome. Fhrin. Neb. PORTLAND SEED CO., Portland, Oregon, Coast Agents. STOCK-fOOO Mm Sir Wire BANK AND OFFICE RAILINGS Barbed Wire, Wire and Lawn Fencing;. Portland Wire & Iron Works MANUFACTURERS. M7 FRONT ST. JOHN POOLE, PORTLAND, ORB Foot of Morrison Street. Can give yon the best bargains in Boiler and Engines, Windmills, Pumps and Gene ral Machinery. Wood Sawing Machines a specialty. See us before buying. I WANT TO BUY FOB CASH Chicken, Duck and Geese feath ers. Address -47. O. SMITH, 10th mndDmvIStm.,Porimna,Or 2IO Kinds for 16c. is a fact that Salter's seeds are found more gardens and on morefarms than nny otner in America, 'mere la fj reason for this. We own and od- erate over MuO acres for the Droduc- tlon of our choice soeds. In order to , induce yon to try them we make tne iouowing unpraceaeniea oni For 1G Cents Postpaid S Mrti woBderial mioba 85 sorts iegaat bbace 1 S sorts maf ntftecBt carrots Sopoorltss lettaso TsrtoUosa 5 rmro luseloas radish, , SO p I eo did boot sorts. 14 gloriously boantlfoJ flowr In all 210 kinds ponUreiy furniBmriff bushels of charm tnif liowers and lota and lots of choice vegetables, togeta-. er with our great catalogue telling ail about Macaroni WhMkt. Hllllun Iol. lr Ctrant, Teoslnte, Bromus, Spelts,1 this notice. loo in suuups sum Oule ed at bat 60e. m noand. JOHN K SAL2ER SEED CO., ta Crosse, Wis. I IaaT been troubled a treat deal with m torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCARETS to be all you claim for them, and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to reo ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity Is presented." J. A. Smith. - 2820 Susquehanna Ave.,'Philadelphia, Pa. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. So Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c, fiOo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Bterllac Bwiy Capuy. Chlac, MMlnil. K.w Tacfc. Mt tlfl-Tfl RAP Sold and iriinranteed by all drug WU- I U-DAU sists to CURE Tobacco Habit. P. X. U. So. 111903. HEN -writing to advertisers please mention this paper. r iPk .It n Lizw Litfir ijjf JJ CATHARTIC Ipjjj. TRAOIMARK BttOITW0 p ! ill For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of .In Use For Over Thirty Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. ER AW J Poultry Netting WHOLESALE RETAIL X and Iron Fencing