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About Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1908)
s TUB-CT<lKV»'»£KS.rV GUARD. TBURziDAY, nCTOaKB 13. 1HS the EUGENEWEEKLY guard " TST r LI S h . fish er Editor aud Publistur. every Thursday at Eugene. Oregon. . x.rriotion price, *1-5° Per Xear* ^advance; »2.00 at end ot F»6-“ ^«.red at the Eugene, Oregon, E°Xe as aecond-clas« matter, for The Guard. «..following are authoried to -a rm-eipt for subscriptions or other business for Thu Daily ^4 U«*ek:y Guard: MC.lfl-J- L. Clark. ^rt-Geo. A. Drury. iddres* all remittances and com- •ul2viRD P rinting co ., Kugene, Oregon ÎKRSÛÂÏ. OCTOBER 15. HMW PIIHMII m PAPMKS. „• sre again offering either the -.gun Agriculturist or American r.rnier free to every subscriber who r* “tiS «ubwription to the Weekly one year in advance. For the offer of silver and kitchen sets ' ”, .,J. rtlaemaat on thia page. ju may have them while they last. Address. Guard Printing Co. Eugene. Ore M by Theo I their er the CESS of the United ire for »«■ike nd en- irts to irrtga- * work 1« it •ountr. ir with Feet I btf. >re oh- ■e irri- clover, iturtw tained. fed 2» isirelv unirri- s per le nor- ; ITW it nor- ». “»» tat the tnbon 1 twice SS per Stow idapted le An- railed tbffl A* »«•T ORRER YOVR COFFIN IN ADVANCE ■ The Philadelphia Press tells of a Inch man in Cincinnati who ordered | his coffin in advance some years ago. I hid »300 for it. When he died last But this d. meter, which being the mo device known is related tl not even do gas contpanv The former age over tl •tat it car l-eter wl en d f tfce Intere» Hid put in its s a< 11 that equally rratic be arrested if he attempts any such thing. When the gas company finds out, by looking over its books, that its earning powers are decreasing, the slump in business is never attributed to dull times, but to lazy meters, anil a campaign is at once begun to lo cate the laggards, which is accom plished by taking out each and every one on the system and installing new and more active ones in their stead. Then when the returns i ■ upward and the patrons flock to the office of the collector with indigna tion, because of the size of their gas bills, everything is regarded as being on a satisfactory basis. The gas com pany may take out a meter for fail ing to register enough cubic feet con sumed by a patron during a month, but never when the said patron storms the office with a protest that the family has been away front home all the month and no light has been used during that period at all. The meter subject is a painful one and past the understanding of man. but it is an affliction that all must stand with as much fortitude as can be brought to bear in this world. ■ week he had grown too big around to I go in it. Lots of men and women order their coffins in advance, is the con- ■ elusion of that paper in commenting Like the poor, the troubles of the ou this item of freak news. They worry and weaken their wills by wor- Balkans are always with the nations ry over disasters that never come, of Europe, and are a constant menace difficulties they never meet and riv- to the peace of each and every one of ers of trouble they never have to them. Once in about twelve months cross. Many lives have been and are there is a big scare sent broadcast nude miserable, hopeless and profit- over the world that war is imminent, on account of some infraction of the less because people retuse to move. treaty by the sultan of Turkey, the or marry, or take a place, or enter a shah of persia, or some one of the business for fear of contingencies I md risks that never came and duties other potentates with interests re- I ud obligations that were shams. Ev- mote or otherwise in that section, | ery home is cluttered and littered Then all the other nations begin to I with things that are kept waiting sit up and take notice and stealthily I for use on this chance or that, and look over their firearms to see if I then never used—coffins all, that they are in readiness to tak«* a hand In the general scrimmage which I have been ordered in advance. These seems ta be likely to take place at I things are dusted and moved and any time. I kept from the mot.is, and packed and One of these annual scares is on I repacked, and in the end all is waste, at the present time. The volcano, I worry and empty effort. which has been smouldering and Thrift is well, saving is wise and rumbling for many years seems about I foresight brings peace of mind when to break out with great vigor. Prince I the hour strikes. These all work for I Ferdinand of Bulgaria proposes to I security, peace of mind and richness announce himself czar of an inde I of soul. But the coffins that are or- pendent state, thereby forcing the se I dered before they are wanted are for cession of Bulgaria from its nominal I years a nuisance and a horror, and subjection to Turkey and forcing on I in the end junk, Turkey the alternative of yielding or The most wearisome mortal in the war. Emperor Francis Joseph pro I world is the one who everlastingly poses to announce the practical an I opens his coffin of woes and asks nexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina I you to view them and give the owu- to the Austrian empire. And all the I er pity or consolation. Some per- great powers ot Europe, signatories I sons forget the lines of Ella Wheeler of the treaty of Berlin, by which the Wilcox, the well-known poetess— ¡»resent anomalous state of the Bal Laugh and the world laughs with kans was established, are agog, won you, weep and you weep alone.” dering what they shall do next. The man who buttonholes you to If the Austrian empire breaks up tell the latest funny story may be a when Francis Joseph dies there will bore, but he ia preferable to the one really have been nothing broken, for who lugs a coffin around or is ever Francis Joseph is the Austrian em lastingly pointing to an uncrossed pire. Turkey in Europe is certainly bridge. not a nation. It is a varying degree Of course there is not much use in of sovereignty, ranging from actual telling the unhappy to be cheerful, authority down to nothing at all. It •s discontent is a matter of liver and is impossible, in any real sense, to de temperament; still every one should scribe even the geographic bounda have sense enough to know it is ego ries of Turkey. It is rather a vary tistical and bad manners to show ev ing suzerainty over certain tribes erybody the coffin he has bought too than a definite territorial sovereign •arly in life's struggle. ty. And the Balkan states are in The everlasting joke maker and Btlll more confusion. Some, like Bul teller la wearisome, the morbid man garia, have been definitely Turkish, “ * nuisance, but the cheerful, well- yet ruled by their own prince. Oth ■aunered man, who is not always ers. like Bosnia, and Herzegovina, thinking of himself and his woes, is have been theoretically Turkish, al the blessing of the earth and the king though the Turkish government ex among men. ercised no functions whatever, and Mnegar catches no fifes.” The the actual administration was in the •’eetness and cheer of smiles and hands ot Austria. Others, like Ser- via and Montenegro, are nominally '•Mhter make life worth living. The unusual interest in the nation Independent, though entirely helpless al game this year would indicate con- to maintain their independence. And clMively that the country is safe and the great powers, jealous lest Tur t»*t the patriotism of the people is key , if broken up. would not be fair- Uy divided: fearful il. lest Russia get an •»impaired. outlet to the sea: timid, lest the pet- ty states fight ea< ich other if given a KKAIHXG the muter *. chance—the powe ers have maintained itiialon. not for the Of *11 the mechanical arrange- this anomalous t. but to kee| the ••*1» ever introduced Into the home, sake of the Ea Ing the West. recording watt-meter Is the most East from trout the powers And probably •ntifyin*. Although this little de- For. while the Con maintain it still ’*• decide« on the amount ot the ti the most helpless ■®»thly electric-light bill, its ways cert of Europe e In the way of tak- body in existent *r’ »o dark and mysterious that th’ lt 1* Invincible in prevent- •***ry layman cannot even read It, Ing action, .. ____ j. The great powers may lag action alone tell how it works. the little ones from fighting, or After all, it is a very simple de- stop t— — t them fight, merely ’*’•* emulating essentially of a tiny they may let -.t. whatever the outcome. agreeing that, ***or which actuates the dial polnt- shall not *r* »y means of a train of gears. The the winner h** loser to 1 to gain or I •otc- 18 In circuit with the lamps a»d re, ’es at a spe«*d proportionate The war th at starts in a thing, i With th urrent being used. If only ad is turned on. the motor re- ry slowly, increasing In h every additional light, FLEET umber of lizhts are in use \\ II \7 III ft < tl 1.1» IH» I '»It < HIX t 1C I I I I I I I I I I I I I authoritative books on subjects re- iatlng to the ^tributes to the No tesine al hi \\ üur Eie« A uld of ‘ phvsicians as an Innocent superstl- tlon .neither beneficial nor harmful, He a dds Professor Trilbert of th’ ow Past, te at ever, >n rated barn develi lene- t one 4 ♦ ‘II will 1 in < aud Mr. We that i the American government might advantage seize the pay- chologit lca» moment to urge upon the other p powers the acceptance of the provisions of the special treaties made with China by Great Britain and the Vnited States for such a modification of the Chinese tariff as would make it easier for her than It now is to meet the pecuniary obli- gallons which arose out of th«* Boxer uprising Referring to the British sp«*cial treaty with China, the terms of which were adopted by the Amer ican government. Mr. Weal«* says: "it has been calculated that the results of this treaty goiug into force would roughly be to double the pres ent annua! Chines«* customs revenues of thirty million gold dollars, thus al lowing the service of all Chinese debts and indemnities to become practically unified by their being drawn from the same source, and al so giving directly to the Pekin gov ernment—as distinguished from the provincial governments—a hand some annual surplus from which to take the sums necescary for a grad ual naval and military reconstruc tion. The importance of these things will be clear to every mind. ' But this treaty manifestly could not go into force, as regards any of its essential clauses, without all treaty ¡»users concluding identical treaties." i 77.16 grain» under a glass ing ten qua s. After the cooled bacil 11 of typhus, tu cholera, sm allpox. etc., were ¡’laced in the bell in open glass tubes and within half an hour all the mien bes were dead, If sugar is burned in a closed vessel containing putrtfied meat or the contents of rotten eggs the offensive odor disappears at once.” The popular faith in the dis infecting quality of burnt sugar ap- pears, therefore, well founded Everybody personally depr«*cates campaign personalities and every- body roads all of them that are printed. Seems to be merely a repe- tition of the caaea of the preacher and the dog fight, the lady and the Beighborhaad scandal. A Washington preacher handed the short-and-ugly to candidate Cha fin, for his attack on th«* morals of the National I Capital, in this la«ly- like way: " An assertion to be at- tributed to the overheated mind of a campaign orator.” Can you beat it? Congressman John Wesley Gaines says. "If Roosevelt saw a dog fight tn front of the White Hous«* he would go out and mix up in it. Maybe John Wesley hasn't noticed it, but there are a lot of men partial to a dog fight. “A rose by any other name”— etc. The attorney for the Interstate Commerce Commission says every EMPIRE STATE SHOH.ll railroad handling western shipments HA\ E DIRECT PRIMARIES of the New York refluerles have been giving the sugar trust rebates under another name. Nowhere in the world is warty ma chinery so powerful as in the state of New kiugs are made In some por- New York. With a tremendous sen tlons of the world much quicker and timent favorable to the nomination much easier than we make a new of Hughes, the organization leaders president, but there is less fun and had it easily within their power to more danger In the king-making defeat his nomination at the Saratoga stunt. convention if they chose. It was not Evelyn Thaw isn’t the first pretty necessary to convince the convention that President Roosevelt was right In faced woman by many thousands to regarding Mr. Hugh««s' nomination UH find out that the "easy-money” game necessary; it was only necessary to always has a time-limit, only they convince a half dozen leaders, who In seem to have stopped without giving turn controlled the larger delega- her advance notice and caught her tions. A direct an * open kind of p:l- broke. marv election, s ich as has been Of course thig country does not adopt«*d in a number of other states, would greatly reduce tue prestige and wish fcr a European war, big or lit- actual power of the state central com tie, but if the nations over there must mittee. the county chairmen and the fight, we’d like them to bear in mind other organization k*aders. It is not that we are prepared to sell them strange that the men who have work supplies of all kinds at reasonable ed themselves up into positions of prices. power in this dominating party or ganization should be in favor of the retention of a system which they know how to operate nod which gives them control not only of nominations but also to a large extent of th«* work of the legislature. There are things to be said in favor of the old conven tion system, and there are things to be said against the primary election plan in its full and extreme forms. But in the state of New York it has been true for a long time that freedom from the domination of men who hold power through their con- trol of party organization more than almost anything else a requisite for the triumph of popular rule and real ly good government. The Republican situation has been vastly improved so far as its relations to public opin ion go. as compared with that which prevailed some years ago. But the system iti in its ramifications throughout the state is not the b«-st one that could be devised. The di rect primary is the only true solu tion of such conditions as obtain in the Empire State. Hon. John Barrett, one of the best known men of the country, will speak at the IT. of O. assembly Wed nesday evening. The public Is In vited and the distinguished gentle man should have a large audience. Time might be saved If certain men would Just use a phonograph with a single record, which would re peat continuously, ‘’1 never did it; it's a lie," and probably Just as many would be convinced. In the "smart” society set the woman who has only one divorce to her credit is put In the same class as the owner of only one automobile and Is regarded as hopelessly behind the age. I ♦ « ♦ ♦ * ♦ John G. Oglesby, th«* Republic nominee for lieuteuant govern«>r jf liliuois. Is a son of the late Richard Oglesby, wao was governor of the alate and uue of the most noted meu. •— -o~ - The ticket to be used at the elec tion in Tennessee next month will contain over a hundred names and It la estimated that It will require an average* ot about seven minutes for the voter to cast his ballot. o— W Bourke Cockran. one of the most eloquent speakers in the Demo- cratic ranks, will be heard ou the stump in bi'half of th«* Bryan and Kern ticket in Indiana. New Jersey, Maryland. West Virginia and New York, during the remaining weeks of the campaign. w—O*' - Three aspirants are engaged in a lively fight for the Democratic nom ination for governor of Virginia next spring and it la reported that Li» u- tenant uovernor J Taylor Ellyson may soon announce his entry In th> race. —o— The managers of th«* national So cialist campaign express themselves as well satisfied with th«* results f the coast-to-coast tour of Eugene \ Debs and the famous "Red Sp«*clal Th«* Eastern trip wound up in New England wlt^h a »¡»eech by Mr Debs delivered in historic Faneuil Hall. •—o— Samuel G. Cosgrove, ' the Republi- can candidate » for governor of the State of Washington, is sixty-one years old and a civil war veteran He was born in Ohio an«! spent his early life on a farm lu Defiance county in In 1KK2 he settled in that State Washington and has since been en gaged In farming and In the practice of law. in both of which pursuits he has been successful from the fl nan- clal standpoint. 1 o IJRiVES OUT J . BLOOD HUMORS The skin is not simply an outer covering of the body, but through its thousands of pores ami glamls it performs the great and necessary work of regulating our temperatures, and also .,ss:at* in disposing of the refuse and waste matters of the system by the ct nstant evaporation that goes on through these little tube«. To j.erfotoi these duties the tissues ami fibres which connect and surt *und the pores .«ml glands must be continually nour ish« d by pure bloexl When front any c «use the circulation becomes infecte«! with impurities and humors, it loses its strengthening powers and begins to disease ami irritate the delicate tissues and pioduces Eczema. Acne, Tetter, or some other itching, disfiguring skit Double. S S. S cures skin diseases of every kind bv going down into the circulation and neutralizing and remov ing the impurities ami humors. It changes the quality of the blo<xl from an xcrid, fiery fluid to a cooling, health producing stream, which, instead of irritating and inflaming the skin, cans ami nourishes it by its soothing, healthful qualities Salves, washes, lotions, etc., may be used for any tern porarv comfort or cleanliness they afford, but skin diacasaa cannot be cur««! until S. S. S. has purified the bkxxl. lk»ok on Skin Diseases aud any meJ ical advice sent free THE SWn T SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. John Barrett V. I -d v authorized to er ui « h ting at lying the Southern Pacific depot grounds wax the principal topic of discussion Plana for th«* work were * ibmitted and at th«* outset Pr«*»l- dent C S Williams offered to h«*a«l Several men from Coburg have re a subscription list with »20 for the cently located on homesteads near work, but D E Yoran suggested that lieeeta, after spending a week or so !f »15,000 is raised for a hoist fund Hl that section the promotion department of the dub Born On North Fork Friday, Oc- could bandit* th«* matter out of that toiler 2 190S. to Mr. and Mrar. R. fund That seeni«*d to In* the con lierslev, a son sensus ot opinion among til«* mem .1. II II Miller, brother of Joa- bers of *he club present. quin and Geo. Melvin Miller, arrived acres to be Im- There are three here Friday and remained until Tues- proved. It is planned to have the day. II«* gave a short talk to the pu- eutlre tract sodded; flower beds will ¡»Ils of the high school and th«* upper be planted near the platform and classes of the interlin'd late depart shrubs and evergreen trees will hide ment Monday afternoon at the school ■the water tank and pump house. house He arranged to «leliver a l«*c- Tr«*es will also be planted along the tlire In the Odd Fellows' hall Monday side boundary of th«* grounds to evening, but the audience* did not ma hide th«* view of the alleys and back terialize. yards. A movement is now under way to Soma of the members of the club build a telephone line from Ac express«*«! th«* opinion that th«* city way of South Slough and the: could well afford to devote a few to Maple Creek. Orrin Stanw hundred dollars to the work. promoting the enterprls«» and | Manager Hartog is iti receipt of a es to build the line and keep il letter from W. F Chace, a landscapt* ¡>air. Persons wishing to « architect at Portland, stating that ha with the wire can buy their will b«* in Eugeua on October 20 to ments and pay him a monthly go over th«* grounds with Mr. liar- for the use of the line. In a petition of the Eugen«* Mill & tog and lay out more definite plans Mrs J. A Vader, who left ............ Elevator Company filed In the United ; far their beautification. Th«« promo I short time ago, is now in a hospital States court in Portland by P. R Kel- I tion department will then obtain in Portland, where she underwent a ly, of Albany, it is charged that the I definite prices for the Improvement surgical operation last Friday. The Albany Farmers' Company disposed am! place the matter before th«* S P. operation proved much more serious of wheat and oats stored by the own company, asking them to fill In the than was expected, as the surgeons ers in a warehouse operated by the entire grounds if the people of the found an abdomlnul tumor which It Farmers’ Company, and that the lat city will do the work of beautifying was necessary to remove. She was ter has defrauded a number of per them. Th«* Improvements will de getting along well at last reports, and sona by refusing to account or settle pend, of course, upon whether or the surgeons and nurses speak hope for grain so housed. It is also not the company will agree to main- fully of th«* prospects of her recov charged that th«* Farmers' Company lain a gardner regularly to care for ery. Florence West. has recently dirposed of a portion of th«* grounds If not. It would be Its assets by selling property to Al money wasted. Iliut a Close «'all fred Freeraken, a resident of itila Mor«* Police Want«-«!. Mrs. Ada L. Croom, the widely county. A committee of three was appoint known proprietor of the Croom Ho It is said that the Eugene Mill and ed to Interview the city council ask tel, Vaughn. Miss., says: "For sev and Elevator Company purchased ing that body to Increase th«* night eral months I suffered with a severe stored 3214 bushels of wheat with police force from two to three men. cough, and consumption seemed to the Farmers’ elevator. The mill com The business district Is growing rap- have its grip on men, when a friend pany shipped a portion of it, but ld , and 11 now n at h la t recommended Dr. King’s New Dis claims to have h id a balance du«* It of it was when the present force of two covery. 1 began taking It and three 2929 bushels, valued at 12753.63, night men waw put on. bottles effected a complete cure.” which th«* eleva'or people refused to Oilier Matters. The fame of this life-saving cough deliver upon demand, an«l which lias A committee was named to see and cold remedy, and lung and throat since been sold. the council to urge the Immed.ate healer Is world wide. Sold at W. A. R A. MeLagan also joins the suit inspection of wooden Hidewalks, as Kuykendall’s store. 50c aud »1. and states that h«* ¡»laced 1HH7 bush many of them are In a deplorable els of wheat in the elevator blns be condition, and to urge th«* extension, DeWitt’s t'arbolizeq Witch Hazel longing to th«* Farmers' Company, of the cement walk district. Th«’ which it sold without an accounting committee was authorized to consult; Salve is the best salve for piles. Be to him. He alleges that his grain dis the council In regard to the light 1 scare you get DeWitt’s. Sold by all druggists. appeared in October of this year. supply, especially on the streets. | Perhaps th«* most serious allegation At the suggestion of D. E. Yoran. i« mad« by William Long, a grain a committee was appointed to make I buyer of Eugene, who states that the a list of Eugene citizens who ar»* not | Farmers’ Company got away with members of the club ami to whom a H73 bushels of oats belonging to him I special invitation will be given to and then issued a check uncashable Join in order to make the club a For Infant* and Children. when the holder of the warehouse re still more powerful ixidy for good. ceipt presented it for settlement. He Will lUTrive Barrett. claims to have sold the warehouse re Before the meeting of the club, a ceipt to J. R. Baltimore, of this city, meet 1 ng of the board of governors| Bears the ' aud that the latter is holding the was held at which Dr L L Whitson, | check, which was refused at the bank President P. L. Campbell and Dr. W. Blguaiui» 01 upon which it was drawn Kuykendall were appointed as a com-| The petition asks that the Farmers' Company be declared an Involuntary bankrupt, and that all Its property be sold for the benefit of its creditors. —Albany Herald. ACCUSED OF SALE OF WHEAT STORED CASTORIA. The Kind You Have Always Bought Had Ferdinand, of Bulgaria, con sulted the American Czar he might have chosen some other than the un A SIMI’LK QI WNTIQN. popular title of czar when he set up Eugene Pe<if>|e Are ib-qursted «s bosa of the Bulgarian works. _________________ **THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY to Tenth and Morrison. Portland. Oregon A. P. Armstrong. LL.B.. Principal <AVa ®cvupy two fl<x>r* 65 by i«x> feet, have a $ jo , ooo equipment, Is not the word of a repr«MM*ntativ»» employ a large faculty, give individual instruction, receive more calls citizen of Eugene more convincing | than the doubtful utterance« of p«*o- for office help than we can meet. Our achool admittedly leads all ple everywhere else in the Union'* others in quality of instruction. It pays to atten«l such an institution. Read this: Charles Beadle, of 333 Eighth St . j <Said a Baslaess Baa: " Keep hammering away everlastingly en thorough Eugene. Ore., says: work. It will win eut in the end.” Said an Edsoatori "The quality of instruc Hosx-wtly Answer Thia. We are beginning to suspect that there are several men who are not convlncd that Mr. Hearst ta solely ac tuated by a desire to purity public The Albany Herald says that I.ane life. county has been padding its school returns. Possibly, but It is the kind " 1 am fully as ready to recom By al) means "let your light shine" of ¡»adding that Linn, with its heavy if you have one, but don't forget mend Doan's Kidney Pills Uiday as falling off In children of school age. that If your nose becomes too much I was in 1903, just after using the remedy. As 1 said in my testimony should do. For Instance, In Eugene of a beacon light, somebody will be at that time, I had suffer«*d from alone there are not less than four sure to say nasty things about it. kidney complaint nearly always since the war. I never knew when hundred more pupils actually attend A cold would Some day there may be an Inter- to expect an attack ing the public schools than there bring it on or any over exertion. were a year ago. If Albany would get national wrangle In Europe in which On several occasions I was helpless. in and "pad” its school census in this France and Germany are not con- The last severe attack 1 had was substantial way there might be as splcuous on opposing sides, though about six months axo. when some- set In and thing like lumbago great a demand for dwelling houses It may seem Impossible now. brought on a heavy bearing down in that city as there is in Eugene at ¡■aln as if there was a weight over After a while we will probably kidney. I was bent over and the present time. have a new postoffice building In Eu could not straighten up to sav«* me. gene. The blds for Its construction There was such a weakness in the We doubt if there is a Judge in will be opened in Washington on the action of the kidneys that I could America who will dare O. K. the de ■»ot control the action of the secre 7th of next month. tions, and it caused much annoy cision handed down by an English ance. Having used several rem judge, that a husband is the owner of There is at thia time one aure way edies with little if any benefit. 1 his wife's gowns The average Amer for the moat ordinary man to attract 1 finally began taking Iman's Kidney ican considers himself in luck to be Pills. From the start almost 1 could attention—pretend that he han not! feel the benefit The action of the allowed the undisturbed possession decided how he's going to v«»te kidneys and bladder was soon cor- of his trouser« «... •. ,| <nd tkM '>»» PBtaa and » ’ ‘ I was benefited In No ns» to advise a trust magnate disappeared. Doubt less the CommiMloner of to "always look on the bright side." every way and what I told in my for mer testimony about the relief I ob Pensions refused to make public the because as things now stand be can tained is true In every respect Three name of the man who returned a big find no bright side to look on. yearn have now elapsed since I tes tified In favor of Ixoan's Kidney wad of pension money on the grou ind Pills and 1 have been continually free that he was not entitled * » It. for f« Ider from kidney complaint, I them a wonderful remedy a re«-on. men«led I loan s *KI< again and again." For sale by all dealers cents Foster-Milburn Cc <>h t< T w tion given in yoar school makes it the standard of its kindin the Northwest. c.<?pen all the year. Students admitted at any time. Catalogue free. : Any bank, any newspaper, any buameea naan ia Portland. - KASPARILLA This sterling household remedy is most successfully prescribe«! for a "world of troubles.” For derangements of the di gestive organs it is • luitiiral corrective, oj-erstmg directly ujx<n the liver «nd ali mentary «anal, gently but persiateatly stimulating a healthful activity. It« bei.’etv isl influent e extends, however, to every portion of the system, auling in the processes of digestion and aasinnlation of food, promoting a wholesome, natural appetite, correcting sour stimiach, bad breath, irregularities ot the bowela, con stipation and the long list of trouble« dire« tl^ tracaat.le to thoae unwholesome conditions Kaaparilla dupels drowsi ness, headache, l»ackacha and despond ency due to inactivity of the liver, kidneys and digestive tract It ia a strengthening tonic of the highest value. If it fails to satisfy we authorize all dealers to refund the purchase one«. H«» yt C hemical C o . Portland, Oregon •X“ ««.-FURSHIDES ia; . I I I