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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1904)
0-0 Ml Humors Are impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there if iqch an accumulation of them, v The litter the whole system. Pimples, boils, eczema and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, bilious turns, fits of indiges tion, dull headaches and many other troubles are due to them. " Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Eemove all humors, overcome all their, effects, strengthen, tone and Invigorate the whole system. "I bad salt rheum on my hands so that I could not work. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla and it drove oat the bamor. I continued Its use till the sores disappeared." Has. Jxa O. Beoww, Bumford Falls, Ma, Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to euro and keeps the promise. Turned 'Sound. Everything is the other way around In China, In that country they behead their reformers. In this country it is the reformers that are out after the heads of the office holders. New' York Mail and Express. The U. S. Dept. of Agriculture rives to Salzer's Oats its heartiest endorse ment, Salzer's New National Oats yielded in 1903 from Jou to 300 bu. per acre in So different states, and you, Mr. Fanner, can beat this in 1904, if you will. Salzer's seeds are pedigree seeds, bred up through careful selection to big yields. Per Acre Salzer's Beardless Barley yielded 12) bu Salzer's Borne Builder Corn 800 bu Speltz and Macaroni Wheat. 80 bu Balaar's Victoria Kape 60,000 fc.a Baler's Teosinite, the fodder wonder.160,000 lbs Balzer's Billion Dollar Grass 60,000 lbs Balzer's Pedigree Potatoes 1,000 bu. Now such yields pay, and you can havs them, Mr. Farmer, in 1904. 8BND IOC IN STAMPS and this notice to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and you will get their big cat alogue and lots of farm seed samples free. IP.Ct, School Children's Reward. Two Franklin county, Me., school marms have evolved an original way of rewarding good scholars,. They recent ly gave the real nice ones a straw ride around town two racks fall and a school marm in each rack. SlOO KKltABD SIOO. The Headers of this paper will be pleased to jam li at there is at least one dreaded disease t mat saieuce nas oeea aoio w cure in u ui es. aua mai lsuaiarm. nau BRwrrauuro only positive cure known to the medical Mtjr. Catarrh being a constitutional dis- requlres a constitutional treatment. patarrn cure is taken internally, acting r upon the blood and mucous surfaces system, thereby destroying the found- ine disease, ana giving tne patient oy DUUding up tne constitution and t nature in doing its work. The urn. have so much faith in its eurativa that ther offer One Hundred Dollars f case that it fails to cure. Send for list uoniais. Address V P. J. CHENEY fc CO., Toledo, O. I- druggists, 75c. VamiUr Fills are the bat. Qratltude. A,f asid the stern woman, "if stole me would you offer a re tire, replied the little henpecked "I'd always reward anyone that a good fa.vor." Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late Genera! Roger Hanson, C.S.A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accom plished by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 44 Dear Mrs. Fixkham : I cannot tell vou with pen r.nd ink what pood Lvtlia 12. Pir.kliaru's Vegetable Coinjiourul did for xac, suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex, extreme lassitule and that all frone feeling. I would rise from rny bed in the morning feeling more tired than when I went to bed, but lefore -I used two bottles of J.ydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable r,kfiiw.ii?i-1 T horrnn t.fi feel the bllOV- i l I T 1 iancy of my younger days returning, If became regular, could do more work II . . . i . J il T J V, . VV1UI 'V Ulv sb - -- - s ana not ieei ureu mu x ubuoti able to do before, so I continued to use it until 1 was restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly, Mrs. Rosa. Adams, 819 12th St., liOnisville, Ky." $6000 forfeit If original of about lettor proving genuineness cannot be produced. FREE MEDICAIi ADVICE TO WOMEN. ront hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat vou with kindness. Her advice Is free, and the address is Lynn. Mass. No woman ever resetted having written her, and she has helped thousands. Dr. C. Gee Wo WONDERFUL HOME TREATMENT This wonderful fht rrw doctor ts called great because he cures people without opera tion that are glTen tip to dim. lie cures with those wonderful Chi nese hertM, roots, buds, barks and vegetable that are ntireiT un known to niedlcal ack- rnce In this country. Tbrougal the use or those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over 600 different rem edies, which he successfully uses In different diseases, lie guarantees to cure cattarh, asth ma, inns, throat, rheumatism, nervousness, atoms h, Itvsr, k'dneys, etc: has band reds or testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and ses him. Patients out of the ctiy write for blanks and circulars. Send stamp, COSSUIr TAllON JTHJK. DOKJSi The C Get Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 251 Alder St Portland. Orsffoa. S3T Msauoa paper. P. N. U. No. 51904. WHKN wriUaa; to adnrtltan pltaM BxntliB this pa par. I BENEVOLENT DESPOT. PORFIRIO DIAZ, THE GRAND OLD MAN OF MEXICO. Ruler Vha Exercise Vast Powers) with Benefit to the Country and Jus tice to the Ind iTidnal-An Autocrat for Twenty-eight Tear, When Warren Hastings was charged with using his despotic power In India for private gain, he cynically replied: "When I think of my chances I am surprised at my moderation." There is a despot of to-day who has had far better chances of "graft" than even Warren Hastings, but never used them. That man is Porfirio Diaz, for twenty-eight years the autocrat of Mexico. His power over the public treasury during that long period has been absolute, but even his worst ene mies do not allege that he ever robbed his country of a cent. And that is in deed remarkable In a Latin-American country. Diaz Is the hero of the Mexican army. When he was a young soldier, the "Hero of Puebla" was the most admired and popular officer in the pa triot army that fought the French in vaders. He was always the first in the charge, the last to retreat, the quickest to volunteer for the post of danger. He held his own life as noth ing in comparison with the cause. Yet no officer was more careful of the lives and comfort of his men. Throughout his career Diaz has paid great attention to the welfare of the Mexican army. He often visits the soldiers unexpectedly in their camps and barracks, tastes their food, finds out whether they are regularly paid and well treated, and whether the of ficers are doing their duty and look ing after their men properly. Thus it'is that the Mexican army is the best in Latin America, not even excepting the Prusslanlaed troops of Chile. It is mainly composed of full blooded Indians, who are readily dis ciplined and as brave as men could be. Foreign officers say they are second to no other troops as marchers and fighters, and in frugality and content ment they are far ahead of most of the world's soldiers. Diaz is proud of them, and they look upon him almost as a god. Sometimes his officials in Mexico City require his presence urgently to decide a knotty point or sign some im portant papers. "What has become of the President to-day?" they ask one another excitedly. The answer is always much the same. He has heard of an old wom an, 100 miles away, whose husband was killed fighting for the independ ence of Mexico. She is living in pov erty. Immediately the President has dropped everything and gone off to see her and to arrange for her future. He would never delegate such a task to a subordinate. When he became President, away back in 1875, before his principles be came known, his relatives and friends used to go to him for easy jobs under the government They expected to be allowed to plunder theti'easury in the good old-fashioned Mexican way, and they were very much disgusted when Diaz made it plain that he neither in tended to loot on his own account nor to allow anybody else to do so. Since then Diaz has dt?alt sternly with many of his family and his tribe, who, uaviug been placed iu public of fice, abused their trust. Although Diaz has been an auto crat for twenty-eight years, wielding absolute sway over all the affairs of his country, he is unspoiled by power. His mind is broad and his views liber al. He is not above taking advice or admitting that he has made a mistake. President Diaz is now 73 years old. REVIVE ART OF BEADWORK. Indian Women Maka Considerable Money by the Industry. Women and girls of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indian tribes are main taining a successful industry at Col ony, O. T., through the assistance of the Itev. Walter C. Roe, a missionary of the Dutch Reformed church, aided by Mrs. Roe, a cultured Boston wom an. Mr. Roe is the nephew of E. P. Roe, the novelist, says the Kansas City Star. When Mr. and Mrs. Roe went to the Mohonk conference of In dian workers in 1S98 they told of the need of employment among the Indian women in Southwestern Oklahoma, and suggested that Indian beadwork, then in its decadence among these In dians, be revived and the products sold wherever a market could be found. In a few minutes enough money was given to erect the building now known as Mohonk lodge. It Is a substantial one story and a half frame structure, with one large salesroom rilled with Indian curios and all man ner of beadwork; another used as a workroom, and others- reserved as apartments for the matron In charge and her assistants. "At first our greatest difficulty was in finding a market for our beadwork; our trouble now is In supplying the demand," said Mr. Roe. "Our bead work finds a ready market from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and some has been sold In Europe. The workman ship In as good as can be found any where, and the patterns are original and attractive. To save waste the su perintendent cuts the leather for the different articles and furnishes the beads and sinew for sewing. The FBESIDENT DIAZ. women are paid by the piece. About 100 workers find employment at an av erage of from 75 cents to $1 a day. It takes a good sewer, however, to earn $1 a day. - . "The bulk of the work is done by the women in their lodges In connec tion with their usual domestic duties. Women frequently earn $10 each In a month. Mary Washee lately made $15 In one month. Her Industry Is more apparent when it is known that we pay at the rate of about 2 cents a square inch for solid beading. Indian women are the" most industrious wom en In the land. In primitive days their life was one of constant toil. -and in fallowing civilized ways they are not shirkers. At Mohonk lodge an Indian woman can find employment at any time at wages that will add much to the comfort of herself and children. "Mohonk lodge has advance orders for more than $1,000 worth of bead work. Our output this year will amount to fully $5,000. The experi ment has been so successful that sub stations will be established at other places in Oklahoma for the sale of beadwork and the employment of In dian women. In the sale of our goods we figure their exact cost and add 25 per cent for the retail trade, but this will be increased. Traders pay 10 per cent less than the list price and com plain that their margin for profit is not big enough. We purpose giving the traders a 25 per cent reduction and will advance retail prices in pro portion." SOFTENING HARD WATER.. Scientific Method of RemoTing the Objectionable Elements, Rain water, while - percolating through the ground to find its level in the surface or deep streams, picks up a large quantity of carbonic acid, by the presence of which the chalk (car bonate of lime), magnesian limestone (chalk and carbonate of magnesia), ironstone, soda, potash and a few oth er compounds are enabled to dissolve and are held delicately and unstably in solution as bicarbonates, says the Engineering Magazine. Now the fundamental operation of the softening of waters hard from this cause is to remove the excess of car bonic acid by the addition of some sub stance with which it readily combines, and preferably one that forms an In soluble or only very slightly soluble compound. Quicklime (calcium ox ide) when carefully dealt with is the best of these on account of its cheap ness and splendid efficiency. The quantity of excess carbonic acid in the bard water Is determined by analy sis, and from the result the required amount of calcium oxide is calculated to completely satisfy this in the proc ess of forming chalk. The lime is add ed to the water in the form of milk of lime of known strength, and what might be termed the beautiful part of the reaction is the double transforma tion that takes place. The newly added milk of lime not only becomes insol uble chalk by combination with the carbonic dioxide, but reduces the bi carbonates of lime and magnesia to the insoluble monocarbonates, and all three fall together in the form of a heavy and rapidly clearing precipitate. The bicarbonate of iron when robbed of its carbon dioxide falls with the chalk and magnesium carbonates in the form of red rust, the superabun dant water remaining perfectly clear and soft. The potash and soda, of course, remain dissolved, but are not in any way harmful if present in only small quantities. THINGS WORTH KNOWING, Keep a Brave Heart Bach Day Cornea aa a Fresh Gift. It is more natural to talk about the faults of our friends than it Is to talk about their virtues; we understand them better. The most reckless spendthrift In the world is the one who squanders time. When a married woman sallies forth to look after her rights her husband stays at home reviewing his wrongs. A man calls ecru, tan and fawn color by the generic term of "drab" he knows a stylish gown when he sees it Encouraging the growth of high In terests in children Is on of the best means of preventing those which are unworthy. Every act we do is full of the power of reproduction; we are tracked and lmntcd by our own deeds, and after we have lost them from view and from memory they reappear and claim as a right the mastery over our fate. It's a hard matter to reconcile our selves to the fact that knowledge is power when we possess all the knowl edge and the other fellow has the power. Each day comes as a fresh gift Meet with a brave heart all that is in the day's portion, but shrink not from phantom lions or from shadows that seem to blot the sun. "n man fthnnljl ha InfrncoH -wlrri ' power who will not use it for some good. We should Imitate the things we ad mire In other that our own nature may be blessed by that which we ad mire. The depth from which our words are spoken is the measure of the depth at which they will be heard. Julian Haw thorne. The only true knowledge of our fel low man is that which enables us to feel with him. George Eliot. Kansas World. For the Smoke Trouble. Eritbs Engineering Company, Lon don, have got possession of an auto matic stoker as a specialty, and as it is certain to come largely Into use it will effect that great Improvement in smoko consumption and fuel economy which has been so long desired. Stand ins Posture Preferred. Eddie I druv a nail in the teacher's chair this mornin. Gee, you ought to see him jump! Tommy I bet he won't set down for a spell. Eddle No, an I won't, neither! Cleveland Plain Dealer. How the Wheels Work. "Young Geezer has wheels in his head," remarked Hojack. "I always thought that his head was turned," added Tomdik." Detroit Free Press. :IJ.-1L Y7 .ri2w IT tr TEE -rii-na Saved Her Life. It Was Catarrh of the Lungs, so r Mrs. Col. E. J. Gresham, Treasurer passu v '" j affjr7Tgci.-jr uit s-mmm dent Hernden Village. Improvement Society, writes the following letter from nernaen, jairiax jo., va. : The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio : Hernden, Va. Gentlemen "I cannot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. I believe that f owe my life to its wonderful merits. I suffered with catarrh of the head and lungs in its worst form, until the doctors fairly gave me up, and I oespairea oi over getting wen again. I noticed your advertisement and people who had been cured by Peruna but utile oetter, but used a second and slowly. "It took six bottles to cure me, but they were worth a king's ransom to me. I talk Peruna to all my friends and am a true believer in its worth." Mrs. Col. E. J. Gresham. A PLAIN TALK On a Plain Subject in Plain Lan guage. The coming winter will cause at least one-half of the women to have catarrh, colds, coughspneurnonia or consump tion. Thousands of women will lose their lives and tens of thousands will acquire some chronic ail ment from which they will never recover. Unless you take the neces sary precautions, the chances are that you (who read this) will be one of the unfortu- Princeton Oraduates Live Long. Statistics gathered at Princeton theo logical seminary show that forty-one members of n the association died last vear at an average age of 68 years. You Can det Allen's Foot-Ease FREE. Write Allen S. Olmeted, Le Eoy.N. Y., for a free sample of Allen 's Foot-Ease. It cures sweating, hot swollen, aching feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for corns, in growing nails and bunions. All drug gists sell It. 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Ocean Depths. The average depth of the ocean be tween 60 degrees south and 60 degrees north is nearly three miles. PITA Permanently cured, cto fits or nervousness ll IU after first day'suseofDr.Kllne'sGrentNervs Bestorer. Send for Free 2 trial bottle and treatiae. Dr. B. H. Kline, Ltd- 93J. Area St.. Philadelphia, Pa. His Reply. - Teacher What is a stepson, Willie? Willie (a stepson) The one that gets stepped on, ma'am. KEEP PERUNA IN THE HOUSE MOT A &ffffl BiSEMSEm It is natural to rub the spot that hurts, and when rheumatic pains are shooting- through the joints and muscles and they are inflamed and sore, the .sufferer is apt to turn to liniments and plasters for relief ; and while such treatment may quiet the pain temporarily, no amount of rubbing1 or blistering- can cure Rheumatism, because it is not a skin disease, but is in the blood and all through the system, and every time you are exposed to tne same conditions that caused the first attack, you are going to have another, and Rheumatism will last just as long as the poison is in the blood, no matter what you apply externally. Too much acid in the blood is one cause of Rheumatism ; stomach troubles, bad digestion, weak kidneys and torpid liver are other causes which bring on this painful dis ease, because the blood becomes tainted with the poisonous mat ter which these organs fail to carry out of the system. . Cer tain secret diseases will produce Rheumatism, and of all forms this is the most stubborn and severe, for it seems to affect every bone and muscle in the body. The blood is the medium by which the poisons and acid3 are carried through the system, and it doesn't matter what kind of Rheumatism you have, it must be treated through the blood, or you can never get permanently rid of it. As a cure for rheumatic trou bles S. S. S. has never been equalled. It doesn't inflame the stomach and ruin the digestion like Potash, Alkalies and other strong drugs, Joints and the sore and tender muscles are immediately relieved. Our special book on Rheumatism will be mailed free to those desiring it. Our physicians will cheerfully answer all letters asking for special information or advice, for which no charg-e is made. JUS 3VXTT CPECfFIG CO., ATlASfTA, Common in the Winter Months. NISS.JMWDRISC0LL Miss Jennie Driscoll, 870 Put : nam Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., writes : 'If people knew how efficient Peruna was in the cure of ca tarrh, they would not hesitate to try it. I have all the faith dn the world in it, as it cured me, and I have never known of a case when the person was not cured in a short time." Jennie Dris coll. Daughters of the Confederacy and Presi the splendid testimonials given bv the and determined to try a bottle. 1 felt third bottle and kent on imorovinz nate ones. Little or no risk need be run if Peruna is kept in the house and at the first appearance of any symp tom of catairh taken as directed on the bottle. Peruna is a safeguard, is a preventa tive, a specific, is a cure for all cases of catarrh, acute and chronic, coughs, colds, consumptin, etc. If you do not receive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Pe runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you bia valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Knows Very Little. The fellow who knows it all seldom has sense enough to know a thing or two. Philadelphia Press. For coughs and colds there is no better medicine than Piso's Cure for Consump tion. Price 25 cents. Four-Leaf Clovers In Profusion. . Two Saco, Me., girls found 470 four leaf clovers in less than an hour one day recently. Mothers will Una Mrs. Wlnslow's Sootblns; rlynip the best remedy to use lor their children the teething season. Put On. 'She has such a natural charm about her.' 'Yes, but it is artificial." Judge. Perrin's Pile Specific The INTERNAL REMEDY No Case Exists it Will Not Care UNABLE TO SLEEF AT NIGHT. Sidney, Ohio, August 26, 1903. A few months agro I was feeling- weak and run down and unable to get sleep at night. I felt extremely bad, and alao had rheumatic pains in my joints and mus cles. The medicine I used g&ve me only temporary relief at best; so seeing 8. 8 S. highly recommended for such iron bles, I began its use, and after taking it for aome time waa well pleased with the result. It did away with the rheumatic pains, gave me rsfreshingBleep and built op my general system, giving me strength and energv. It is a good medi cine, without a doubt, and I take pleas ure in endorsing- it. j R.F.D. No. I. S. S. BOTJOHTOM". 1 but tones up the general health, gently stimulates the sluggish organs, and at the same time antidotes and filters out of the blood all poisonous acids and effete matter of every kind ; and when S. S. S. has restored the blood to its natural condition, the painful, feverish probable age of the sun. Discover of Savdiam Charaata Vlewa of tha 8cientiaav One of the first speculations to be reawakened by. the marvels of radium was that which concerns the age of the sun, says -the London Standard. : This is a far-reaching conception in science. Geologists . used to demand at least 200,000,000 yean for the earth and they were met by the physicists, headed by Lord Kelvin, with the reply that no such draft on the bank of time could be allowed. The veteran pro fessor believed that . he bad demon strated . mathematically that the sun could not have shone more than 100, 000,000 years and most probably not more than 20,000,000. The doings of radium have altered all that, because, as Prof. G. H. Darwin says, In a letter to Nature1 of London: . "We have recently learned the ex istence of another source of energy and the amount available is so great as to render it impossible to say how long the sun's heat has already existed or how long it will last in the future." Lord Kelvin treated the solar orb as a condensing white-hot body, slowly cooling, and gave this poor planet of ours some barely 10,000,000 years long er in which to support life; but now, thanks to radium, the old earth may have a length of life before it incom parably longer that is, if the sun is made up of any similar radio-active materials. In addition to the iron, sodium, hydrogen, helium and other ordinary elements for which alone he has hitherto given credit Prof. Dar win remarks: "knowing, as we do, that an atom of matter is capable of containing an enormous store of energy in itself, I think we have no right to assume that the sun Is incapable of liberating atomic energy to a degree at least com parable with that which it would do If made of radium." Hence, he con cludes that the sun's latent heat-giving power may be extended ten or twenty times; In other words, our central luminary, this earth and our neighbor ing worlds In space may have at least 100,000,000 years before them. And thus, even with our slow progress, life may become worth living in that lapse of time. Needless to say that Prof. Darwin, does not assume that the sun is actually to any large extent made of radium, The essence of his communication lies in the words "that an atom of matter (as we now are) is capable of containing an enormous store of energy." The energy of the atom is the new stupendous doctrine of physics, which we owe to the con tltuent of pitchblende, discovered byM. and Mme. Curie. On the solar surface not radium only but other elements may exist In a condition of radio activity, which, as yet, we cannot pro duce here. HEATER FOR WATER. An Attachment that Mar Be Fastened to an Ordinary Lamp. - In every home there has come the time, summer or winter, night or day, when warm water was wanted, and warm water was not to be had without the task of building a fire in the range or stove. A Michigan man has devised an affair which, with the aid of an or dinary lamp, will provide the neces sary heated water In a few minutes after it is wanted. For accomplishing this purpose he provides a receptacle conveniently lo cated on a table or shelf, and which contains the water to be heated. This receptacle is connected by a tube at its base with a .xylindrical heater, LAMP ATTACHMENT WATEB HEATEB. which fits on the lamp in the place of the regular lamp chimney. A second tube from near the top of the heater makes another connecting link with the reservoir. Through the center of the heater, extending from bottom to top, is an aperture in which-the flame of the lamp plays. This heats the water in the surrounding cylinder, and the heated water rises to the top. There it flows through the upper con necting tube to the reservoir, from which, at the same time, cold water is passing through the lower tube to the heater.. It can readily be seen from this explanation of the principle of the affair that in a very short time all the water will be heated, and the degree of heat needed Is easily ob tained by the regulation of the time pf heating. Hadn't Paid. A little girl went into a baker's shop and asked for a penny roll, which was. given her. "No I think J. 'd rather have a pen ny bun," she said, handing back the roll. . ' Having eaten her bunf she was leav ing the shop, when the baker reminded her that he had not got his penny for the bun. "I gave you the roll for the bun," said the child. "But," said the baker, "you didn't psv me for the roll!" "Of course not I haven't eaten It!" was the reply. Normal Weight or Children. A child of 5 should weigh forty-one pounds, be forty-one and one-half Inch es in height and have a chest girth of twenty-three and one-half inches. Fault-finders are disgusted when they bump up against perfection. ' A G 1 ou " I have made a most thorough trial of AVer's Cherry Pectoral and am prepared to say that for all dis eases of the lungs it never disap points.' J. Early Finley, Ironton, O. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral wont cure rheumatism; we never said it would. It won't cure dyspepsia; we never claimed it. But it will cure coughs and colds of all kinds. We first said this sixty years ago; we've been saying it ever since. Tlrce sires: 25c, Mc, SI. All Consult yoor doctor. If he says taks It, than do as ha says. If he tells you not to take it. then don't take it. He &nows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Haas. "Creations" Come High. Wife (in her latest dress from Paris) Harry, what's the difference between a "gown" and a "creation?" - Harry I can't give the exact figures, but it's a small fortune. Punch. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's tittle Liver Pills. Oust Bear Signature of 9 Pac-Slmlto Wrapper Below. an TjbTJ ssaaU aad aa easy iajatewscK . j pAinTD'QlF0RHU0ACHE S UAril Clip FOR DIZZINESS. niTTLE FDR IIUOUSMESf. IflVFR FOR TORPID LIVER I I PI LLS FOR CONSTIPATION, I I rnM FOR SALLOW SKIN. 1 i irOR THE COMPLEXION . OKNUHE MUSTBAVSSiOMATUSS. ;ti5rt I Pnrery TcttetaJfleiwgSg W l JUamUUlUBlUBSlW.su asssasasal CURE SICK HEADACHE. Wood Saws, Drag Saws ran ty steam or gaso line engines, also the latest in saw mill ma chinery, stump pullers, weU drilling- machin ery, etc., etc Write for your needs. REIERSON MACHINERY CO. Foot of Morrison Street Portland Oregon WEWILL BUY Cattla, Sheep, also dressed beef, hindquarters and loins of beef. Vaal, Pork and Poul try We fill country orders. SMITH BROS. Wholesale Butchers PORTLAND, OR. Your L our Ltiver Is it acting well? Bowels regular? Digestion good? If not, remember Ayer's Pills. The kind you have known all your life. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Want your moustache or heard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE .FIFTY CT9. OF PRTOC.1BTS OR R. P. HALL t CO., WASHITA, If. H.. Seeds cost more yield more- save all experimenting- save disappointments. 48 years the standard Seeds. Sold bv all dealers. 1004 Seed Annual postpaid free, to all applicants. D. M. FERRY & CO.. Detroit, Mich. Our 100 Page, 19u4, Illustrated Cata . log tells all about the best Seeds, Plants, Bee and Poultry Supplies, Spray Pumps, and Fertilizers for this Coast. This catalog cost us J5.0O0 you get a copy free. Do you want one? Write us. PORTLAND SEED CO., Portland, Oregon Headquarters for Bee and Poultry Supplies lOiOOO Plmlsfat 10c 4 Wore gardens and farms are planted to S lmnriL Tltfr is rttnti f. ,i- il, i. (alzer a fiepal man an, tititT in We own and operate over U3UU acres forjjijJ 1 order toinnuceyou to try tnezn, we maKe you me louowme unpre cedented oner: For IS Cents Postpaid 30no EbHj, Hrdlum and Lata Cabbages, SIHH lirlieloaa, Cirrou, S0O0 BUaehlnr Celery. 20OO Kick Kaltj Lettaes. 10OO Spiralis Oclon, 1000 Rare Lnnsioos Kidlide. 1000 dlerlontlj Brilliant Flowers, A bore seven mckaees contain soffl. elent seed to prow 10.OW plants, lux- iuBningounaeia ororiiiiant nowers ana iota and lots 01 cnoice vepcta blea.together with onr great catalog. tenuis an sdoue flower", noses, Small Fruits, etc., all tor 160 ia aioinps ana isis aotieej. juam mom 140-paee catalog aions, c JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO., J La Cross. Wis. t Couch Syrup, Tastes Good, bsa .nor. .ut,t .11 ri rr .an. In tun. Bold by druggists. m aR IS A. ST V f-ri m II I 1 Mm I2Z i1 L