Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909, June 02, 1903, Image 4

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    f If
That
Tired Feeling
Is a Common Spring Trouble.
It's a sign that the blood is deficient
In vitality, just as pimples and other
eruptions are signs that the blood
Is impure.
It's a warning, too, which only the
hazardous fail to heed.
flood's Sarsaparilla
and Pills
Remove it, give new life, new cour
age, strength and animation.
They cleanse the blood and clear the
complexion.
, Accept no substitute. '
r "I felt tired all the time and could not
sleep. After taking Hood's Sarsaparilla
a while I could sleep well and the tired
feeling had gone. This great medicine has
also cared me of scrofula." Mas. C. M.
Boot, Gilead, Conn.
Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to
cure and keeps the promise.
Keeping in Practice.
The Washington's -birthday masked
t ball was in full swing. The hour for
unmasking had arrived.
"Where is George Washington?"
asked the Spanish inquisitor of Louis
Qninze.
"The last I saw of him," said Louis,
"he was in the buffet cutting down the
visible supply of cherry bounce.
A Quandary.
"Jones is in a bad fix mentally."
"What's his trouble?"
"He can't decide whether it is better
to lose his soul cursing the icy pave
ment or lose his life trying to whip the
man that throws ashes on them against
the wind." Baltimore News.
No Substitute.
Little Eliazbeth was impatiently de
manding a piece of bread and butter.
Her mother was busy and said :
"Have patience, Elizabeth!" To
which Elizabeth replied:
"I don't want patience; I want bread
and butter." Little Chronicle.
Fine Outlook. -
"What's the outlook for a newspa
per in this town?"
"Finest in the world. Editor's up
in a tree, an' sees over the whole coun
try." A Work-Weary Suicide.
John McCartney, a 16-year-old, work
. weary lad, employed by a dairyman,
living in Baltimore, shot and killed
himself in his employer's home. This
note waa-found on a bureau : "I am to
die like a dog would, but I am better
off dead. I do nothing but work."
British Manufacturers Left.
The Firmingham Post calls the atten
tion of British manufacturers to the fact
that contracts involving the sum of
$65,000,000 have been obtained by
American interests during the last few
weeks for the construction of electrical
traction systems in England, Russia
and Holland.
Understood.
Linzee There's nothing I like bet
ter than hard work.
Morris There's nothing you like
better when someone else is doing it.
Linzee That's understood. I hope
you didn't think I was such a fool as
to like to do hard work myself, or any
other kind, for that matter.
Just the same as ever VS&3tVTik H
StJacobsOil
- continues to bo the euro cured j Jfy-. i
Rheumatism Wimffl B
I 2M Neuralgia SSii
I Price, 25e. and 50o. H
lirOMC
still ci Ulcsrs upo
Nothing is a source of so much trouble as an old sore or ulcer, particu
larly when located upon the lower extremities where the circulation is weak
and sluggish. A gangrenous eating ulcer upon the leg is a frightful sight,
and as the poison burrows deeper and deeper into the tissue beneath and the
sore continues to spread, one can almost see the flesh melting away and feel
the strength going out with the sickening discharges. Great running sores
and deep offensive ulcers often develop from a simple boil, swollen gland,,
bruise or pimple, and are a threatening danger always, because, while all
such sores are not cancerous, a great many are, and this should make you
suspicious of all chronic, slow-healing ulcers and sores, particularly if can
cer runs in your family. Face sores are common and cause the greatest
annoyance uecause iney are so per
sistent and unsightly and detract so
much from one's personal appearance.
Middle aged and old people and
those whose blood is contaminated and
tainted with the germs and poison of
malaria or some previous sickness, are
the chief sufferers from chronic sore3
and ulcers. While the blood remains in
an unhealthy, polluted condition heal
ing is impossible, and , the sore will
continue to grow and spread in spite of
washes and salves or any superficial or
surface treatment, for the sore is but
the outward sign of some constitu
tional disorder, a. bad condition of
the blood and system which local
remedies cannot cure. A blood purifier
and tonic is what vou need. Some
thing to cleanse the blood, restore its lost properties quicken the circula
tion and invigorate the constitution, and S. S. S. is just such a remedy.
S. S. S. reaches these old chronic sores through the blood. It goes to
the very root of the trouble and counteracts and removes from the blood all
the impurities and poisons, and gradually builds up the entire system and
strengthens the sluggish circulation, and when the blood has been purified
purifier and tonic combined and a safe and permanent cure for chronic sores
and ulcers. If you have a slow-healing sore of any kind, external or internal,
write us about it, and our physicians will advise you without charge. Book
a "The Blood and Its Diseases " free. -
His Idea of Happiness.
MrB. Enpeck ( reading from novel)
"And so they were married and lived
happily ever after." Now what do
you think of that?
Mr. Enpeck 1 think they must have
secured a divorce right away.
Similarity.
Jewsharp George I snppose after yer
rolled around in de street an' sot full
of mud de lady in de wayside cottage
thought yer had been intoxicated.
Cinder Charley Not at all. I told
her I had been rid in' in a racin' auto
mobile. Pertinent Inquiry.
, Biggs (smoking)) This is something
like a cigar, old man.
Diggs (getting a whiff) Yes er
something like one. What is it, any
way? The Mean Man.
"Never heard of such an ungrateful
man."
"In what way?"
"Why, I heard he was freezing and I
had a bushel of coal dumped on his
pavement."
"What then?"
"Well, he had the nerve to say as
long as I had mussed up his sidewalk
he hoped I would send someop.e around
to clean it."
Scientific Fact.
Fred Do you know anything about
Llove?
joe Do I? My dear boy, I've made
it a life study.
Fred With what result?
joe Well, I've succeeded in reduc
ing my ignorance of it to a science.
No Dash About Him.
Jones Hamilton is a pretty good ex
ample of what a business man ought to
be.
Brown In some ways, yes, but then
he's so terribly deliberate. Why, I've
known him to spend ten minutes over
his noonday lunch. Boston Transcript.
Will Sometimes Happen.
"You wouldn't believe it,',lieutenant,
but only yesterday a lieutenant lay at
my feet."
"Oh, yes! Lieutenants sometimes
stumble!" Fliegende Blaetter.
Justifiable Hatred.
"Why does Mrs. Dinsmore hate Mr.
Templeton so relentlessly?" asked Ho
jak. "He once alluded to her as a well
preserved woman, and some one re
peated it to her," replied Tomdik.
Detroit Free Press.
DEAFNESS CABSOT BE CUBED
By local applications, aa they cannot reach the
diseased portion oi the ear. There is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness ia caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous li igofthe
Eustachian Tube. When this tube sets in
flamed Ton have a rumbling sound or imper
fect hearing, and when it la entirely closed
deafness is the result, and unless the inflamma
tion can be taken out and this tube restored to
its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cases out ot ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case oiDeainess (caused by catarrh) that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Care. Send for
circulars, free. .
V. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold by Druggists, 75c
Ball's Family Pills are the best.
Great Show.
Ernie Mabel was engaged four
times down at the beach last summer.
She said it was a regular circus.
Edith Sort of a four ring affair, I
suppose. . -
Getting at the Causes.
MrB. Muggins How did you break
your husband of swearing?
Mrs. Buggins-I had the telephone
taken out and gave the alarm clock
away. Philadelphia Record.
SORES ON BOTH ANKLES.
Gentlemen : About ten yearn aero
mall sora came on each of in j ankles.
Sew got into the places and they be
came Jargre, eating ulcers, and I Buf
fered Intensely for nearly ten years.
X had spent more than $500.00 try
ing to get well when X chanced to
see B. 8. S. advertised in a Memphis
paper. I began to take it and was
cored. My limbs have never been
ore or given me any pain at all
since. X have recommended 8. S. 8.
to a great many people, and am new
giving it to my nine-year-old aon for
Eczema. During my lens;, sickness X
waa living near Ulemphie, Tenn., but
have since romoved to Kansas City,
and am now residing at Ho. 614
East Sixteenth Street.
Sirs. B. A. HARRIS.
Kansas City, Mo.
Sores
and the system purged oi an moroia,
unhealthy matter the healing process
begins, and the ulcer or sore is soon
entirely gone.
S. S. S. contains no mineral or poison
ous drugs of any description, but is guar
anteed a purely vegetable remedy, a blood
f -11 1' i 1 1 1 I i 1 1 ! i 1 1
OLLV
I FAVORITES
-l"l"l"t"t"H"l"I"H"t-l"H-4"i"H-4"I't-
y John Burns of Gettysburg.
Have you heard the story that gossips
tell
Of Burns of Gettysburg? No? Ah,
well ; .
Brief is the glory that hero earns,
Briefer is the story of poor John Barns;
He was the fellow who won renown
The only man who didn't back down
When the rebels rode through his native
town; ,
But held his own in the fight next day,
When all his townsfolk ran away.
That was in July, sixty-three,
The very day that General Lee,
Flower of Southern chivalry,
Baffled and beaten, backward reeled
From a stubborn Meade and a barren
field. .
I might tell you how, but the day before,
John Burns stood at his cottage door,
Looking down the village street,
Where, in the shade of his peaceful vine,
He heard the low of his gathered kine,
And felt their breath with incense sweet;
Or I might say, when the sunset burned
The old farm gable, be thought it turned
The milk, that fell in a babbling flood
Into the milk pail, red as blood,
Or how he fancied the hum of bees
Were bullets buzzing among the trees,
But all such fanciful thoughts as these
Were strange to a practical man like
Burns,
Who minded only his own concerns,
Troubled no more by fancies fine
Than one of his calm-eyed, long-tailed
kine
Quite old-fashioned and matter-of-fact,
Slow to argue, but quick to act.
That was the reason, aa some folks say,
He fought so well on that terrible day.
And it was terrible. On the right .
Raged for hours the heady fight,
Thundered the battery's double bass
Difficult music for men to face;
While on the left where nbw the graves
Undulate like the living waves
That all that day unceasing swept
Up to the pits the rebels kept
Round-shot plowed the upland glades,
Sown with bullets, reaped with blades;
Shattered fences here and there
Tossed their splinters in the air;
The very trees were stripped and bare;
The barns that once held yellow grain
Were heaped with harvest of the slain;
The cattle bellowed on the plain,
The turkeys screamed with might and
main,
And brooding barn-fowl left their rest
With strange shells bursting in each nest.
Just where the tide of battle turns,
Erect and lonely stood old John Burns.
How do you think. the man was dressed?
He wore an ancient long buff vest,
Yellow as saffron but, his best;
And, buttoned over his manly breast,
Was a bright-blue coat, with a rolling
collar,
And large gilt buttons size of a dollar
With tails that the country-folk called
"swaller."
He wore a broad-brimmed, bell-crowned
hat,
White as the locks on which it sat.
Never had such a sight been seen
For forty years on the village green,
Since old John Burns was a couatry
beau,
And went to the "quiltings" long ago.
Close at his elbows all that day
Veterans of. the Peninsula,
Sunburnt and bearded, charged away;
And striplings, downy of lip and chin
Clerks that the Home Guard mustered
In
Glanced, as they passed, at the hat he
wore, . -
Then at the rifle his right hand bore;
And hailed him, from out their youthful
lore,
With scraps of a slangy repertoire:
"How are you. White Hat?" "Put her
through."
"Your head's level," and "Bully for
- you!"
Called him "Daddy"; begged he'd-disclose
The name of the tailor who made his
clothes,
And what was the raluehe set on those;
While Burns, unmindful of jeer and scoff.
Stood there picking the rebels off
With his long brown rifle, aud bell crown
hat.
And the swallow tails they were laugh
ing at.
'T.was but for a moment, for that re
spect Which clothes all courage their voices
checked,
And something the wildest could under
stand .
Spake in the old man's strong right hand:
And his corded throat, and the lurking
frown
Of his eyebrows under his old bell-crown;
Until, as they gazed, there crept an awe
Through the ranks in whispers, and some
men saw .
In the antique vestments and long white
hair - .
The Past of the Nation In battle there;
And some of the soldiers since declare
That the gleam of his old white hat afar,
Like the crested plume of the brave Na
varre, .
That day was the oriflamme of war.
So raged the battle. You know the
rest:
How the rebels, . beaten and backward
pressed,
Broke at the final charge and ran.
At which John Burns a practical man
Shouldered his rifle, unbent his brows,
And then went back to his bees and cows.
This is the story of old John Burns.
This is the moral the reader learns:
In fighting the battle, the question's
whether - .
You'll show, a hat that's white, or r
feather!
Bret Harte.
HAS LEFT HIS HIGH POST.
Srand Duke Alexia Mo Longer Head
of the Russian Navy.
The Grand "Duke Alexis, who has
been compelled by a severe illness to
retire from his position as head of the
Russian navy. Is
the uncle of the
Czar and one of the
three living broth
ers of the late Em
peror Alexander
III. The grand
duke" Is 53 years
old and has had a
t empestuo u s
career. , Several
years ago, during
his brother's reign,
DUKE ALEXIS.
he was dismissed in disgrace from his
post, but more recently he. was "re
stored to full favor. Several years ago
he paid a visit to the United States.
The larger the town, the older the
women are before they quit dancing.
Tell us of a town In which the women
quit at 40, and wa can tell you how
large the town Is.
Great as you are, your friends wll"
lavgh msrril after your funeraL .
Mrs. -Laura L. Barnes, Wash
ington, D. C, Ladies Auxiliary to
Burnsids Post, No. 4, G. A. R.,
recommends Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
In diseases that come to women only,
as a rule, the doctor is called in, some
times several doctors, but still matters
go from bad to worse; but I have
naver known of a case of female weak
ness which was not helped when
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound was used faithfully. ,For
JroungJwornen who are subject to
teadaches, backache, irregular or pain
ful periods, and nervous attacks due to
the severe strain on the 1 system by
some organic trouble, and for women
of advanced years in the most trying
time of life, it serves to correct every
troiible and restore a healthy action of
all organs of the body.
Lydia 13.Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is a household reliance
in my librae, and-1 would not be with
out it. In all my experience with this
medicine, which covers years, I have
found nothing to equal it and al
ways recommend it." Mils. Laura. L.
Barnes, 607 Second St., N. E., Wash
ington, D. C.- $5000 forfeit If original of
aSove letter proving genuineness oannot be produced.
Such testimony should be ac
cepted by all women as convinc
ing evidence that Lydia E.
I'ialcham's Vegetable Compound
stands without a peer as a rem
edy for all the distressing ilia oi
women.
Valuable Collection of Stamps.
A collection of stamps formed by G.
Owen Wheeler of the London Philatelic
society wag sold by auction recently
for $5,575.
PROPER KISSINQ.
If You Want Your Lover to Love You,
Have dcod Teeth.
There are a good many people in
love, and love leads to kisees. At
least, if it does not immediately lead
to kisses, it is usual that fond persons
while conversing sit near each other.
At such a time they can see whether
each has a nice, white set of teeth or
not. And it is more than likely that
if either has neglected his, or her,
t9eth, the resulting offensive breath
will be noticeable to the other perEon.
The question isr Are fine, white,
perfect teeth admirable and attractive?
Will they tend to enhance your charms
in the eyes of your lover? Will yellow
teeth, or the pungent odors that exude
from uncleaned or decaying teeth, have
the opposite effect upon one who other
wise might be fond ofyoj? '
Aside entirely from the fact that it is
more comfortable and practically help
ful to have perfect teeth and keep them
in good order.you should not forget
that the very persons whom yon would
wish most to like you may be strongly
repelled by a neglected or foul condi
tion of your teeth.
These considerations arj eminently
sensible things for people to consider.
They are suggested by a recent talk
witn Dr. W. A. Wise, of the famous
dental firm, Wise Brothers, Failing
building, Portland, Oregon. This firm
is probably the most up-to-date concern
in the Northwest. They put teeth in
order without causing any pain, and
their prices are extremely moderate.
The moral of this story is that levers
should not neglect their teeth. There
are probably 50,000 bad-toothed lovers
within 50 miles of Portland, all of
whom should go immediately to - Wise
Brothers and get fixed up for proper
kissing. -
John Burroughs has an article on
"The Ways of Nature" in the forth
coming June Century, which contains
high praise for Kipling's wiork in nat
ural history. He Bays that we are
never at a loss how to take Kipling in
the "Jungle Books;" and of the story
of "The White Seal." Mr. Burroughs
says that he could not detect one de
parture from the facts of the life his
tory of the seal so far as it is knon.
The Life of Prayer.
Prayer is the abiding background
in the life of the Christian. Ram's
Horn.
Genuine
arter's
Little Liver Pills.
Oust Bear Signature of .
fee Facsimile Wrapper Below.
Vaarr man and aa easy
to take as mugax.
FOS HEADACHE.
FOB DIZZINESS
CARTERS
ITTLE
FDR BIU0USHESS.
FDR TORPID LIVER.
FCS COKSTIPATIOff.
FOR SALLOW SKIM.
FOR THE COMPLEX! 99
IVE
PILL
iPrtw
I OKZf
!B cnt I Purely
Teffetaiae
1 MJIMMH LMm 8Mlt
CURE SICK HEADACHE..
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE MLb.
Best Cough Byrap. Tastes Good.
in time. Bold ny orpgginm.
SECURITY.
c
1U1
SLEEPY GRASS"
It Has a
Sedative Effect Upon
11
Horses Eating of It.
There Is a species of grass, Stipa
vaseyi, growing In the mountains of
New Mexico and In some ot the neigh
boring regions, that has the remarkable
effect of putting to sleep every horse
that eats it. Until recently there have
been only vague and unauthentic ac
counts of It. But at a recent meeting
of the Washington Biological Society,
Vernon Bailey, an official of the Biolo
gical Survey, described the efTects of
this grass on the horses of the explor
ing party of which he had charge last
year. -
They had camped lnThe Sacramento
Mountains In New Mexico, at an alti
tude of about eight thousand feet.
Their horses had Just been turned loose
to graze on a grass that had an abund
ance of green blades aad tall heads full
of ripe seeds, when a passing ranch
man warned them that It was "sleepy
grass," and added, "If they get a good
feed of, that grass you will not get out
of here for a week." After the horses
; had grazed about half an hour the
warning was heeded, and the horses
were picketed in another spot.
The next morning all the horses were
drowsy, and one was sound asleep,
standing with legs braced and ears
and lower lip drooping In a most un
usual and grotesque fashion. He had
almost to be dragged to camp, and
would not eat his oats or drink water.-'
He preferred to sleep. All the horses
were sleepy for about three days, but
no 111 effects followed, except profuse
sweating while traveling and a little 1
loss of flesh from preferring to sleep
instead of eating full rations. , . i
The range horses are said never to
eat sleepy grass, and those that are
brought Into the region where It grows
and turned loose eat of it only once.
Horses that were thought to have
strayed and were lost for days have
been finally found asleep in the bushes
near camp. Cattle fire said either not
to be affected by eating this grass or
to refuse to eat it. The exact facts are
not known. It is possible that when
more Is known about this sleepy grass,
an extract ma be made from It which
will be of use as a sedative.
A gifted monkey in a London menag.
I erie died recently. He answered to
the name of Esau and was 4 years
old. His life was Insured for a large
sum and the manager of the menag
erie asserts that the signature for his
life policy bore Esau's own auto-
' graph, which his trainer, Captain Del-
j ascier, had taught him to write. Esau,
Indeed, had his own banking account,
. his earnings, amounting to some thou
sands a year, being credited in his
own name. Checks drawn against this
sum were signed by Esau.
, A woman of Paisley, Scotland, re
cently stumbled at night into a stream
which was in flood and was swept Into
the sewer through which the stream
flows before joining the River Cart.
While passing through the sewer she
caught a projecting ledge and climbed
upon It. The place was swarming
with rats. She had the greatest diffi
culty in keeping them off and much of
her clothing was torn or gnawed
away. After she had been In this po
sition for eight hours the stream rose
and she was swept off the ledge into
the River Cart, where she clung to
the bank and was rescued the next
morning.
The national museum at Washing
ton has a remarkable collection - of
rats, which was presented by Major
Edgar A. Mearns of the medical de
partment of the army. In this collec
tion are specimens of water rats,,
mountain rats, field rats, tree rats,
ship rats, factory rats, cave rats and
plain every-day rats. There are trop
ical rats, arctic rats, rats from Su
matra, rats from the Phllippines,ledl
ble rats from China, rats from the
East Indies and muskrats;also skunks,
chipmunks, squirrels, mink, raccoons,
opossums and hundreds of varieties of
mice, including field mice and wood
mice.
Two Very Stylish Waists.
No. 1 shows a stylish elbow sleeve
shirt waist of white brilliantine. The
round yoke is made with a deep bias
fold droping lfke a tuck over the
shoulders and gathered seam of the
bodice. The deep bias folds run about
the bust and about the belt and give
a chic, bouffant effect which is par
ticularly becoming to slender figures.
No. 2 shows .a pretty and simple
mode for figured lawns or batiste.
White cuffs and collar add to the ef
fectiveness of the waist. --
His Monej's Ayorth.
"Yesterday, when I gave you a dime,
you called me 'colonel;' now that I give
you a dollar, It's plain 'mister.' ' How
is that?" - ' -
"Well, you see, boss, 'kunnel' Is so
common dat I thought I'd sorter distin
guish you set you ter one side, In a
row all ter yo'se'f." Atlanta Constitu
tion. . Study of Textiles. '
North Carolina and Mississippi have
State schools for the study of textile
fabrics.
It isn't what a man Is that makes
him happy. It's what he thinks he Is.
I
hitis
rone
I have kept Ayer's Cherry Pec
toral In my house for a great many
years, it is tne oesr medicine in
the world for coughs and colds."
J. U. Williams, Attica, n. I.
All serious lung
troubles begin with a
tickling in the throat.
You can stop this at first
in a single night with
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
Use it also for bronchitis,
consumption, hard colds,
and for coughs of all kinds.
Three lira : 25c, 50c. SI. All orvuMs.
Consult your doctor. If he ay take It,
then do as he says. If ba telU yon not
to take It, then don't take it. lie nuwi.
Tmwm it with him. Wa are wllline.
J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mail.
Usually the Case.
"Do yon believe that position affects
one's sleep? ' asked the Mt. Auburn
man.
"Certainly!" replied the Norwood
philosopher. "I never knew a man
who had a position on the police force
to be troubled with insomnia."
Always look for this trade mark : "The Klean,
KooL, Kitchen Kind." The stoves without
smoke, ashes or heat. Make comfortable cook
ing. Subordinate.
Mr. Bvrnne Coyne Ah.
sweetest
one, may I be youi captain and guide
yonf bark down the sea of li-'e?
Mrs. Berrymore (a widow) No, but
you can be my second mate.
E8T Permanently cured So Tlzb ot nervousness
119 after firit ray' tieof"Tr. Kline's Great Nervi
Restorer. Send for FREE $-2.09 trial bottle and treat
tee. IB.B.H.LiNx.Ltd.a3lArcbSL.Philadelphia.fs
On Their Dignity.
He I kind o' think I've seen you
before. Ain't you a shop girl at Bar
gen's? She Sir! I'm a ealsslady!
He That so? I'm an elevator gen
tleman at the same place. Philadel
phia Pi ess.
For coughs and colds there is no better
medicine than Piso's Cure for Consump
tion. Price 25 cents.
A Butterfly Farm.
Near Scarborough, -England, a fam
exists for rearing moths and butterflies.
Half an acre of land has been plant
ed with trees and shrubs 'for the pur
pose. In their season the stock of cater
pillars is twenty thousand. From
thirty to forty thousand preserved in
sects are kept in reserve, eo that but
terflies and moths can be supplied irre
spective of the time of the year.
" I have been notngr PA8C.1KETI and tu
a mild and effective laxative tber are simply won
derful. Mr daughter and 1 were bothered with
sick stomach and our breath was very bad. After
taking a few doses of Cas carets we have improved
Wonderfully. They are a great help in toe family."
Wll RKI.MINA NlGIL.
1137 Blttennouse 8t., Cincinnati, Cbio-
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. 50a,
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
terllag lUardy bapur, Chh-.F. a.niml. K.w Tork. 311
Ifn.Tfl Rif Sold and guaranteed by all rirugr
KU" I U-iSAU k-ists to Ct JtK Tobacco Habit?
I Ti
J&jffivj candy.
KRAUSE & PRINCE, Wholesalers, 87-S9 First St., Portland, 6t'
t-tr
by
Established 1878.
The Donfflaa .ecrtt proc.. of fanlngth bottom Mloa
produc mort flexlblo 4 longer w.rlntr leather
afcu My otbor toHOgo. Th. ul bnw thu
ted 111. put tonr y.ara, whirh prores M. .nperlarUj.
' 1899 Sales: , o,tS.l
1903 Sales: S5,04,S40.04
THE FAIRBANKS
I A o
lit Tllil UV CPAa.. VZy
I?.. DfM VVEn 9 SO iss3sk 23sB
ARE OPERATED ON
OAS, GASOLINE, DISTILLATE OR CRUDE OIL
cost o! Operation
very uont. -
No Expense len,
Koi Running
A Money Earner
First and Stark Sts.
. PORTLAND, OK.
More Supreme.
The Bible stands more supreme at
this hour than ever before. Rev. W.
A. Bartlett.
REIERSON MACHINERY CO,
(Successors to John Poole)
Foot of Morrison Street, Portland, Oregon
With us for Saw Mill and Shingle Mill Ma
chinery. Wind Jlill and Bains Pump, Etc.
Cream Separators, regular price 90, now 160.
Spring wagons $39. Buggy shafts 13.50.
Over one million dollars in pensions secured
by us for our clients during the six years last
past. Over 20 years successful ezreriene3. Per
sonal and prompt attention to all claims en
trusted to us. If your attorney has been dis
barred you can appoint us to act in your claims.
Fees fixed by law and contingent upon success.
Taber & Whitman Co,,, 38-40 Warder Bldg.,
Washing'on, D. C.
- You can largely increase the yield of
'our crop by using our special fertiliz-
rs. Write for prices.
1 PER GENT OFF !
1 3 On all Packet Seeds
For orders of $1.00 or more
(This does not include grass seeds or X
T garden seeds in quantity.) T
T If in tha market write for special net T
J prices. , J
: MANN, the SEEDMAN. I
188 Front Street, Portland, Ore.
1 AGENTS WANTED !
) - "
) Everywhere. Write now. js
RAKBLER, 0LDSM0BILE, WAVERLY & TOLEDO
Automobiles, $500 op. jg
RAMBLER, IMPERIAL, MONARCH, CRESCENT ,
& BARNES Bicycles, $20 and upwards. ,
MOTORCYCLES. g
3 i Send for catalogues. !
I FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CO.
Portland, Oregon.
jj Spokane Tacoma Seattle 6
Alcohol,
Opium'
Tobacco
Write for
Illustrated ,
Circulars'
FrST rtONTeOMtRY Ss.
Using
Portland, Obz.
Telephone Main 591-
THE NEWLY DISCOVERED AUSTRALIAN
BOTANICAL REMEDIES.
For the Cure of all Diseases and a One Dollar
Book Free.
We will mail free to any -person having a dis
ease, our tenth annual edition, Zto Gateway
to Health and Wealth, really a one dollar book.
Treats on new ways to get health and wealth.
1 as 'ormulas for the cure of many diseases,
how to nurse and care for the sick, now to pro
long eld age and live 100 years, wrinkle remcv
er and complexion beautitier worth its weight
in pold, many valuable miscellaneous receipts
for housewi f a, f a rn. e -.business and profession al
men, valuable miscellaneous information, trade
secrets and money making schemes, a real bot
anical wonder.encyclopedia' and home doctor
book, valuai le to all that want health and
wealth. Send your address today and the ad
dress of two or more persoi.s that have con
sumption, catarrh, rheumatism, nervous dis
easfs, eczema, piles, liver, kidney, bladder,
gravel, heart disease, lame back or sides, worn a,
bald heads, asthma, chronic old acres, salt
rheum or blood disorders, or any other disease,
and the book will be mailed to you and them
free on receipt of ten cents to pay postage. Ad
drers The California Botanical Medicine Co., Inc.,
1093 North Alvarado St., Los Angeles, Cat.
P. N. U.
No. 221903.
"II KN wilting to advertisers p lease
mention caia paper.
Boys' and Youths'
Jack Knife Shoes
Ask your dealer for the' Jack
Knife Shoe. Every boy gets a
pocket knife with his pair of
shoes. Best wearing shoes. Razor
steel knives.
Ti. DOUGLAS
S3.and B3. Shoes SS
Vou can save trom iw.ou to W).u yearly
wearing W. L. Douglas 83.50 or S3 Shoes.
They are just as good In every way as those that
have be Vi costing yon from $1.00 to $5.00. The
immense sale of W. L. Douglas shoes proves
tbeir superiority
over an otner makes.
iu dv retiiii e
shoe dealers everywhere.
The genuine have name and price
d
tamped on the bottom. Take no
substitute. ast volort.yelruu$ea.
W. L. Douglas S4 Ullt ISdge
llne cannot bo equailea
at any price.
W. Ij. Soucrlas makes and sells more men's
Goodyear welt (hand-sewed process) snoes
tbnn any o her manufacturer In the world.
tfOK flfin DoworH will be paid to anyone who
vPOtUUU ncWdlU can disprove this statement
Made of the best uuiiorteU and American leathers.
- MORSE ENGINES
Weston
o second
Can Be mn
' in o second
i loney sever
UUliill
Ever Ready
310 Market Street 136 So. Los Angeles SL
SAX FRANCISCO, CAX. X.OS ANGELES, CAL.