BOHEMIA NUGGET ISOIIIL.MIA M'LKiLI PlULISMIMl COMPANY. ,'ako Hi J chock Hl'lc to UtfKOl I'uh '. l r:. r..l ntthe p..i.x:K f nl l 'oil. ori'Vf. ' -won a ccmh1 '.a- mail utal'.or. SI HSi lUPTU'N KATKS. HIOllttM b00 i year tfl.-O S (UOIltlkH ?i.tH If paid in t' tiiuv. Clubbing Patvs. Tlic Bohemia Nuniii't cite year v ltd niiy 0110 of the following pub lications' one year (or amount set . ipposlte: i-a-llie Monthly ?' ci Vtvklv Oregont.in 1 Portland) ?'.'.0 "Veekl'v Journal t Portland I I eidv Mlninir Becord ilVuveri $.r.f0 Weekly Mining F..s-ord Jfa.iS Pacific Homestead !fi,i.' Northwest Poultry Journal $l.7 M pr.iH-r is kci t .mi rr.i- lv Tllti AMhKI . MIMSii v oS..i;i..'. I'bmuti.r c( Com re UuiiiliUH. IHmmt, Colo . where oi'.r i.'.cniwiil U flciue to the uec( the load- nape frem I h . artnus un i) iki: so ti"ii c( W, rt, a M-U'ti: ii'.rarv k:i.1 in; u-t ' e :.t. alls l'.UT.K Ifkepttin meat EC. Prake's . crtis.'.'.g Av. i-.cy. SI mi.l Pi Merchant Kx i'.vp, Mtii KnincWc. 1 Hliturnta. hero I'oti .. ts tor advert ;us --an H- made for 11 Wkdnusday. Jan. 1907 Protective Association. Motto -Credit where credit is due. Object Protection, 1st To tLe mtrcbants who may care to extend credit. ;d To the patron who may care to ask lor credit. KIEL'S AS Ar'I'ULD TO C-'l l-ECTIOXS. !rt Ail accounts are due aud payable at the place of business where th credit is given, thirty .lavs aftT o.iite, o; the Erst dav of the mouth, unless other terms are rranged at the tia.e of such deal. 2i N collector will bs sent out ; -f:?r book accouMs, neither will s'':ements be rendered uctil ac ciutt is overdue, and such notice wil be evidence cf delir.ipjer.cy. 3d Accounts mt paid as per jigreemeut will le closed aud no farther credit given by any mem ber of the Association. 4th All accounts must draw in terest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the date due until paid. Such accounts to be secured iy note. 5th Any party receiving an As sociation letter from a member of this Association and not responding lo or acknowledging receipt there of shall be deemed unworthy of credit- Notice :ha!l be given the secretary aud he shall inform all members of the Association. It is not t'ue wis'i or intention of the Association to make credit diffi cult, but to make credit safe and dispense with the ineouvinience and expense of monthly collections. Lumbermen Meet in Chicago. At a large, well attended mett in' recently hel 1 in Chicago under the auspices of the American Lum berman, the national lumber paper, for the purpose of taking steps to alleviate the car --h'Htage whi.-h i extending all ov r the Unite i .States a bill was i:n'te 1 and will l e presented to Congress for uctiou A committee of the lumbermen present at this meeting were ap pointed to call upon the president and preser t the situation to him and he utated that he was in hearty accord with any measure looking to the relief asked for. With Con gress after them, as-ii-ted by the Oregon k-gislatuie, surely some method will be deviled by which the railroads can be made to come to time. Worth Investigation. Ou a recent trip east a prominent mill man of PortlaLd on his return made the statement that the lum ber yards of the Mississippi nlley were having extieme trouble in getting sufficient eafch and doors to supply the trade- In this connec tion a splendid opening is pre sented right here at home for the c Htablishment of such an industry as in no part of the country is tim ber more BU'table f'-r this purpose found . Some day au outsider will come here and establish a plant for this purpose and then the cry will be raiHed that the people here did not Fee Buch an opening ar.d oppor tunity. Frank C. Baker Will Not be For gotten Frank C. J'"ker left an eatate valued at $250,000. His will givts $2500 each to the Portland Baby's home, lioya and -iris Aid Society, the Cbildren'H Home, Florence Crit teuton Refuge Home, l'uttou Home for the aged, the Y. M. C. A , V. W. C A. and Salvation Army, 'i litre ii set aside $i5,000 for a monument to the miMuotv of 0o-! got) pioneers, and ir.UH er.ch tor ! right drinking lonnt.iin:; a No $50. , o v to beautify tlic pirks. The bal ance if his tot tune goc to his rel atives. THE EYE AND ITS CARE By IT Franc Lucile Hard. Kootus 1-4 Chrismau Building. Kui;?tu'. 1 Cornea 6 irttioa Humor 1 Aipueous Humor 7 Optii' Nerve .U-Pupil S Retina I Iris ; -Choroid fi Cryslaliue leus 10 Scb totio The eye ball has three coats. The sclerotic or outer eoit, the choroid or middle coat and the re tina or inner coat. The sclerotic coat is a thick, touh, white fibrous structure. The front part of it is that part commonly calkd "the white of the eye." This is eovered with a very thin transparent mem brane called the conjunctive, which cjives to the white oi" the eye a bril liant luster. The sclerotic joins the coruea in front and the optic ner. iu back where it h the thickist. The uext or middle coat, the choroid, is composed of u dense network of capiliarics mi 1 veias. l'etween these are tinny cells con taining dark pigment The choroid extends an far forward as the cili arv muscle aud there tonus a little plaited frill around the crvstaline i lens, the retina is a direct continua tion of the optic nerve which comes from the l.rain. The retina lines the whole interior of the e as far forward as the cili iry process-, where it ends in a jagged mugin. This is the nervous membrane ot the eve and mav be coniMared to the sensitive plate of a camera be- cause the picture of the obj-ct looked at is imprinted upon it, from there the message is conveyed to the brain by means of the optie uei ve. At the entrance of the optic nerve, or the Porus Optieus there is no vision and this is called the blind spot. In a direct line from the pupil is a depression in the re tina and here vision is most keen. This is why, when we are looking at an object it Ptands out more clearly than do the objects to the side, above or below it. The retina is extremely' thin, semi-transparent and composed of many layers. Next week the Emmetropic or normal eye ball will be talked about. First National Bank Elects Directors. The annual meeting of stock holders iu the First National Bank was held at the bauk Jan, Mb. The following were elected directors: N. W. White. O. O. Veateh. Herbert Kkin, T. C. Wheler and J. II. Hawley. Following this meeting the ui- rectors met and elected Herbert Kakin president and T. C. Wheeler cashier . m WnnHmPn r.f fhf WnrlH anrl Wnnion nf Woodcraft Install Officers Bohemia Camp No. 260 Wood men of the World and St Valen tine Circle No. 121 Women of Woodcraft held a joint public ses sion Tuesday evening. Both orders installed offieers for the ensuing vear and concluded the evening with a reception, amusements and refreshments. The officers installed were: WOODMh.s. Or Tilt WOIH.D. Consul, L W. Bker; alrisor, F. J. Bartels; escort, J. W. IMdy; clerk, C II. Vaulienburg; banker, F. 1. Krnent; watchmsn, J II. Brown; i-enlrj, J. D. C'fTman; managet, l (J. Cofl'iian. WOMi:. i.I' V.uiiIh k,u t. Post Guardian Neighbor, MfH. Katie B Veatch; Guardian Neijh bor, Mrs. Marguerite Johnson; Ad vior, Mrs. Lilly Eddy; Banker, Mrs. Ka Ilemenwar; Cb rk, Mrs. Flora J. Miller; Magican, Mrs. Christie Carpenter; Attendant, Mra. Maud Wheeler; Captain of the (Juard.s, Mrs. Mary Van Denburg, Inner Sentinel, Mrs. F.tta Frye, Outer Sentinel, Mrs. Almira Jen kins; Musician, Miss Eunice Van DenburL'; Manager, Mrs. Klla Bin be v. Planting Cedar Timber in Japan. The Japanese have planted thous ands of acrea of waste land iu cedar timber. These nre set out ju regu lar rows but for the firt three years it is necessary to keep the bamboo grass which grows very rank cut in order to give the treeM a chance to make a good Hand. It is said they glow us (straight as at rows and are used for telephone and telegraph poles. American Lumberman. w n 1 x k. BEACH CANO MINING IN SOUTHEKN OREGON, Diggings Profitably Operated About Hoqile fhvpr's Mouth and Other Points -Grc.it Hopes That Dr. Day Will Solve All Problems. tlold licach, Die.. Jan. l. 1 1 terest is being revived to a cousi I crable extent in the gold-bcari ig beach sands along the Orcg it const. This interest has t eti created by the yood return do- rived duiing the past year by those who h a v o followed practical methods. The experiments nude by lr. David T. Dav ami his as sistants of the I'nited States geolo gical survey have also had much to do in reviving the beach sand min ing. Diggings are being woiked at vat ious points along the beach, ; ! near the month of Kogue river, at ; ithe mouth of the Chctco and at1 I points farther north. ; i The sands sought and mined are j ! much line ordinary beach sands, , 'but datker. They cart y values in :tlour gold and platinum. This sand as it is called, is really, so Dr. Day affirms, a magnetic iron that forms at least half and m many instances three fourths of the b'dk of the black sands of the IkmuIi. The yold of these beach sands is very fine, light and tliky. A very large percentage of the particles will llo.it on water and for this rea son and the fact that they will nt, i or at least but scantily, adhere to ' mercury the proees of catching an t saving them is difficult. The b.- ; of tke beach sands do not run over : $0 a tou, while the average is but "tut $4 a ton Dr. Dav and his assistants have not only teeu experimenting for values but have also been seeking some practical method of separat ing and saving them Dr. Day l.op'-s to be iible to giv,. within a sboit time h method that will t be'ter that the cm V svMern tar low j employ ed ami that eau readily be 1 j adopted by all who are interested j : in beach Hand turning. Governor Chamberlain in His Message I Anlclqliipfl C-On. Ih,i ' iu uic kcisiaiuic ian? niui Wining is One of the Most Prom ising Industries in the State and Goes After State Min- ing. Mining is one of the most prom ising industries iu the state, and those engaged iu the legitimate woik thereof ought tu be protected agiicst imposition and impostors. The Am ericau Mining Co::gie.-s appointed a committee oi distin guished geutlemeu to prepare a bill for the punishment of mining fakers and promoters of illegitimate raining 1 nlt-rprisen, and I presume it will be submitted to you. A la has recently been passed by the California bgislatuie along these lints, and reports tire that it has worktd an almost complete rid dance Iron thfct state of spurious mining Ktock and that lecherous parasite on the mining industry -the fake promoter The sta'e has 1 'ei sf usl "J"- "y ie o HPur""UH mining sto-k throughout U)e Hu ' tl,ls lb ,h,w lUJ(i,Jr i glaring he.llines of jiamphbts ! published htie and elsewheie Any ! person who in b-i takes to s'll-T assent to the ici blicatioii, itiat. 1. j or pubpely, of a fradulent 01 -xig- 1 geruted report tending to Kive any ; person or the public the idea of a greater value than nuch stock really possesses, with intent to dtfrau ', ought t' be deemed guilty ot a! felony and punished aceordiu 0'ly. The Bureau of Grades. The Bur au of Grades of the Oregon and Washington Lumber Manufacturers Association came into active existence Jan. 1st at which time A- N. Hageu entered upon the duties of chief inspector. In the selection of Mr. Hagcri it is conceded that the right selection has been made Mr. Hagc.11 is w. 11 ouaUfied for the duties of this of- I fi"e having fcixn aetive serviee both in lumber yards and otlke woik, there is no doubt bis work ill give satisfaction. Mr. ILigmi made a trip to this part of the val ley ou the 1.5th inst. but finding nearly nil the mills closed do'.j re turned to l'ortlaud atatiug Lo would be here in February whon ho will make au official visit to nil of tho mills connected with the Lumber Association. Cottage Grove souvenir tables at the Bazaar. "It is now eleven years since I li.id a narrow escape from consumption," writes C. O. Floyd, ti loading hiirlnesH man of Kershaw, N. C "I had run down in weight to Pifj pounds and coughing was const ant, both by day and by night. Finally 1 began tak ing Dr. King'H New Discovery and continued this for about six months, when my cough and lung trouble were entirely gone and I was ro h Lured to my own normal weight, 170 pounds," Thousands of person me healed every year, fi iiaranteeil at J'eiiHuiM Pharmacy. .'0c and $1, Trial bottle free. Classif icil Atlwrti-; mcut WANT I.D Angou 1i'v th- v cm l" - I Ml' ft p. -m 11 U iMao mm l: . . v. 1i l -. 1. K . ; ' Ml Golden W.andoUs. 1 have a lew j u 1 I m . . I I i ; . ! . s do at fj.r.tl pel pair, c' l - t-I Select 'cgs " tti:o: ! I -s 1 M us. jon D iMiiiM 1 ... v'.; . C.tove, Phone No '..'s ,1 Boar For Sale or f. xc'i an;;;.- Ivcgistctcil Poland Cl.ii: I it I S mouths old tf wi 1 1 1 1 1 V'O 1'' K V N i K v ! W.witeii. Cientktuan m le!v reteieiu'C, to trav I b a rig, f h a tit in o; capital. S. 1l.1t y 1 ,''' and cxpen-.es , s.ilai v and t pen- cH ad nr. with st .imp. Jos Cottage, tirove, Oi Stock lor i !i lb Stock of the Or. Mo Springs As-sori.pio-t .!,..' tion owns and operv.es rln Mineral Springs uiidei llie ineut of Levi (I is 01 si office lor '2i c ills j ( 1 11 F Oiilld. A breast pin was 1 1 in I road tt.n k. O.vn. i can S'llling at Nirjget oi!, .w. f r notice. K rlvir(ril. Tmii Awbrey h.is t.-'i 'oi lage drove and 1 - .1.1.1 iustttauce pola u--- ; u t...- 1 o:n '1 b'ire Kdiet s-n . and the Aetna Fire bis of Hattfor I. Con" Mi l'or SaIu eb ven liutid puu insrcs. or will ti 1 de . r e it t ' 1 jl'.i 1 e o, . ii alii.- - b'i; m. I Dm;:, a :M .w.,, i Phone Hohenna Line. l ! i 1 1 IIP KH.II i N M Mr. Aunil-l tie iiVi't'i'iT of the I'" 1! 1 . 1 1 , .Pill' -ays : 1 11 . k 1 u .; ' lire rl -l.tl 11. 1 lie- ! more agreeably . do more make one fi-.-i lei , r Ihaa laxative." Miaran'eed t oustie-is and i-oiti' 1'. Ilensoii 'h Pharnui. . Heusuu's Pharuj.iev iiulidiv is the best iu the citv Ti-- -u a line of staple thi n.;s t '1 . . 1 . used everv dav i:i t!i- , ,V-' ' - 1 t ib . a) f ft ft ft incluuiim the If tt v.i'z -r '.H'.V T'- i.J1.-".'.r:"J Create priees. We can save yon 40 per cent in standard magazine subscriptions if you accept this oiler NOW. -W PER CHNT SAVlil). REVIEW OF REVIEWS . $3.00 WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION.. . 1.00 SUCCESS MAGAZINE. . 1.00 NUGGET 1.50 REGULAR PRICK ...$6.50 $3.90 The time lor Mib,c.ribiug to one .ei io .li--.il is past. Ivvery refined home, where good real- hik is apiiiouaic i, is noi wonoiu mm lamuy ".loujtoi )erio ncais thing for tho young pnopl-, S jin-tlniig for the woinuaii. Theno pletely as a year's supply for Wl't). Il.. KT,,,r,r..l c,..i III ...v.. i,.v u.i, i.-i, ' I- Six million of the b.t help and inspiration. We an ft ft ft ft iMuggei. 11 101 any reason frieude. No present is more ltIJMIiMlHf.lt the thr Nllggct costs frl.rttt too.. We order today; do it now. ft 4. 0 tr 1 1 1! Cotlixjjc Grove M Mini tebll. is i P.ian per I" 1 1 t I Mil t. ll, ae! tgll,(" 1 1 loll , ib -i .'I . 1 , 1 'I' 'lik, Ii 11 ley with til r..." H,e .lill. fin V etch Hay! .1 ,,1 , 1, 1 mi" Its fo Harking Vv iViklAViuicr C .4 1 Ui . nr It. 44: 4.44 4. 4.--4.v4.-4- 4 - 3 AS ' J i-irs, C V V V CfM Heavy Winter Goods marked down A Full Line of Cold Weather Clothing on Hand Look ir our Window! NUGGET'S iinu s 01 t he Year hiicsl magazines tho library table. You will want them anyhow, ho whv not in-t th,,. ..,. .tJ ,..,.11 ll. tr..,,l.l.. I- ' ... .J "l h .iUUUI i-'-ii"i-. o' ics)oiunug wim lour publishers? pnopl-j in Arnmici have found these three great magazines a joy and - pi oil d to be abhj to olkr them in one groat conibjnutioa wjti, tll0 -ju no o oi n.ini .in nu-inaga.ines lor aeicptabl great magazines ; 1 1 v Cost $s.OO lle, all ). r tu von lor a limited time Flour Mills f I'loll' and b'ee l .0 cent-. I 1 I k l i ll late on ton lots MIO ited vaiietn and II II. o , I 1 1 -1 1 . 1 d for eo,v h ill I feed I' V ' !l spn t!n!lv, & Hansen. Sale earance AT enzzzszama Stock 01 4 - 4.-4.4.4.- 4t4444444-x m : 1 . s. . i 1 r 1. a ; ; argam at the littlci Ovir Price Only aomotlung for the man three magazines fiill the bi SOIIKi- 1 ti I ) nm - Voill'He f. umol l,... ... your if bou-'llt S(;l-ir:itelv n.,.1 .!, only for Vy. Scnd in your r tr (If r f rtf (lr (f rf rff tlr fjf (if f f iir $r (If (lr f (lr f (If