Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1905)
Catarrh Whether It Is ot the nose, throat, stomach, bowels, or more delicate organs, catarrh lrf always debilitating and should never tail ot attention. It is a discharge from the mucous mem brane when kept in a state ot Inflammation by an impure, 'commonly scrofulous, con dition of the blood. Hood'sSarsaparilla Cures all forms of catarrh, radically and permanently it removes the cause and overcomes all the eflects. Get Hood's. His Little Joke. Subbubs I thought you were going to have a baseball game to-day. Backlotz Oh, the creek backed up In some way and flooded the diamond. It's the first time it ever happened and Subbubs Ah! You might call it a diamond of the first water, then, eh? Philadelphia Public Ledger. Among those who have received the highest award the Grand Prize at St. Louis World's Fair, was the A. J. Tower Co., the makers of the FISH BRAND SLICKERS. Many of our readers who went to the Fair will re call their fine exhibit in which water proof garments were shown adapted to bo many uses that almost every depart ment of the world's work was suggest ed. The Grand Prize was a deserved tribute to one of the oldest manufac turing concerns in the country. Where the Rub Comes. Untraveled Youth I believe I will go to Florida next week. What is the' fare? Traveled Elder Young man, if you had enough to pay your board after you got there, yon wouldn't ask about such a trifling incidental as the railroad fare. Piso's Cure is a remedy forconghs, colds and consumption. Try it. Price 25 cents, t druggists. Pins Hish This Year. Wife-My dear, I want $400 for pin money. Husband Humph! Pins must be high this year. Wife Yes. Diamond pins are. I suffered for a long time with a bad case of Catarrh, and took a great deal of medicine without any benefit. v I had a continual headache, my cheeks bad grown purple, my nose was always stopped up, my breath had a sickening and disgusting odor, and I coughed incessantly I heard of your S. S. S. and wrote you. I commenced to use it, and after taking - several bottles I was cured and bave never since had the slightest symptom of the disease. Miss Mary L. Storm. - Cor. 7th & Felix Sts., St. Joseph, Mo. Wheeling, W. Va., May 29, 1903. I bad Nasal Catarrh for years for which I used S. S. S. with very gratifying results. I tried local applications for some time, and getting no permanent relief I came to the conclusion that the seat of the trouble was in the blood. Knowing S. S. S. to be a good blood medicine I began its use, and after using it for some little while it did away entirely with the offensive mu cus in the nostrils, and I -did not have to hawk and spit, especially in the morning, to dislodge the catarrhal matter. 1627 South SL Fred H. PrESSY. The filthy secretions and foul mucus that are continually dropping back into the throat, find their way into the stomach and are absorbed into the blood. Catarrh then becomes con stitutional.and the only way to get rid of it is through the blood. Write us if you have Catarrh, and our. physici ans will advise you without charge. The Swift Specifio Company, Atlanta, Ga. LAND SCRIP FOR SALE Forest reserve script for securing title in any quantity to farming, grazing, desert or timber land without residence or improvement for sale at lowest mark et prices. H. M. HAMILTON, Tha Portland, Portland, Or, - - - - - - - " Tt Xg OFFENSIVE personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and " JusNas-ffood'' are but Experiments, and endanger the Health or Children Experience against Experiment. '. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing' Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic' substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind y51 'eHeves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation ' and Flatulency; It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural Bleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You HaYe Always Bought jsears tne In Use For ma enrraua ecmmnv. tt s7 I " COLLEGE BUILDING RACE. - Aa It May Be with Millionaires ' in Competition. . Andrew Carnegie has assured Pitts burg people that if they are really de sirous of having a university which shall beat anything in the country he will help. Imagination falters, says the New York World, when it attempts to pic ture the struggle that must follow among the philanthropists when such a pacemaker starts in the schoolmak ing race. Fancy the scene at the Mil lionaires' Club five years from now when Mr. Carnegie will come swinging jauntily into the room with his golf clubs under his arm. "Well, John," he will say, "I have Just added 200 acres to the Pittsbnrg campus ana aeposuea $o,uuu,uw m steel bonds, as endowment to provide gymnasium facilities." . Mr. Rockefeller will rub his hands in glee and say: ' "Too late, Andrew. Very good in its way but antiquated. I have Just bought Lake Michigan for the University of Chicago for its crews to practice -on. All out at' Sault Ste. Marie hereaf ter." Mr. Vanderbilt will look up from his paper and remark casually: "I might say that .the family has just purchased all the land within two miles of the Yale campus and willcov er it with dormitories." Mr. Vanderbilt will say this very modestly, but with a gleam of triumph in his eye. But "Ah!" he will exclaim, as he returns to his paper. "Boy, bring my checkbook! Gentlemen, Mrs. Stan ford has just bought the Sierra Nevada mountains for the- school of forestry of the Leland Stanford, Jr., Univers ity." Jhe three rich men will pale at this announcement. i "There's one thing left to do!" they will cry in chorus. "Raise the profes sors salaries. We must stay at the top." "I give an annual income of $100,- 000 to raise the professors'" salaries,' one of the millionaires will blurt out A college professor who happens to be a guest at the club that evening will be carried out fainting. Poor, bat Polite. "Want some money, do ye?" said the kind old lady. "Now, I wonder ef -ye deserve it. What would you do with penny ef I gev it to ye?" Lady, replied the polite beggar, "yer kindness would touch me so dat I d buy a postal card wid de money an' write yei a note o' thanks. "Catholic Standard and Times. -TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drug gists refund the money if It tails to cure. E- W. Grove's signature Is on each box. 25c Horrible to Think Of. Church In some of the Hindoo tem ples an elephant takes up the collec tion. It goes round with a basket ex tended from its trunk." uotnam wnat ao you suppose would happen if some thoughtless per son dropped a peanut in the basket some Sunday morning? Yonkers Statesman. . To Break in New Shoes. Alwavs shake in Allen's 'Foot.Ease. a novrder. It cures hot, sweating, aching, swollen feet. Cures corns, ingrowing nails and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 26c. Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed FEES. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. . Bushmen Dwell in Nests.- - Several travelers who have return ed from the heart of Africa and the Australasian continent tell 'wonderful stories of nest-building people who in habit the wilds of those countries. The bushmen of Australia are, per haps, the lowest order of men known. They are so primitive that they do not know enough to build even the sim plest form of hut for shelter. The nearest they can approach to it Is to gather a lot of twigs and grass and, taking them into a thicket or jungle, build a nest for a home. The nest is usually built large enough for the family, and if the lat ter is very numerous then the nests are of large size. Sometimes the foli age above will form a natural cover ing, but there is never any attempt at constructing a protection from storms. - WI - - - l - lVYirc born the signa- signature of Oyer 30 Years. mumuv snntcr. new vena city. WILL MEET AT.PORTLANDf , Quadrennial Convention. International Anti-Cigarette League. ." ; , Oregon is to be favored with the in ternational meeting of the anti-cigarette hosts. People young and old in terested in this "most successful of re forms," as U. S. Senator Teller, of Col orado, terms the Anti-Cigarette league, will gather in the Lewis and Clark city on July 15-16-17 next. The meetings of the convention are timed to fit in between and overlap with.- the conven tions of the American Medical associa tion and the National Board of Chari-. ties and Corrections, so that prominent persons interested in these two great events may also have the opportunity to take part in the deliberations of the anti-cigarette meetings many of the leaders in medicine and the work of charity and reform being also identified with the efforts of the opponents of the cigarette. A great campaign of education among the schools of Portland lias just been completed by Dr. Wallace R. Struble, general superintendent of the Interna tional league, and. over 7,00O! young people have been enrolled as members of the league in that city. Those will be properly organized and officered and FRANK A. BUCK Of Toronto, International President American Anti-Cigarette League and Vice President for Canada of the In ternational League. - will be divided into proper committees for the reception and entertainment of the young people who may attend ai delegates or visitors from abroad Many interesting events are being planned for the entertainment of the unior section of the convention, . em bracing field sports, musical attractions oratorical .contests, etc. The -election of International Junior officers will also be held, an event; that will doubtless occaison much competition. As the league now extends throughout Great Britain and Canada as well as the United States, there will be numerous aspirants for the official honors. Information as to the , conventionn may be obtained by addressing Elmer Ellsworth Miller, secretary board : of directors, 612 Commercial building, Portland, Oregon. ON THE FIELD OF WATERLOO. Monument Erected by France to Her Soldiers Who FeU There. The field of Waterloo, where the star of Napoleon I. forever set in night of gloom, has been variously marked with monuments by the na tions whose soldiers took part in that titantic struggle. No more attractive memorial has been erected, however, - ITHX WATERLOO MONUMENT. than the new. one just dedicated by France to her soldiers who fell in that conflict- The French lost about 30,000 men, while the allies English, Dutch and Germans lost 23,000. - These frightful casualties throw into Insig nificance the combats thus far waged in the East and which Japanese admir ers would have the world believe as transcending anything preceding them. The monument - is ; crowned by wounded eagle, typical of the defeat France sustained In , the downfall of Napoleon. "Winning' the euchre ' trophy 1 was something of an honor for Mrs. Card er, wasn't it?" ; H n; . i "Tea; quite a bird to her hatf' Nw Orleans Times-Democrat - Salt Lake Mote. Deacon Mellck moved yesterday to his new twelve-story residence in Sa line avenue. The family was an hour and ten minutes passing the postofflce. Newark News. ' i SCALLOPS ARE REVIVED. Charming Fashion of Daya of Empress ' Eugenie Again in Vogue. Of the multitude of charming things ' which the present revival of fashions has given us, nothing is more fetch ing than the scallop, which is so grace fully decorative that one can only won-! der at its long absence from the sar torial field. The scallop was in high favor with the Empress Eugenie, and consequent ly the second empire gowns are very liberally bescalloped. The peerless EUgenle rarely made a mistake in matters of dress, and her judgment was unerring. She was the arbiter of fashion for many years, and, save for the ugly crinoline, the modes of that period were exquisitely grace ful and beautiful, and the numerous things which we are now borrowing from the second empire are invariably attractive when adapted to our present day ideas. - This season we are being treated to wealth of scallops, for the French have taken a fancy to them, and thus we are favored. Many of the new gowns have no other form of decoration than scallops bound with the same material. ' One may perhaps suppose that this is a most economical arrangement, but scallops are only' for the long purse, unless they are made at home, for it requires a deal of time to bind each scallop carefully, and as the binding down is done by hand, it is a long task, and in large dressmaking estab lishments this sort of thing means big bills, but on expensive gowns flounces are scalloped till the whole is as fluffy "as with leaves. Scallops are bound with a contrast ing material in color many times, and thus a great variety may be -obtained if one delights in scallops sufficiently to have several gowns trimmed with them in one's wardrobe at one-time. Boston Globe. ' A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES Itching Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles Yonr drngglst will refund money If PAZO OINT- MJ&NT fails to euro yon In 8 to 14 days. aoc. Two of a Kind. 'Yes, sir," said the pompous self-made individual, "I began life as a barefooted boy on a farm." 'Quite a coincidence," rejoined the unregenerated hardware drummer. "I was likewise also born without shoes." Mothers will find Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothine Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. , France hopes to achieve the bloodless conquest of Morocco, ' says the Paris Matin, by establishing a schoolmaster and a doctor in each of the towns on the Algerian frontier. CTQ Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness 110 after first day's use ofDr.Kline's Great Nerve acini :ur r ros intii ouuie ana treatise. Sr. . S. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. It Would. Seem So. L .Stringer-rChristmas should b a. busy season tor the pawnbrokers. Nibbles Because why? Stringer Because so many stockings are hung up about that tune. ttlltlllMHtMHHIHIH THERE IS NOTHING 1 more painful than Rheumatism and : Neuralgia but there is nothing surer to ... cure than ; The old monk cure. It is pene trating, prompt and unfailing. T Pric 25c. and 50c. 1 kX f j most earenil farmers jfji Psf andgardenerseverywhereVj I y place confidence In Ferry's I Seeds the kind that never fall. J Wjk have 1 They f VSold have been the standard for 49 years. xuey are not an experiment , Sold by all dealers. 1905 Seed nnu free for the asking. D.H. FERRY CO. Detroit, Mich. WET WEATHER. WISDOM! V - . f- THE ORIGINAL . VV rf sjl SLICKER BLACK OR YELLOW, WILL KEEP YOU DRY NOTHING ELSE WILL : TAKE NO 5UD3TlTVte CATALOGUE rilCC ; -. HOWINOTUU. UNf OF GARMENTS AND HAT. - I A. J. TOWER CO., BOSTON, MASS., U.S. A. TOWEW CANADIAN CO.. LTD., TORONTO, CANADA. auacoDsuu "I 3 R U .T N A M : P A D B L. E 3 S D V B 3 Color snore coed brighter and fester colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally welt and Is guaranteed to give period rein I ts. Ask dealer or we will send post paid at 10c a package. Write for free booklet how to dye black and nixed colors. MONROB RUO CO.. Unio nvllle. Illinois. ) - CAUGHT BY RELEASED BY PERUNA "The World of Medicine Recognizes Grip as Epidemic Catarrh." Medical Talk. La Grippe is Epidemic Catarrh. It spares no class or nationality. The cultured and the ignorant, the aristo crat and the pauper, the masses and the classes are alike subject to la grippe. None are exempt all are lia ble. Grip is well named. The original French term, la grippe, has been short ened by the busy American to read "grip." - x Without intending to do so, a new word has been coined that exactly de scribes the case. As if some hideous giant with awful grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in the baneful grip of a terrible monster. Have you the grip? Or, rather, has the grip got you? If so, read the fol lowing letters. These testimonials speak for them selves as to the efficacy of Peruna in cases of la grippe or its after effects : A Southern Judge Cured. Judge Horatio J. Goes, Hartwell, Ga., writes: . "Some five or six years ago I had a very severe spell of grip which left me with systemic catarrh. MALLEABLE IRON. STUMP PULLERS Fastest, lightest and strongest Stump Poller on the market. 119 Horse power on the sweep with two horses. -Write for descriptive catalog and prices. - RBIERSON MACHINERY CO. Foot of Morrison Street I'ortland, Orezon ALWAYS CALL FOR A CIGAR BY ITS NAME MEANS MORE THAN ANY OTHER NAME BROWN BAUDS GOOD FOR PRESENTS "taj-fMt feUer la th. World." Dr. 0. Bee Wo Wcnierfu! Home Treatment This wonderful Chi nese doctor is called great because he cures people without, opera tion that are given up to die. Me cures with those wonderful Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, barks and vegetables that are entirely un known to medical sci ence in this country. Through the use of those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over S00 different remedies which he successfully uses in different diseases. He guarantees to cure catarrh, asthma, lung, throat, rheumatism, nervousness, stomach, liver, kid neys, etc.; has Hundreds of testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see him. Patients out of the city write for blanks and circulars. Send stamp. CONSULTATION FBEE. ADDRESS . 4 The C 688 Wo Chinese Medicine Co. : , 2515-253 ALDER ST PORTLAND, OREGON . jsy Mention paper - lYCtOME"l THRESHERS Wlnfl Stackers. PmHm. Horse Powers Suoolfes . il h 4 ;the AVERILL MACHINERY CO. Writ for Catalogue and Prices THE Q R I P "A friend advised me to try your Pe runa, which I did, and was immediate ly benefited and cured. The third bot- " tie completed the cure." H. J. Gobs. Cured in a Few Weeks. Miss Jean Cowgill, Griswold Opera House, Troy, N. Y., is the leading lady with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes the following: "During the past winter of 1901, I suffered for several weeks from a severe attack of grip, which left a serious ca tarrhal condition of the throat and head. borne one suggested Pernna. As a last resort, after wasting much time and money on physicians, I tried the remedy faithfully, and in a few weeks was as well as ever." Jean Cowgill. Saved by Pe-ru-na. Hon. James B. Guill is one of the oldest and most esteemed men of Oma ha, Neb. He has done much to make it what it is, serving on public boards a number of times. He endorses Peru na in the following words: I am 68 years old, am hale and hearty and Peruna has helped me at tain it. Two years ago I had la grippe my life was despaired of. Peruna saved me." J. R. Guill. FIRE PROTECTION! OLDEST HOUSE IN NORTHWEST Large and complete stock of Fire Apparatus, Hose and Department Supplies. Our goods are In use la nearly every Fire Department, HEAVY COPPER, BRAZED JOINTS, RELI ABLE FIRE EXTINGUISHERS "Babcocks" (20, "Patrols" lo, each. Thess are tbs Standard Extinguishers. Common Extinsmishers, with riveted Joints, 12 each. A. G. LONG, Portland, Or To Convince You THAT THE CHATHAM Is the BEST INCUBATOR on ' the market, I will send you one, freight prepaid, and wait for my pay until October 1, 1905. It was given the highest award at the Oregon State Fair, held at Salem last fall. Write fir our Descriptive Catalogue of Incuba tors and Brooders and oar time proposition. GEO.W. FOOTT, Dept. 12 Portland, Oregon P. N. U. No. 41905 WHBN writing to advertisers pleat I s f mention this paper. It RUSSELL' ENGINES Traction or Portable Simp'e or Compound Wood or Straw Bu. ners PORTLAND, OREGON