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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1903)
V Peculiar To Itself In what it is and what it does con taining the best blood-purifying, alterative and tonic substances and effecting the most radical and per manent cures of all humors and all eruptions, relieving weak, tired, languid feelings, and building up trie wnole system is true only of Hood's Sarsaparilla Xo other medicine acts like it; no other medicine has done so much real, substantial good, no other medicine has restored health and strength at so little cost. " I was troubled with scrofula and came near losing my eyesight. For four months I could not see to do anything. After taking two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla I could see to walk, and Then I had taken eight bottles 1 . could see as well as ever." Susie A. Hairs ton, Withers. N. C. - Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to cure and keeps the promise. Lost Fortune In Crap dame. J Herr Jules Block, the Swiss iron magnate, lost $30,000 in a game of iraps at Tozapah, a Colorado mining :amp, last week. He merely smiled t his ill luck and the next, day drew on his New York bankers for a" suffic ient sum to make good his losses. ' ' t ....... Cruel. "When he proposed to me I was de lighted, of course," confessed Miss An reek, , "but I tried not to let my face 3how him what my answer would be." ' "And did you succeed?" asked Miss Peppery. "No; he found his answer there." "Ah! Bead between the lines, I sup pose." Philadelphia Press. Thoughtless. ; ."Jim," said the first tramp printer, as the freight train flew along, "we ought to have waited till tomorrow to make this trip." "So?" "Yes ; the company runs an excur sion today and we're only beating it out of $4.60." Indianapolis Sun. Imitation.. V The hairdresser had done rather a hasty job on the raven locks of the young woman. : "Well," she said, surveying the re sult in the morning, "this is a sham poo, all right, if there is any such thing as a real 'poo.' " Chicago Tribune. ' ' . New to Him. Pat How does yez loike codfish balls? ' Mike Faith! an' I niver 'tended one, but it's big toimes I've had down it th' .firemen's hop. Lippincotts'. Suffer With I rite The world to-day is full of innocent sufferers from that most loathsome A disease, Contagious Blood Poison. People know in a general way that it is a bad disease, but if all its horrors could be brought before them they would shun it as they do the Leprosy. Not only the person who contracts it suffers, but the awful taint is transmitted to children, and the fearful sores and eruptions, weak eyes, Catarrh, and other evidences of poisoned blood show these little innocents are suffering the awful consequences of some body's sin. So highly contagious is this form of blood poison that one may be contaminated by handling the clothing or other articles in use by a person afflicted with this miserable disease. There is danger even in drink ing from the same vessel or eating out of the same tableware, as many pure and innocent men and women have found to their sorrow. The virus of Contagious Blood Poison is so powerful and penetrating that within a short time after the first little sore appears the whole system is infected and every drop of blood in the , body , is tainted with the poison, and the skin is soon covered with a red rash, ulcers break out in the mouth and throat, swellings appear in the groins, the hair and eyebrows fall out, and unless the ravages of the disease are checked at this stage, more violent and dangerous symptoms appear in the form of deep and offensive sores, copper colored splotches, terrible pains in bones and muscles, and general breaking down of the system. S. S. S. is a specific for Contagious Blood Poison and the only remedy that antidotes this peculiar virus and makes a radical and complete cure of the disease. Mercury and Potash hold it in check so long as the system is under their influence, but when the medicine is left off the poison breaks out again as bad or worse than ever. Besides, the use of these minerals bring on Rheumatism and stomach troubles of the worst kind, and frequently pro- duce bleeding and sponginess of the gums and decay of the teeth. S. S. S. cures Blood Poison in all stages and even reaches down to hereditary taints can be taken without any injurious effects to health, and an experience of nearly fifty years proves beyond doubt that it cures Contagious Blood Poison completely and permanently., Write for our "Home Treatment Book," w hich describes fully the different stages and symptoms of the disease; " TIIE SWSFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA. GA E5228 90K'T GET DISCOURAGED : BENKE-W&UER - Send for Spacial Circular Portland, - - - oregon SPOKANE SEATTLE BOISE SALEM MEDFORD PAINLESS EXTRACTING Teeth Extracted Absolutely Without Pain and all kinds of Dental Work Done by Wise Brothers, the Painless Dentists. f ' ) i Open evenings till 9. Sundays from 9 to 12. DO. W. A. WUU . WISE BROS., Dentists All Clear to Him. "Yes," said the traveling artist, who had paused to contemplate the charm ing view from Mr. Meddergrass' front yard and to drink a cup or two of but termilk; "jes, I should like to linger in this lovely spot all summer. To me there fcould be nothing finer than to remain hei-e and bask in the light of inspiration, while the wonderful scen ery grew more and more upon me. Do you grasp my thought?" "I reckon I do," said Mr. Medder grass. "You mean you'd like to loaf around here long enough to get hayseed in your hair and then sit still till it sprouted." Judge. In the Interest of Sleep. "What did you mean by telling those new.nieghbors that they needn't buy a new lawn mower, as you will al ways be glad to lend them ours?" asked Mrs. Bliggins. "That's one of my best ideas," answered her husband. "No one is go ing to have the blamed assurance to come around at 6 o'clock in the morn ing to borrow a lawn mower." -Washington Star. - Proportion of Murders. One death in every 112 United States is a murder. in the Mothers will And Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing (Syrup the best remedy, to use for their children the teething season. " Relax Your Muscles. : A rjerann who can sit down and com pletely relax his muscles can obtain more absolute rest in ten minutes than the Ttersftrf who cannot relax his mus cles will be able to obtain in an hour .J CATAEEH CANNOT BE CURED With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it Sou must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca irrh. 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 conn try for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, cont ained with the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what pro duces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. - F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprs., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. Halls Family Pills are the best A Jewel. Betzer Why do you have iron bars in front of your kitchen windows and .door? , f i z the cook. Brooklyn Life. riTA Permanently Cured. vo fits or nervousness M 10 after flrstday'suseofDr.K.line'sGreatNerTS Restorer. Send for Free 2 trlalbottleand treatise. Dr. A. H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa Saw It Only One Way. Tuxydo-I was thinking of proposing to that pretty widow, but I changed my mind. She's the most unsenti mental article I ever struck. Euxton So? Tuxydo She told me the last time I called on her that she had plans for a nice home and was going to advertise for proposals. Judge. Innocent; BLOOD POISON IS RESPECTER OF PERSONS and removes all traces of the poison and saves the-victim, from the pitiable' conse ' quehces of this monster scourge. As long . as a drop of the virus is left in the blood it is liable to break out, and there is danger of transmitting the disease to others. S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable and Difficulties are only fences across your chosr n path. Stenography and a business education are the muscle and skill that htlp you to get over the fences. Make the first jump today by writing us for our catalogue. Our graduates are all employed . BUSINESS COLLEGE, Portland, Oregon. Sanders Disk Plow ' Simplest and most perfect made. Before you give your order for a Disk Plow be sure to ex amine the Sanders. For sale by the old reli able house of ' fflitshell, Lewis & Staver Co., 4 P bl. T. f. WitoS Or. Main 2029. 208-213 Failing Bids. Cor. 3rd St Wash. Sts. tltlALS OF TEACHER OF ' CHINATOWN'S CHILDREN After spending three months in the detention pens at San Francisco and at Montreal, Canada, because of offi cial red tape, Mrs. Loo Lin, of China, has been formally admitted to this country and has rejoined her husband in New York City. She is to take charge of a mission kindergarten In Chinatown. She is a Christian, as is her husband. She was only admitted to the United States after an imperial certificate designating her as a teacher had -been sent from Peking. , OUR ALPHABET FOR JAPAN. Reman Script la Hereafter to-Be Used : in the Mikado's Domain. Japan seems to be about to take one of the most remarkable and not least important of all her steps toward har monizing herself with the highest civil ization of Europe and America. That Is nothing less than the adoption of Roman script our own English alpha bet -pari passu with, if not as a sub stitute for, her own ancient system of ideography. For the last dozen years, a knowledge of Roman script has been Increasing in Japan among the most highly educated." But now it is pro posed by the most influential educa tional organization in the empire to make the teaching of our alphabet and of our" mode of word formation com pulsory and universal in the . public schools. It seems probable that the government will adopt the proposal, in which case, of course, all private schools will have to do the same, with the result that all the children of Ja pan will presently be learning, not necessarily the English language, but at least to write and read their own language in English fashion. That will be a great thing for Amer icans and Europeans who want to learnthe Japanese language. It will make that language little harder to learn than French or German and will enable people to learn it- in the same way that they learn the European tongues. At present the great stum bling block in the way of mastering Japanese is the necessity of learning a multitude "of different ideographs. Once Japanese words are expressed in letters like our own the task of learn ing will become immeasurably easier. It will then also be much easier foi the Japanese to learn our language, for of course our alphabetically form ed words seem as strange to them as their ideographs do to us.' Moreover, it will cause a change amounting al most to transformation in the Japanese-mind, or in the linguistic func tions of that mind. The Japanese will for the first time regard words not as indivisible integers of speech, but as composite things formed of letters. Perhaps we can partly realize the magnitude of that change by ourselves trying to regard words as not formed of letters, but as indivisible units. . Nor is that all. Dual systems of languages are abominations.. Where fore it is to be expected that, having adopted alphabetical script by the. side of ideography, the Japanese will soon substitute the former for the latter altogether. It will be greatly to their advantage so to do, and also to our ad vantage to have them do it But it will none the less be an extraordinary thing. For the mother tongue, in all its details, is one of the things to which men cling most tenaciously. We need, to convince ourselves of that. to recall only the language controver sies in Canada, in Bohemia, in South Africa, in Malta and elsewhere, not mentioning the recent clamor about the teaching of German in New York public schools.' We may also recall Bismarck's inexorable opposition to the introduction of Roman script into Germany in place of the far less legi ble German characters. That the Jap anese should voluntarily make this revolutionary change in their national script indicates their possession of an exceptionally high ambition to place themselves abreast of the best civili zation of the world and all this emer gence from savage . seclusion within the memory of men'not yet grown oldl New York Tribune. Interchangeable Parts. "My brother bought an automobile here last week," said an angry man to the salesman who stepped forward to greet him, "and he says you told him If anything broke you would supply a new part." "Certainly," said the clerk. "What does he want?"; - i "He wants two deltoid muscles, a couple of kneepans, one elbow and about half a yard of cuticle," said the man, "and he wants 'em right away." The Feminine View. A story told in the New York Trib une shows how vain it is fer man to exercise his imagination on the sub ject of domestic tragedy. A young and venturous man was one day talking with the wife of a member of the Cabinet about some of the ironies of married life. "I can't imagine anything more dreadful," said he, "than for a wom an, after mending her husband's coat, to find in one of the pockets an old love letter from a former sweetheart." "Fortunately, that could never hap pen," said 4the lady. "The woman would find the letter first, and then she would not mend the coat." A man exhibits great presence of mind if he isn't absent-minded when I the 'contribution box comes his way. UBS. too riN. ' ' . ' S Every mother possesses information of vital value to her young daughter. That daughter is a precious legacy, and the responsibility for her future is largely in the hands of the mother. The mysterious change that develops the thoughtless girl into the thoughtful woman should find the mother on the watch day and night. As she cares for the physical well-being of her daughter, so will the woman be. and her children also When a young girl's thoughts become sluggish, when she experi ences headaches, dizziness, faintness, and exhibits an abnormal disposi tion to sleep, pains in the back arid lower limbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude, and a dislike for the society of other girls, when she is a mys tery to herself and friends, then the mother should go to her aid promptly. At such a time the greatest aid to nature is Iydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It prepares the young system for the coming change, and is the surest reliance in this hour of trial. Casebf a New York Girl of Interest to Every 'Mother and Daughter in the Land. " Dkab Mbs. Pdtkham : I hope you will publish this letter, for I want all mothers to know how much good your medicine did my young daughter. Her health broke down about six months ago, and although she is large, for her age, I did not understand what was wrong with her ; the doctor did not. either, for he treated her for her heart, which pained her a good deal.; but he did not do her any good, and we were afraid heart trouble would carry her off. Every day she kept getting wiiter and thinner. She had no appetite, and she sat around without any ambition, and was always too tired to do anything. All night long she would moan in her sleep, as though in terrible pain. . "1 felt terribly discouraged; I was spending money for doctor's bills ngM along, but she was receiving no help. At that time I was taking I,ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I read in one of your books about young girls. I decided to drop the doctor, and give her your medicine. I wish you could see thechange in her, and the pink cheeks Lydia E. Pink nam S Vegetable Compound has given her. She had taken but half a bottle when menstruation started again and her heart trouble went away like magic. I had her continue the medicine, and now she is fat, rosy, and per fectly healthy. Menstruation is regular and painless, and I owe my thanks to you and to your wonderful medicine for her good health." Mbs. Maeoabit Phjelajt, 673 Tenth Avenue, New York City. SPECIAL ADVICE TO YOUNG WOMEN FREE. Prom her vast experience in treating female ills, extending1 over 20 years, Mrs. Pinkham has gained a knowledge which is of untold value to every ailing young woman. Her advice never fails to help. If you need such help write her. Address Iiynn, Mass. - A medicine that has restored so many women to health and can produce proof of the fact must be regarded with respect. This is the record of Xydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which cannot be equalled by any other medicine the world has ever produced. It is well to remember these facts when some druggist tries to get you to buy something which he says is "just as good." That is impos sible, as no other medicine has such a record of cures as Liydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ; so do not experiment with untried medicines, but insist upon the one you know is lesL $5000 FORFEIT if "w cannot forthwith produce the original letter and signature oC above testimonial, whioh will prove its absolute genuineness. ydlm E. Ftakham Medicine Co.. X.jnn. UaaaV Still Too Young. "This is my birthday." "And I suppose you feel as young as you ever did?" I "No, I don't believe I'm quite old I enough yet to feel as young as I ever ' ' Tawti Ti4-'ttr Piso'a Cure la a good cough medicine. It has cured coughs and colds for forty years. At druggists, 25 cents. In Chicago. "The devil does more for one's pleas ure and comfort than any god," says a Chicago woman. There is nothing like knowing who your friends are. New ! York News. I) OREGON PORTLAND A I St. Helen's Hall ( Home and day school for elrls. Ideal S) S) location..' Spacious building. Modern (S) equipment. Academic, College Frepar- (& () ation and special courses. Music, Elo- (5) cution. Art in charge of specialists. () S) Illustrated catalogue. Easter term opens February 1, 1904. (S) ELEANOR TEBBETTS, Principal. BREWERY FOR SALE - Complete Brewing1 and Bottling-' plant, capacity three bbls per dav. for Weiss Beer, Ale and Porter, in full operation, only one in Portland or Oregon. Long lease, low rent. Address "Owner" or i" apply at C. H. Pig- f;ott. Lawyer. 4 Mulkey Building, Port ana, Oregon. FORCED SALE P.N.U.? No 45 1903. HEN writing to advertisers please mention this paper. EMERSON'S 10 CENTS, -flSESMt : H&MAnilfS .SOLDVFRY1i7fJ:PEl Not Always Thus. Tramp Madam, I was not always thus. , Madam No; it was your other arm you had in a sling yesterday. Journal. ABSOLUTE SEGURITYi Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Clust Bear Signature of ; e Fac-Slmlle Wrapper Below. SXfttr small wad m easy to. take as socik FOR HEACACKEa FOR DIZZINESS; FOR B1U0USRESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. CARTERS rfTLE v IVER LLL FOR THE COMPLEXION CURE SICK HEADACHE.. f t PI (C3 OUICKLYCURED C08T OF A TRIP ABROAD. On Can 8pend Vacations in arop at Xtittle Kxpeuae. Every one knows that it costs. him something to live In this country, no matter where he is, and every one knows that living is cheaper abroad than here. But, says Collier's Weekly, the slight effort of putting these two .facts together Beems to be too great for the average mind, which never fully takes in the truth that once ar rived in a foreign country an Ameri can can live more cheaply there than here. ' , The cost of transportation Is, of course, one item to be taken into ac count, but this Is reduced by common sense figuring to a nominal sum. To the tired seeker after rest no beginning of a vacation could be more favorable than ten or twelve days spent on a slew, comfortable steamer of one of the smaller lines. The cost of such a passage is about $50 a passenger. The average man would spend at least half of that sum in caring for himself if he stayed closely at home during the ten or twelve days, and he would think he was ak good manager if he made a hasty business trip to Wash ington on the other half. As to his expense on the other side, it Is a certainty that any American can live comfortably abroad for less than what he pays here. Of course he can not if he travels incessantly, but once" the haunting feeling lost that this la his first, last and only opportunitj there will be no necessity for such a hurry. He will see before him a vista of vacations, each spent in exploring at his leisure some small district of Europe, whence he will return with nerves calmed, with sane vision, with cool head and (this is an actual fact drawn from repeated observations) with not one. penny less in the bank than he would have had had he stay ed at home with the usual summer ex penses. At man or woman who can afford a vacation anywhere (outside, of course, the regular two weeks' com mercial vacation) can afford it in Eu rope. Suppose that three concrete exam ples are taken as covering roughly the entire field of varying tastes. Take the ca.se of the man or woman who is thoroughly tired and worn with the excitement and nervous strain of one of our terrible American winters of activity in all directions. He has two or three months in which to recuperate before the wear and tear of an exactly similar winter begins. There are a dozen German towns of the third or fourth class in population where he can live in greater comfort than in any American boarding house of moderate prices for not to exceed f 1 a day. For this price he has a good room of a quietness perfectly blissful to tired New York's ears, four meals a day of llearty, wholesome German food, his light and heat and what is almost sure to be the most quieting and restful of company. He spends his days out of doors walking or bi cycling on the excellent roads through a country which, beautiful, historic and keenly interesting as it is, will make the trolley parks, picnic groves or even golf links of his usual summer resort seem tame and uninteresting. AN INSECT THERMOMETER. Cricket Chirps Bear a Close Relation to the Temperature. On an autumn evening, when the crickets are out enjoying life too, it is very interesting to be able to tell the temDerature of the air by the number of chirps the cricket makes per minute. It seems that the rate of chirps is affected by the temperature, and the exact relation of the temperature to the number "of chirps has been esti mated. With a little care in counting, one soon becomes expert enough to tell the temperature within one or two degrees Fahrenheit One meets with many discourage ments at first as he tries hard to. count every chirp; the cricket stops before the minute is up: other insects' notes drown out the cricket's; the noise of passing vehicles, etc., are very apt to interrupt at the critical moment of counting. But a little patience will easily overcome such difficulties. When one has the average number of chirps per minute, take one-fourth of that number, and add forty to that; the result will be the temperature within a degree or two of the actual temperature as read from a thermome ter hung out of doors. Another experiment is to capture a cricket and take him into the house and see how much faster he chirps when he is warm. To count the chirps per minute, tak ing one-fourth of that number and adding forty to it may seem a little complicated but it is really very sim ple, and is like the game, "Think of a number, and double it," put to an interesting purpose. St. Nicholas. Great Britain's Seamen. One in every thirty-six of the males over 15 years of age in Great Britain is a seaman in the mercantile marine or a fisherman. That ' by no means represents the proportion of Britons who go to sea in ships. For the cur rent year the total number of officers and men, active service ratings pro vided by the estimates for the royal navy, Is 127,000, being an increase of 4,600 over the previous year. Taking the two totals this means that one In about every twenty Britons Is a sailor, which is an enormously larger percent age than that which any other nation can boast, even with the conscription which supplies, the seamen of several continental countries. Advice of a Railroad Condncter. A conductor in Kansas has prepared the following advice for his passen gers: 'Have no money transactions with strangers. Give your - trunk checks to a baggageman, and nobody else. A gold brick isn't worth bring ing home. Don't get off the cars while they are in motion. When a suspi cious-looking man asks you if you have lost your pockefbook tell him you nev er carry one. Don't feel for It while he Is looking. Have your ticket ready when the conductor comes along." A manless baby carriage would fill a long-felt want in some populous com munity. , Dark Hair "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a great many years, and al though I am past eighty years of ge yet I have not a gray hair in my head." Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have. If its arav nnw no matter; for Ayer's I riair vigor always re stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long ; and it stops falling of the hair, too. Sl.N a oU. All drnrriits. If your drnggist cannot supply yon, send us one dollar and we will express 70a a bottle. Be sure and give the name oX your nearest express office. Address, J. C AXK CO., Lowell, Mass. ORDER QUICK Special bargain list, new goods. South Bend Steel Plows, wood beams, 14 in., 10; South Bend -Chilled Plows, wood beams, 14 in., $7.70; South Bend Chillec: Plows, wood beams, 8 in., $3.50; all sizes and styles in plows. Young America Cream Separator, No. 800, $55; Steel Wind Mill. 8-foot, $22; Wood Wheel Wind Mill, 12-foot, $35. Write us for prices on anything in the machinery line. Relerson Ma chinery Co., foot of Morrison St., Portland, Or. ALCOHOL, OPIUM, TOBACCO USING. WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE First sod Hontgomery Sts., Portland, Orm Telephone, Hain 394. Your Liver Is it acting well? Bowels regular? Digestion good? If not, remember Ayer's Pills. The kind you have known all your life. J. C. Ayor Co., LowoU, ICass. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE VVEATHFDWISE IS'THE MAN WHO WEARS 91KIERS A reputation extending over rv -: j oiAyr-iA jreors ana our guarantee ore back, of v every oarmeni. Deannp xne x .unM np -r-iir- n; lm There are many imitations. ' Be sure of the name 1 uhck on xne Duuorw. ON SALE EVERYWHERE ,u A. XTOWEEZOlpOSTON. MAS,U 5. A. TOWER CANADIAN CO. Limits. TORONTO." CAM W. L. DOUGLAS 3.&3SHOESS You can save from $3 to $5 yearly by : wearing W.L. Douglas $3.50 or $3 shoes. They equal those that have been cost ing you from $4.00 to $5.00. The im mense sale of W. L. Douglas shoes proves their superiority over all othsr makes. Sold by retail shoe deaiers everywhere. Look for name and price on bottom. That Douglas am Cor ona Colt BTOTes there is value in Douglas shoes. , Corona is the highest ' grade Pat. Leather made. Fast Color Evelctt used. Our S Oilt Edae Line cannot be eaualled at anu price. Shoes by mail, 25 cent extra. Illustrated Catalog free. W. L. DOUULiS. Brockton, Mass our Stomach After I was Induced to try CAMCA. BETS, I will never be without them in the honsa. My liver was in a verr bad sbape. and my bead ached and I bad stomach trouble. Mow. since tak ing Cascarets. 1 feel fine. Mr wife has also used tbem with beneficial results for sour stomach." Jos. KBiHLura, isa Congress St., St. Louis, Mo. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Bood, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c 26c Us. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Strlta Bwwlr CMBpaar, Chirac, Maatresl, S.w Yrt. SIS HA Tfl RIO Sold and guaranteed by all drug mi I U'UAW Kists to CIli-JiK Tobacco Jiahit. Dr . C Gee Wo "WONDERFUL - HOME TREATMENT This wonderful Chi nese doctor Is called great because he cures people without opera tion that are given up to die. He cures with those wonderful Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, barks and vegetables that are entirely on- rnfiwn bi tnAHinal Itci- ence In this country. Through the use of those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over 600 different rem edies, which he successfully uses in different diseases. He guarantees to cure cattarh, asth ma, lung, throat, rheumatism, nervousness, stomach, liver, kidneys, etc : has hundreds of testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see him. Patients out of the city write for blanks and circulars. Bend stamp. COIs"BOI TATION FREE. ADDKKBS The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 253 Alder St.. Portland, Oregon. aVMenilou paper. " CUBES H!lt ALL ELSE I -4 Best Cough Srruo. Tastes C t V - i 'a. ji -. . 1UKUIO. WU UJ U I UK K ' 89 a . 1 jails. rr tood. Osa I i j HI Ezra