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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1903)
Catarrh Whether it is of the nose, throat, stomach, bowels, or more delicate organs, catarrh is always debilitating and should never tail of attention. It is a discharge from the mncons mem brane when kept in a state of inflammation by an impure, commonly scroraloas, con dition of the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures all forms of catarrh, radically and permanently It removes the cause and overcomes all the effects. Get Hood's. Information for the Young. "Pa, what's a grain of truth?" "It's generally the thing that keeps all the women in the neighborhood say ing, 'Well, I declare!' 'I never would have thought it!' 'You don't Bay!.' 'I never did believe she was as innocent as she tried to make out!' and 'I feel so sorry for her children!"" New York Herald. riTft Permanently cured, profits or nervousness. 1 1 lu after first day'Busp of Dr.Kliue's Great Nerv Beatorer. Send for Free S2 trial bottle and treattae. Br. K. H. Kline, Ltd.. 631 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa, Its Hereafter. "You seem to think a good deal of that monkey," said the littel girl. "Yes," replied the organ grinder. He good monk." "Do you think he'll go to heaven?" "No; when ze monk die he go to Newport." Chicago Tribune. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sootbine; ttyrup the best remedy to use for their children Uie teething season. Didn't Worry Her. "Doesn't it make you angry when folks twit you about your failure to ac quire a husband?" asked the girl who was doing her first season. "Not me," replied the philosophical spinster. It is better to be laughed at because you are not married than not to be able to laugh because you are." Brooklyn Eagle. Piso s Cure fs a remedy for coughs, colds and consumption. Try it. Price 25 cents, at druggists. - The Whyness. ."I suppose," said Mrs. Mixer, "my reputation as a breadmaker is due to the practice I have had. I am the mother of seven boys, you mow." "Yes," replied Mrs. Catchington, "and my reputation as a matchmaker is doubtless due to the fact that I am the mother of nine daughters."- Chi cago Newfl. Has That Appearance. "It looks to me a good deal as if the new woman and some society women would like to be hens." - "Not very complimentary." "But a reasonable deduction, never theless." . "Why do you think so?" "Because the incubator would then relieve them of so much responsibil ity." Chicago Post. Just Wanted a Chance. "Mister Jedge,"-called out the col ored witness, after he had been on the stand a full hour, "kin I say one word, uh?" "Yes," replied the judge. "What it?" v"Hit's dess dis, suh. " Ef you'll "dess make de lawyers set down en keep still two minits, en gimme a livin' chance, I'll whirl in en tell de truth!" Atlanta Constitution. Despair. "Yes, Cholly's valet has committed suicide." "Dean mej Now, do say, what foah?" , "Why, Cholly wanted to smoke his cigawettes foah him." Baltimore News. Mar Be Only a Pipe Dream. Standard oil capitalists are reported to have bought Coney Island. We may yet, remarks the Chicago Record Herald, be able to get our midway amusements through a pipe line. Diplomacy. "At what age do you consider women the most charming?" asked the inquisi tive female of mere or less uncertain years. , "The age of the woman who asks the question," answered the man, who was a diplomat from Diplomacyville. Chi cago News. AN INDESCRIBABLE TORTURE Because Rheumatism sometimes comes on suddenly it doesn't prove that it is a chance disease or one due to accidental causes. It takes time for it to develop, and is at work in the system long before anv symptoms are felt. The blood is the first point of attack, and the poisonous acids that cause the uted through the circulation to different parts of the -system, and settle in joints, muscles and nerves ; and when the system is in this condition it needs only some exciting- cause like exposure to mgnt air, damp, chillv weather, or the cold, bleak winds of winter, to arouse the slumberinsr poisons and brinir of the attack depends upon the amount of acid in the blood and the quantity ot acrid matter in the joints and muscles. Some peo ple are almost helpless from the first, while others have occa sional spells or are uncomforta ble, restless, nervous and half sick all the time from the nagging aches and pains. Rheu matism s a disagreeable com panion even in its mildest form. It grows worse as we grow older, and frequently stiffens the joints, , draws the muscles out of shape and breaks down the nervous system. A disease that origin ates in the blood, as Rheumatism does, cannot be cured with ex ternal remedies like liniments and pains or drive them to some other the disease or improve the condition of the blood. The thin acid blood of and v up Write .for our special book desire any special information or it without caarge . . THE SWIFT SPLCIFIG CO$ ATLANTAg GAa Bread. Sift a quart of flour with half a tea spoonful each of salt and sugar Into a bowl. Scald a sup of milk and stir It into a teaspoonf ul of butter, melted In a half pint of boiling water. When this is lukewarm stir it into the sifted flour, then add a third of a yeast cake that has been dissolved in a gill ot blood-warm water, and mix to a soft dough. Turn upon a floured pastry board and knead for ten minutes. Set to rise in a bread pan with a perforated top, set in a warm place for six hours. At the end of this time divide the dough into two loaves, knead each of these for five minutes 'and put into a greased pan. Cover with a light cloth ind set to rise for an hour more before baking in a steady oven. Tomato Catanp. Boil together a peck of ripe tomatoes and four large onions until they are soft. Pass through a colander and then strain the liquid through a fine sieve. Put this over the fire with a dozen sprays of parsley, a couple of bay leaves, a teaspoonful each of ground cloves, mace,' white pepper, sugar, salt and a very little cayenne. Tie up a teaspoonful of celery seed in a little muslin bag and drop in with the rest Boil all together , for five hours, stirring occasionally. When boiled down one-half, and quite thick, take out the bag of celery seed, add a pint of vinegar and take from the fire. When the catchup Is stone cold bottle and cork, sealing the corks. Cheese Croquettes. Cut Into small dice one pound of American cheese. Have ready one cup ful of hot cream sauce In a saucepan; add the cheese and the yolks of two beaten eggs, diluted with a little cream. Stir until well blended, and let the mixture, remain on the stove for a mo ment until the cheese gets "steady." Season with salt, red and white pepper and a little nutmeg. . Set on the ice un til cold, then form into croquettes and roll in fine bread crumbs. Dip in egg, then In crumbs again, and fry In deep. hot fat until a delicate brown. Good Housekeeping. Panaaare with Buckwheat Cakes. Prick the sausages well and fry in a little bacon fat. Put them on a hot platter in a circle on the outside, leav ing space for the cakes in the center. Cakes. Mix thoroughly two cupfuls of buckwheat flour, a little salt and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder; then add milk and water of equal parts to make the batter of the right consist ency. Add a little molasses, which will give them a better color. Fry on a soapstone griddle and pile neatly in the center of the ring of sausage. Cream of Celery Ponp, Gut the celery into inch bits, cover with a quart of water and boll tender. Rub through the colander and return the liquid to the fire. Make a roux of a tablespoonful of butter and one of flour, and when it bubbles pour upon it a plat of rich milk part cream, if you have it. Stir until smooth and thick, then add gradually the celery puree. Season with salt and white pep per and serve. Oyster Pie. Line a vegetable dish with mashed potato. Brush it over with the white of an egg. and put it in the oven to brown lightly. Take two dozen oysters, half a pint of milk, one tablespoonful of butter, pepper and salt to taste. Let it come to a boll, and thicken with a heaping teaspoonful of flour and put into the space left In the vegetable dish, What to Eat. A Vindictive Horse. . "How did it happen that your horse died?" ' 'The veterinarian's automobile broke down on the way over." aches and pains are then distrib oa Rheumatism. The severity EHE UMJLTIS II IU ELBOWS, WHISTS AND KNEES. TTrbana, Ohio, Aug. 25, 1803. Xiftst winter I had a severe attack ef Rheumatism. It started in the right elbow, and from tnere to my wrists; tne riirht wrist was the worse. It became swollen and extremely painful. My left knee joint was the next plaoe to be at tacked. It became swollen ana or course painful. The next point to be affected was the hio and ankle, which arave me much trouble. I waa barely able to gret about for some time, x was upaor treat ment of a physician for awhile but sret tins: no better I began 8. S. 3.. and after taking- it for some time I was entirely relieved of the Rheumatism. AH swelling and soreness disappeared. I consider 8. S. S. an excellent remedy for Rheuma tism and all troubles having their origin in tne Diooa. GRIFFITH KELLY. 408 Bloomfield Ave. plasters ; such things scatter the part of the body, but do not touch must be restored to its normal purity and strength, so that all poi sonous substances may be carried out the system, and no medicine accom plishes this in so short a time as S. S. S. . which not only neutralizes the acids counteracts the poisons, but builds the general health at the same time. on Rheumatism, and should you advice, our physicians will furnish Polygamy. Every time polygamy is mentioned in the Bible the sad results are shown with it Rev. W. H. Hop- j kins, Congregationalism Denver, Colo, j Selfish Rulers. Millions of men1 would .be Christians, but they see us ruled often by selfishness, greed. Jeal ousy and evil passions. Rev. Ray Palmer. Baptist, Chilllcothe, Mo. The Clerical Function. The chief function of the preacher should be to set forth the spiritual food, of which the Bible contains such exhaustless abundance. Rev. R. F. Hurbert, Meth odist, Burlington, Iowa. Universal Standard. A universal standard at the present time seems all that is necessary for a union of all Christian forces in the conquest of the world for Christ Rev. J. L. Lee, Pres byterian, New York City. Mankind. Our personal success in work for God depends much upon our methods, - for we have to deal with men as we find them and not as we would desire them to be. Rev. Geo. Adams, Methodist Brooklyn, N. Y. Artificial Life. Humanity, as it is presently constituted, is unnatural. We live an artificial life, a life in oppo sition to the divine, hence our envi ronments are Inauspicious. Rev. F. B. Mason, Scientist Brooklyn, N. Y. Work of the Church. If churches had not been built jails would have multiplied. If the sanctity of the mar riage tie had not been defended, the divorce courts would have been over crowded. Rev. W. J. White, Roman Catholic, Brooklyn, N. Y. Practical Christianity. If any man fancies that Christianity is not practi cal he reveals his ignorance of the New Testament The religion of Je sus has to do with the life-that now is as well as that which is to come. Rev. L. M. Crandall, Baptist Chicago, 111. ' Independence. When a man finds himself in radical disagreement from bis associates he is free to assert his independence, otherwise we are liv ing in a modified system of anarchy, and not in a republic. Rev. A. Mc Kenzie, Congregationalism Cambridge, Mass. .Divorce. Marriage is a relation which Is Indissoluble except for one reason. If it is a civil relation a di vorce can and may be granted. If it is ordained by God no court has any right to interfere and sever the bonds. Rev. B. L. Powell, Disciple, Louis ville, Ky. . Circumstances. The social and financial condition has little or noth ing to do with one's spirituality, ex cept as he is influenced by it But in the sight of God we are not saved or lost by our circumstances, but by our faith or lack of it Rev. C. L. Palmer, German Reformed, Kinston, N. J. Joy. Joy is a vital and worthy ele ment in every life. Our rugged and rushing age is so serious-minded that we have almost forgotten to be merry and ring out hearty peals of laughter. Yet no one is at his best until deeply and divinely happy. Rev. W. P. Fer guson, Methodist Los Angeles, Cal. Ideals. Every young man has a mental conception of character which is his Ideal. The statesman, politician, educator, philanthropist inventor, master mechanic, orator and writer are ideals after which young men of to day mold and fashion their lives, build characters and shape their destinies. Rev. Z. E. Bates, Disciple, Allegheny, Pa. - Speculation. By the laws of the church, which have stood since the sixteenth century, priests are absolute ly forbidden to engage in business without first obtaining the consent of the bishop of his diocese. Gambling or speculating wifh either his own funds or the funds of the church are included In this. ' Rev. William O'Ryan, Roman Catholic, Louisville, Ky. Increase of Crime. While the popu lation of the country has increased three times, the crime in the country has Increased twelve times. The Unit ed States is paying more for the sup port of criminal institutions than for both religion and education. ' In addi tion there is the expense of protect ing people from the attacks of crimi nals without the jails. Rev. ' C. N. Howard, Baptist, Rochester, N. Y. " Future Punishment We want no amateurs regarding future punish ment We want an expert, whom we can trust as the little child trusts the wise surgeon, as the traveler trusts the guide and deliverer, as the pas senger trusts the captain of the great ship. Fortunately, Jesus Christ, in the great hour of His life, has spoken in words so clear, so simple, as to leave no room for doubt-r-Rev. N. D. Hillis, . Congregationalism - Brooklyn, N. Y. Man and Woman. Those who seek to make men and women similar in tastes, habits, and aims seek the im possible and the unprofitable. ' Social, educational and religious life require for their full consummation and sym pathy both the man and woman ele ments of minJ and souL Society ?Mll not be benefitted by making men and women similar, but by keeping them dissimilar. Woman in her sphere is and has been as supreme and impor tant in her mental and spiritual con tributions as man. Rev. R. A. White, Universalist, Chicago, 111. - Some Large Undertakings. "Talk about big jobs," said the Cheerful Idiot while trying to look se rious. . v "Well," said the victim wearily. ' "Wheeling West Virginia may be some and Lansing Michigan may be rather a big surgical undertaking, but Flushing Long Island isn't such a tiny sanitary stunt" Baltimore American. - Perverted Pride: "Aren't you ashamed of . that last" massacre?" ' "I don't see why I should be," answered the Sultan,' "It wffshtvrsuca.v'very small one." Washington Star'-"". I A 1 skstfo ma "One of my daughters bad a terrible case of asthma. We tried almost everything, but without re lief. We then tried Ayers 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. Tares sizes: 25c. Wc.Jl. All drnrrkts. Consult year doctor'f fee says take It, then do a he says. If hs tell yoa not to take It. then don't take It. He knows. Lssts it with him. Wo are willing. 4. 0. AYB CO., Lowsll. Haas. Perrin's Pile Specific The INTERNAL REMEDY V Case Exists it Will Not Cure Wood Saws, Drag Saws run by steam or gaso line engines, aleo the latest in saw mill ma chinery, stump pullers, well drilling' machin ery, etc., etc Write for your needs. REIERSON MACHINERY CO. Foot of Morrison Street Portland Oregon TIT i VT'I' L'TV Every man or woman so ln yV A IN I P-ll cllned to learn Uie Barber trade. A nice light ocenpation, good wages.easy to learn, constant practice. The method is right and the price and time required the best possible to give satisfactory results. Write for full particulars to the AMERICAN BARBEB CCLLEGK (Inc.), 253 Everett 1st.. Portland, Oregon. - CXSXS)S)3X OREGON PORTLAND (fj I St. Helen's Mall (S) Home and day school for eirls. Ideal (S) location. Spacious building. Modern & equipment. Academic, College 1'renar- (S) (S) ation and special courses. Music, Elo- (i) cution, Art in charge of specialists. ) Illustrated catalogue. Easter term g opens February 1, 1904. ELEANOR TEBBETTS, Principal. ik cms v "gum in tamiicf r BAB Waterproof OILED CLOTHING A - IOWMK CO, . Ma, USA. , TOK3NT4 CAM "I have bean using CASCARETSfor Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for over twenty years, and I can say that Cascareta bave given me more relief than any other reme dy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recom mend them to my friends as being all they are represented." Thos. Gillard, Elgin, 111. 'leajan. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good, Do Oood Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 36c. SOc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. - ... StwHag IwiMy Ci y, Cklusi wrtwsl. In Int. SIC MaTQaBAC Sold ana gnaranteed by alldrng " I "Mb cists to fJlJJSK Tobaeao HaaUT Dr. C. Gee Wo VONDERFUL HOME TREATMENT This wonderful Chi nese doctor la 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 tbat are entirely un known to medical sci ence In this country. Through the nse 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 or testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see him. Patients out of the city write for blanks and circulars. Send stamp. CO-NSUIr TATION FKEK ADDKKSS The C Gee Wo Chinese Hedicine Co. 253 Alder St., Portland, Oregon. MSriLtatiou paper. 23"! Washington Farmers and Stockmen Indorse Prussian StSck Food! READ THE FOLLOWING LETTERS. THEY SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. ' I aav used Prussian Stock Food for the part three years for Homes. Cattle. Sheep and Hoes. AS A FAT PRODUCING FOOD IT HAS NO EQUAL. I And it a thorough ren- orator; It tones up the system in general and puts new life and vigor in the animal. In my dairy business I And lu every instance when fed according to directions it will INCREASE the flow of milk to a marked degree. Also with young animals, calves in particular that are subject to SCOURS Prussian Stock Food will check the malady as if by magic. I have tried consider Prussian StockFood the BEST on the market to-day. Era. G&ur, Daven port, Wash. IT DOUBLED Increase in Milk. Since nsing the Prussian Stock Food with my milch1 cow I And her supply of milk has increased from ONE to TWO quarts each milking. D. C. Fabhswobih, Bookford. Wash. FOBILAND SEED CO,, Portland. Or., Coast Agents. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. I Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Sold by druggtsts. I sSa 11 11 1 f I 3 itlBesi LtJ m tit ANCIENT QUARRY IN NEBRA8KA. Waa Worked by a Kscs ef Peapla Un known to tha Pclentlata. In the great flint quarries near No na wka. Neb., covering more than a township, a party of well-known den tists has found what they think is evi dence of the existence of a lost race, hitherto unknown. It is thought that this prehistoric people belonged to neither the red men nor the mound builders. But who they were and at what remote age they Inhabited the Missouri valley cannot now be ascer tained. They were a race of patient plodders whose knowledge and handiwork had not been developed beyond the primi tive ideas of the stone age. By their industry it is shown that they were not of the nomadic, indolent Indian race; by their Ignorance and crude handiwork that they were not of the refined, almost civilized mound build ers, the first American aborigines, whose existence is definitely known. Then who were they, whence did they come and by whom were they ob literated? Aside from the mound build ers and the latter-day Indians no American aborigines are known to scientists, and in these quarries is evi dence of a strange race. There are no doubt the quarries are of great age The entire series of mines has been buried beneath an av erage of ten feet of soil. The accumu lation of this must have taken cen turies. It is known positively the con dition has not changed at all in 100 years. Then how many centuries did it take for this ten feet of soil to cover the whole of the mines? ' To settle the mooted question wheth er these quarries, situated on the Ne hawka fruit farm owned by Isaac M. Pollard, were the work of some artifi cial agency or of nature, an unusually large party of prominent scientists was induced by State Archeologist E, E. Blackman to visit the quarries. Of the findings of the scientists State Arche ologist Blackman gave out the follow ing statement: 4 Mr. Pollard, when he arranged the visit to this spot a year ago, caused a cross section to be cut in the brow of the hill and laid bare the face of the quarry. - This excavation is eighty feet in length, six feet wide and averages ten feet in depth. It shows that the artisans removed two layers of solid limestone and one of decayed rock be fore the-y came to the strata . which they sotjght and which contained the nodules of flint from which imple ments were made. Tons of flint are scattered on the surface and in the de bris of fhe quarry and there are many rocks stowing where the flint nodules were taken out. On the large pieces of limestone in the quarry pit one may see f rartures, as : if they had been struck with a heavy sledge. The face of the qnarry as shewn by the excava tion is a perpendicular wall twelve feet hign. The surface indication be fore digging was a circular or oblong depression. There is a burr oak tree standing nearly in the center ot the pit measuring six feet two inches in cir cumference. ATHLETICS AT OUR COLLEGES. Plea In Favor of Sports in tha Large Iuatitutions. The day Is past when the whole mis sion of oar colleges was to turn out young men of over-developed brains in under developed bodies. In 1780 the founders of Andover Academy includ ed In their deed of gift, as the purpose of the givers, "To instruct youth, not only In English and Latin grammar, writing, arithmetic and those sciences where jj they are commonly taught; but more especially to "learn them the great and real business of living." Except for the small proportion of college graduates who equip themselves for the business of teaching other youths. the curricula of their student years, the aim of the undergraduate life cannot be better expressed than in the words of the founders of An Ldover, written a century and a quarter ago, "the great end and real business of living." And in general it cannot be disproved that the modern Interest In bodily betterment In the develop ment of athletics and outdoor evercise has. done more to make young men manly, healthy and self-reliant, with clean ideals and wholesome lives, than the dead languages and higher math ematics. Every autumn graduate football players flock back to the universities by the dozens to help coach the elevens. Looking these men over, it is fair to remark'that they are as fine and representative a body of Ameri can citizens as can be grouped, and that if their "capacity for attention has been ravaged and degraded," their lives do not show resultant disaster. If th same number of valedictorians, whose: "capacity for attention is unquestion ed," were to be compared with these football coaches, Cor example; we be :lieve that the verdict would go all In favor of the "degraded" class of grad uates, as. having achieved an all-round mastery of the real business of living, in whatever way success Is measured, Illustrated Sporting News Origin of Meteorology. Meteorology owes Its origin to Italy, which, as Di. H. O. Bolton notes, pro. dnced every .one of the fundamental Instruments now used in weather ob servations. . The hygrometer was In vented about 1450 by Nicolas de Cusa; anemometer, 1578, by , Egnatio Dante; thermometer, 1595, by Galileo; rain gauge, 1639, by Cartelll; " barometer, 1643, by Torricelli. A Rapid Berry-picker. The speediest feminine . picker of huckleberries hi Monroe County, Penn sylvania, is Carrie Everett, a girl of .15 years. From 8:30 to 4:30 p. m. she picked seventy-two quarts of huckle berries. Oscar Altemose has the rec ord among men and boys, as he picked 125 quarts of huckleberries in eight hours. Clever Youth. Shopper Young man, do these goods shrink? y Bright Clerk Not so much as I would from telling you they didn't, ma'am, if they did." Philadelphia Ledger. . A man would never discover that his wifo bad a temper if she didn't lose it GRATEFUL, HAPPY WOMEN Miss Muriel Armitage Female Weakness Is Pelvic Catarrh Always Half Sick are the Women Who Have Pelvic Catarrh Catarrh of any organ, if allowed to progress, will affect the whole body. Catarrh without nervousness is very rare, but pelvic catarrh and nervousness go hand in hand. What is so distressing a sight as a poor half-sick, nervous woman, suffer ing from the many almost unbearable symptoms of pelvic catarrh? She does not consider herself ill enough to go to bed, but she is far from being able to do her work without the greatest ex No Offense Meant. Bloobs I understand, sir, that you referred to my photograph as a side show?" V Slobbs Don't get excited, old man. I merely meant that it was a profile." aOr'Br TM18T 'We offer One Hundred Isollars Reward for any ease of Cattarrh that can not be cured by Halrf Catarrh Cure. r. J. CHENEY & Co., Props. , Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the past 15 rears, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and fin ancially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wist & Trtjax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Walding Kinnan 4 MABvn? , Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall'sCatarrh Care is taken internally, actin directly on the blood and mucous surf sees of the system. Price 75c per bottle. Bold toy all flruggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Fills are the best. 'Twas Ever Thus. "Who lives in that little cottage down there by the lane?" "There dwells the man who wrote the poem that made Beasley's shaving soap famous." "And who resides in 'the splendid mansion on the hill?" ' ' Beasley . ' ' Chicago Eecor d-Herald . BSOLUTE ECUR1TY, Cenuino Carter's Utile Liver Fills. Cluat Bear Signature of ee Fac-SImile Wrapper Below. f Very asaaU and as ea7 tta.taka as saga. FOR HEADACHE FOR DIZZINESS -FDR II1J0USNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION, FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOX THE COMPLEXION! BUB MUTKAVt U0NATURC I Mm I OSMSUUiai MUSTSAVtSWHATUWt. , CURE SICK HEADACHE.. CARTER'S UlVER I Y xl Is the time to write for our catalogue. We educate Hfll inmnrrnW lir IniQ ya practically for business and get you a position Send for Special Circular SPOKANB SEATTLE WE HA VE FEELINGS AS WELL AS YOU Dr. W. A. Wise has found a safe and absolutely painless way of ex tracting teeth, and his 17 years' ex perience in plate work enables him to nt mouths comfortably with any kind of false teeth wanted. . Dr. T. P. Wise is an Expert at crown and bridge work and gold tilling. A IB. W7 A. W it WISE BROS., Dentists, x 1 1....A HI.. Thank Pe-m-na for Their Recov ery After Years of Suffering Miss Muriel Armitage. 86 Greenwood Ave., Detroit, Mish., District Organizer of the Royal Templars of Temper ance in a recent letter, says: "I think that a woman naturally shrinks from making her troubles pub lic, but restored health has meant so much to me that I feel for the sake of other suffering women it is my duty to tell what Peruna has done for me. "I suffered for five years with uter ine irregularities, which brought on hysteria and made me a physical wreck. I tried doctors from the different schools of medicine, but without any perceptibte change in my condition. In my despair I called on an old nurse, who advised me to trv Peruna, and promised good results if I would persist and take it regularly. I thought this was the least I could do and procured a bottle. I knew as soon as I began tak ing it that it was affecting me differ ently from anything I had used before, and so I kept on taking it. I kept this up for six.months, and steadily gained strength and health, and when 1 had used fifteen bottles I considered myself entirely cured. I am a grateful, happy woman today." Miss Muriel Armitage. Peruna cures catarrh of the pelvic or gans with the same surety as it cures catarrh of the head. Peruna has be come renowned as a positive cure for female ailments simply because the ail ments are mostly due to catarrh. Ca tarrh is the cause of the trouble. Peru na cures the catarrh. The symptoms disappear. haustion. This is a very common sight and is almost always due to pelvic catarrh. It is worse than foolish for so many women to suffer year after year with a disease that can be permanently cured. Peruna cures catarrh permanently. It cures old chronic well as a slight attack, the only difference being in the length of time that it should he taken to effect a cure. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Peru na, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giv ing a full statement of your case, and he will be plaesed to give you his valu able advice gratis. Address Dr. Hratman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. L. N. ROSENBAUM Notary Public Attorney-at-Law Pension Atttorney Solicitor of Patents Phones: Sunset, Main J589 Ind A 1860 304 New York Block SEATTLE, WASH U.S. A. SELTZER . CURES AXVI Headaches 10 CENTS EVERYWHERE Dizzu? Appetite poor? Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? Head ache? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills, all vegetable. Want your moustache or beard a beaatlful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE ran era. o PKTrnmm o a r. HALt t co.. wivRvk, n. h. ALCOHOL, OPIUM, TOBACCO USING J WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE First aad Eontgomor Sts., Portland, Ofm Telephone, sum 37. P. N. U. Ho 491903. jw 1 HEN writing to advertisers pleas mention this paper. Sanders Disk Plow RO M O Simplest and most perfect made. Before you eive your order for a Disk Plow be sure to ex amine the Bandera For sale by the old reli : able house of Mitchell.Lewis&StaverCo., PORTLAND, - - - OREGON BOISE SALEM MEDPORD p. i) IIIIMI'i. IIIDI .. '" lin. 1 ' 'I ,,nn&rSn 1