VOL. XVI. GRANTS PASS - JOSEPHINE COUNTY - OREGON - THURSDAY OCTOBER 4. 1900. No, 47 omiHMiiiiHiimitimmtit i FULL LINE Neckwear, Overcoats, Boots, Shoes, - - - Rubbers, Furnishings Reduced prices to close out line of LADIES and CHILD REN SHOES WELCHS' CLOTHING STORE NEXT TO P. O. D K. CLIVE MAJOR General Practitioner of MlCllH'lSB AND Sl KdKKV. Cilice iu Williams Block J" P. DODGE, INSURANCE and kkal esTaie Lite, Fire and Accident Insurance. GltAKTS pA88. ' OllKOON. A. C. HOUGH, ATTORNEY-ATI. AW, Piacticee in all State anil Federal Courts Ollice over first National Bank. Grants Pass, - Obkooji. D R. J. JENNINGS RESIDENT DENTIST. 30 Years Expedience. OtTice in Opera House block; see the sign of The big Tooth. Ukants Pakh, ... Ohkuon. IL C. PERKINS, U. H. DEPUTY " MINERAL SURVEYOR, Giunts Pans, Okkoon. QOSIIOW & SHERIDAN, M1MNU ATTORNEYS, Special attention given to Mining and Laud Laua,aud Laud U I lice practice. Koklijiko. Oukuon. QEOKGE II. BINNS, ASSAYER, Ollice iipj'ottile Hot el Josephine, (jUanth r.(-H, - - Okkuox. N. E. McGrew Pioneer Truck and Delivery G.IUNTS PASS. OREGON. " Painters are not made they are Born t We are Natural Born Painters." The Grants Pass Painting Co. Cedar & Boor., I'KijrtiiETOKS HOUSE. SIGN AND CARRIAGE PA1XTKRS, GRA1NKRS PAPER HANGERS AND CALCIMINORS GET our piices before making your contract jt jt jt Jt jt Satisfaction Guaranteed ZalT A Postul Curd Receives Prompt Attention J. Representative You will find J LOUIS UELHLS j Reliable Wutcb Maker I at Kremer's Drug Store. j Watch and Clock Impairing a Specialty j N. DeLAMLTER ! iu: Aim is j GROCERIES, FLOUR, FEEDj With Every V20 Cash Purchase of Groceries You Are Given a Handsome, Life-Size Crayon or Water-Color Portrait Thumb No. 80 Eisman & I.urns liros. Frtsli and Salt Meats 4 i i 4 4 4 Kih on Fridays Poultry on Sa'.uidayi, The popular barber shop Get your tonsorial work done at IRA TOMPKINS' .On Sixth Street Three chairs Hath room in connection Caihoun Grocery Co. Tux Poeina Gkocxhs FRESH V ICO E TABLES and FRUITS-,, 'Phoxx 14 sVvWwvVVvvWvv OF. GRANTS PASS Josephine County Map. Tlie official map of Josephine county ran bo had at I ho Coikikh ollice at re duced pricta. Folding pocket map, I; wall maps in colon, $3.50 Call and get one. An Observation Car. Ot unique deeijn, will always be found at the end of the Northern Pacific's North Coast Limited, both east and west hound. Observation platform is six and a half feet long anil entire width of car. Ladies' observation potior ie :'3 feet long A. I). Charlton, Asa't Gou'l Paas. Ag't, 255 Morrison Bi., Cor. 3d, l'ortland, Oro P. H. HARTH A. SON CLOTHING, SHOES, FUR NISHING GOODS, HATS TRUNKS AND VALISES Willis Kramer M AS! FACTI IlUR OK Myrtle Creek Kxtra Tamil Flour And Everything Hint goes with Class Milling. First- For sale by Chii.es. Dki.kmater, Wapk, Pikk and Cornku.. fall for it; sniue -price as other brands' Cxrants Pass Business Firms. J.M.CHILHS GROCERIES HARDWARE TA1JLEWARE Fine Duttcr a Specialty FRONT and FOURTH STS. White House Grocery Stam.k and Fancv GliOCERIKS thk iiim of hkhwiiimi at au. timks .. Tmonb CLAl'S SCHMIDT i STAPLE GROCERIES , CANNED GOODS i FLOCK and FEED; fixTii St., oi l'. Cirv IIai 1. OVSTERS Every Day and Night it E. W. I) LAKES Nut lo foe's. ) local tbappcninosj Bicycle hospital for all repairing a Cramer Bros. Geo. Hitler and family have moved In town from the saw mill at Draper Extra Operator Strickler is night operator at the depot until the return of Agent Jester. Ten Cents will puichasea bundle of old papers at this office come handy in underlying carpets. C. B. governs of Ashland was taken to the aiylro at Salem last week by Sheriff Ornie and Tom Reed. Soverns was four. J to be dangerously insane. Mr. and Vrs, Geo. Estegof Roseburg were on lost Thursday's passenger ernonte to St. Louis. Mr. Estes goes to attend the meeting of the Order of Rail road Telegraphers. E. L. Mnsick of Crescent City was in town Monday, having made the trip on his wheel, lie has spent apaitoflbe summer wheeling in California and report having had some oleasant trips. Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Jester left for St. Louis Thursday, Mr. Jester being a delexale to the convention of the Order of Railroad Telegraphers which meets next we.ik. Mrs. Jester accompanied him. R.ilph RUcr was 111 town Monday on his way to his home at Crescent City , Ralph liad Intended to enlist in Uncle Sacu's seivice will; the boys who went from this place but a .elephone message from bis parents put a stop to pro ceedings. Warranty Deeds. Quit-Claim Deeds. Notices of Quartz Location. And nil other blank forms on sale at the Coi uier. A new supply just fresh from the presets. At lied Time, t take a pleasant herb drink, the next morning 1 feel bright and my complex ion is better. My doctor rays it acts gently on my stomach, liver and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative.. It is made (rem herbs and is prepared as easily as tea. It is called Lane's Medicine, All druggists sell it at 75 cts. Lane's Fami ly Medicine moves the bowels each day. If on cannot get' it, send fur a free sam ple. Address, Orator F. Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y. The Unc that Had no Turning. Sinre adventuring into Egypt in quest of the raw material of w hich fiction is made, Mr. Gilbert Parker's Canadian fields have been lying fallow, lie re turns to them, however, with new vigor, and even fuller power; and the serial w hich he has just completed finds him at the highest dramatic level to which he has yet attained. The Lane that Had no Turning is remarkable fnr itl honest strength, thorough originality, anil absorbing interest. The scene of the story is Pontiac (whither Valinoud came), and the period the middle fifties. The lead ing charae'ers are Madelinette, a famous sinner, an) her husband, Seignior of Pontine, for whom she dates all and risks all. The story gains interest as it progresses and concludes w ith a striking and wholly unexpected finale. The " Line that Had no Turning " V'gun in The Siturday Evening Post for September 2U, and run through five numbers. Hall Itliruiu Cured. Dr. Darrin Dear Sir: It is with great pleasure and a thankful heart I wish to inform you that 1 am cured of salt rheum, which I have suffered with lor 25 years, at times so bad that mv lands would crack to the bone, and my body was also affected. I bave no words that can express my thankfulness to you. Mrs. E. Sherretts, of Vancouver, Wash., has known my condition, and can be rellerred to. Refer to me at Gardiner, Or. Mhh. Martha Daily. R. O. McCrokcy, Dry Good. Slim, I.adic('itptaiid Jack-t-L, Iridic' and Gents' Furnishing Imkhi, Hals, Miners' Good, Trunks and Talipes. Crants Pass Greatest Store. SWEETLAM) & CO. FRESH and SALT MEATS.o . TllO.NB 21 ...E. C. DIXON... I)RY GOODS, CLOTHING j Ladies' and Gents' SHOES KVKKYTIIIKU IN SrVLK II. II. HARTON, WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. Full airlineTit ofW.itcli.i, flock, Sil verwear and Jewelry. A Go, Airtnw-nl of Hrafvieu, and j Heart Bungles, ' Clemens' Drug Store. i j T. F. CROXTON, I Dealer in I GROCERIES. DRIED FRF ITS, FLOUR AND FEED. i Front Btreet. "L VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVllrVv5a OUR PARIS EXPOSITION LETTER The Art Galleries at the Exposition Paintlnjt and Sculpture of all Age and Countries (From Our Regular Corresioudent) Paris, September 10, 1900. For those who are interested in art, the Paris exposition offers a formidable collection ot specimens. There are assembled here, as in a gigantic encyclo pedia, all the materials serving in the history of art in the past, making its development by stages, and showing in the present by means of a comparison between the displays of all races, the dominant thoughts, the modes of ex presMon, and the progress achieved. It is true that these materials are scattered throughout the exposition. In the grand palace of fine artB, one ran with a single glance embrace the simultaneous effort of nations in what was formeily called the noble arts; one can recognize what each people has achieved in paint ing and sculpture in the last ten years, but the conclusions to be drawn from this examination aru incomplete. One ttrust go to the Hotel des Invalides, and from there to the Cham de Mars, and study the collections according to classes, in order to obtain the necessary data as to the present development of ai t and as to the forms it has taken. The fine aits, so called, show only one sulci of the artiMlc temperment of a nation. Its natiiia! tendencies, its taste are shown as well, or even better, in the special character it gives its work, in the products of its most humble in dustries as well as in its creation of articles of luxury, in its decoration for interiors, in the forms given to furniture, in the selectiou of colors, in the arrange ment of designs for carpels, for hanging, for goldsmith's work, for crockery, for toys. These represent a country much more fully than the fine arts themselves, which often receive their models from foreign countries, are stjbject to in fluences and obey fashions in actual con tradiction with the genius of their race. Besides, these are usuallv produced for the richer classes alone, while the applied arts, exploited for tho benefit of the masses, receive inspiration from them and are modeled in accord with their taste. Much better than painting or sculpture do they show the instinct and the artistic capacity of a people. In this connection, the artistic develop ment of Germany is especially interest ing. With all the wonderlul progress made by the country since the founda tion of I he empire in 1HT0, art has re mained more or less stationary. There remain a number of petty states, princi palities, grand duchies, toy kingdoms, which have kept set ii ions importance, among other linos, by the maintenance of local schools of art and universities. The latter have been forced to adapt themselves to modern conditions and methods of education ; but the schools of art, located for more than a century in the same cities, remote from in dustrial or commercial centers, have continued to seek models in tho past and to avoid contact will) the life of the present day. Add to this lak of a common source of education auj to the snperanuated instruction given, the dillerences in races and temperaments of the German ueople from the positive, realistic German of the north to the expansive, sentimental German of the south, in fluenced by the tasies of the neighbor ing Italy and the reason for the lack of homogenous art in the country will be seen. Among the representatives of the northern school only two are worthy of mention, Werner and Vogel. The pictures of the first are noted for the exactitude of the physiognomies de picted. Vogel knows how to use color, and his work has maiks of distinction; but there is a decided monotony. Lieberinann is of quite different type. During his long stay in Holland he gained the ability to givean atmospheric quality tj bis pictures. He gives us views of fisherman and laborers eminged in thsir dreary occupation under the grey sky of Xeetand; all refrechingly true and lacking in any attempt at drsniatic effect. The "genre" picture, as shown by Defiegger, in Bavaria, appears frequent ly. The principle on which it rests, ahiih consistsin a study of types studied eparate'y and aihitrarily united and grouped, is wi'liotit aulhoiity. There are some notable exceptions to this class among the Germans. William Liable siicceds in producing studies of colors ami lights in which figures play a part, tint do not predominate. One of hit pictures in the Grand Palace represents a man seated before a window. The curtains a. e raised land the light fal's full on his face. The atmospheric elfec is peifect, and one sees the hand of the true artist in every detail. Gotthard Kuehl goes a step further in this direc lion by inakiiik the human figure a mere accetsory on his canvas. Ilaeicells In darkened Intel iors, in which a ray of light is multiplied in dancing reflections on wah and flxir He has exhibited view of the inside of a church, in this style, that is a work of the fiMt rank. Ilerr l.'hde. of Diesden, ainti religiuu it jecta with much feeling. lie takes his types from the luswa, hut chooses the models that be thinks so old best or contisit best with the figure of Christ. II? clothes them iu rags that might be of any age. They resemble the camel's hair rob-s of the Bedouins, which might well have len worn liy trie com pan ions ofJeu;bul they are also not unlike lb torn garments with which lbs oor of today covei themselves. In Ins ex ecution, I'bde has returned to Remhran tuque ideas, shroudirw In shade ad nn necessary details, concentratii;gtiie light I on Ihs faro of Chiiat. Above all, be breathes into his canvas that motive ol rharity and pur, u tiering .,i,, Hist of the evangelists bnt partaking of their depth and aidor, that liuptrea the world today. Max Kliuger, of 1-eipiig, has also the ambition to represent religious subjects, lie seems to have one of the most vigor ous temperaments that has appeared in Germany in twenty years, but ha does not find his best form of expression in painting. His engravings derive their power from the very qualities that injure bis canvas originality ot design, rough ness of style, strength of execution. In the completed picture, the attitudes are convulsive, tho types hideous, the color ing atrocious. It is impossible to give an idea ol tho vulgarity of his Christ, or of the glaring effects he produces. .e THE CENTER OF THE EYE. Should conic directly in the center of the lens sometimes not always. Whether your eye should look through upper, lower, inner or outer part of the lens is immaterial to you, but that you should look through the right part is of the utmost importance. A know lege of tho eye that will enable us to place the lens projierly is what we offer you. Tho wrong glass wrongly placed will injure your eye, the right one rightly adjusted will strengthen It. Dr. Darrin is prepared to fit glasses to any eye. Those w ho have not been for tuntite to consult tho Dr. before now, w ill have until November 11, to do so. Dr. Darrin not only tests to fit glasses but treats all curable diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat, as well as all chronic, acute and diseases of a private nature, sud can be consulted free at the Josephine Hotel. Fables of Hie Itall.-Xlll. A minister wai going to a city oue day to accept a new charge, but the train was very much delayed and the minister lost his temper and swore softly'under his breath. Now it happened that one of the new congregation was an absent treatment doctor and with his telescopic mind he read the preacher's thoughts and immediately imparted the infor mation to the rest of the congregation so that when tho minister arrived he was given the marble heart, at which he left the town in high dudgeon. Moral He should have left the town in a North-Western Line train. Any way he ought nut to have taken the town with him. Oregon Mining Stock Exchange. We present to our readers and those inteies'.ed in mines and their develop ment the following letter: Pohti.and, Ore., Sept. 27, 11KM. Rofll'K Rivkb Coi'Hikh: - Gknti.kmkn Your paper is received regularly and read by the visitors in the parlors of the Oregon Mining Stock Exchange. Having passed through our first three months of activity and experiment, we are settled down to solid business and are In a position to assist those interested In mining in the various mining sections of Oregon iu creating a market for stocks and bring ing money to develop the meritorious prospects. The Exchanue is not necess arily for the booming of big mines but simply an eniouragur of mining in a general way, and will manage so as lo give every square mining proposition, a fair show. Some of our brokers have sought other fields foi their labor, as is always the case In exchanges and is impossible to suit all notions of every body, all of the lime. Iu the place of those having gone, new brokers are coin ing. The directory of the exchange is to be strengthened by the addition of some of the best known businessmen in Oregon. At our daily calls at 10-30 A. M. there are many visitors, the at tendance increasing each week. We hope for your continued encouragement and good wishes and will assist in put- ling before the public the claims of your section to our utmost, in co operating with you, in the motto, "Oregon the first mining slate." I am very truly yours, F. J. IIahi), Secretary, TheOiegon Mining Stock Exchange Farmer Thrifty eot the idea that if he could keep a horse without the cost of Iceoing. it would lie a great economy, so he reduced the horse s food a little every day. I'ufortunate ly juntas the experiment promised to succeed, the liorse lunl down ami died. Farmer Hurd- seusesays Fanner Thrifty was a fool. Hut there are eople as much worse than old Thrifty as it is more foolish to work vour own bony unoer starvation conditions, than your borse's. Hut every fanner has plenty to eat. Yea, but It isn't what is eaten. It la what nourish ment is otitaiucd from food that decides the miestion of starvation. It wouldn't do trie farmer any good to run a stack of wbeet ihnjugh a thrashing machine which was so out of gear that it didn't pet the grain out of one head of wheat in fifty. That's just the way with the dis ordered stomach. It doesn't get tlx enrol out ot the tone) tlutt is eaten. There ia no medicine will so ouicklv act 011 the organs of digestion ana nutri tion, and put the stomach in perfect working order, as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It make pur tdood, and rich blood, and puts Uie body on a plane of perfect health. "ImrTrrt't A sis Tears wilh rntiatjnaftoa and to'titrrsluin. riitnnf which dm I mplTd phf McattS. hut they could VA rvach my caw." wrltra Mr. f. p.wUwctl. of Huraka kprtnira, Carroll Co, A kinal. "I fell there waa no h'lp for mv. Two yars afro 1 mmfliwH tak ing lr Pirrcr'a Itotdm Mrdwal IMacvycry sud llttl - I'rtUrU.' and Improved from Ike atari. I Ml nam In guorl health." Dr. Pierre's Pleasant Pellet keep the bowels healthy. v 1 A,. V Washington trf-ller. (From Oiir Regular Correspondent, Wasiiinuton, Sep. 24, 1'jOO. ' Uncle Sam ha decided to play a lone hand during the remainder of the Chinese game, and baa so I in formed those who were hit partners In the early stage et the game. The division of the power as to what ought to be done made the outlook lor trouble in China so threatening, that this govern ment concluded to take no chances of being drawn into a war either against China or any ot the allied towers, and diplomatic terms informed the powers that the U. 8. Minister at Pe kin had been directed to arrange the preliminaries for opening negotiation with Li Hung Chang and the other peace envoy ol the Chinese govern ment. And he farther accentuated the intention of this government to act alone by announcing that excepting a strong guard for the American legation, it would order all American troop out of China at once. What effect if any, this will have upon the plans of the other powers in China, ia at yet problematical, but the impression in ft ashington is general that this govern ment was wise in taking advantage of iu first opportunity to honorably with draw from the alliance. The guard (or the American legation will be a strong ona ol about Si,0p0, men, artillery cavalry and infantry, and will not lie subjected lo the orders of Count Waldor see, commander iu chief of the allied army. The troops withdrawn from China will be sent to the Philippines, where the renewed activity of the Insurgent make them needed. In fact, the need lor soldiers In the Philippines, t be lieved to have been a (actor in causing the administration to decide to hurry up the withdrawal of the American troop from Chin. There will be no delay, as Uen. Chaffee waa ordered nearly a month ago to hold himself in readiness to withdraw at any time. Recent news from Cuba has not been pleasing to those American who are sincerely desirous of leasing the island governed by the Cuban at an early day, and the prediction ia freely made that the programme provided for the with drawal ol our military authority next year will not be carried out. It is the result of the constitutional elections that ha caused this uneasiness as to Cuba' immediate future; Unless those who ought to know are mistaken, a majority ol the delegate elected to the conistitutional convention repersent the worst elemonts on the island, and there is no probability that they will formu late a constitution that will provide for a staple government or be accepted by our congress, to which it must be sub mittod when complete. Officials will not discuss the matter, laying that the constitution will speak (or itsell when finished, and the only duty of the presi. dent in connection therewith will be to transmit it to congress. Private letters received In Washington say there is much alarm felt among that class of Cubans who are not seeking personal profit out ol the government ol the island. They are afraid that congress may accept the constitution that will be prepared by tlie convention, and will lake slop to Inform congress and the people of this country ol the true character of the majority ol the men who will be members of that con vention. General Fitxhugh Leo. who is in Washington on leave ol absence, said of the coming constitutional convention in Cuba: "Everything in connection with it is problematical and experimen tal. If the Cuban can frame a consti tution and prove their ability to govern ihemselres, so well and o good, but il they can't do this (or themselves, well, then somebody will have lo do it (or them." HeuatorMurgan, of Alabama, although politically oposed to the administra tion, highly commend its Chinese policy, which he declares to be con servative. He thinks it calculated to remove danger ol our becoming in volved In a common war ol the powers against China, ol which he says : "The United States cannot afford to run the risk of accepting the fruits ol sutb a war, whether succesilul or unsuccessful We cannot become Involved with the European powers, i hs American policy is scperate and distinct from the policy ol other governments. It is abuvi board and open. Our ends and om aims are not identical with lleise ol any other country. We cannot afford to all) ourselve with any of them. We may co-operate with one or all of them, but we do not need to agree with Hihiii." Prof. J. W. Jenka, who has been In Europe lor three month making an in vestigation f trust for the informatloi of the United States Industrial cum mission, ha submitted a preliminary leport. He found that Germany led in the number ol trusts in Europe, the courts of that country having upheld contract with them in decisions, and that they flourish in England and Austria and ere beginning to make headway in France. In both Auslri snd Germany, banks are active in the promotion ol trusts and frequently con Irol them. He learned in Gurmaui that they at trying to form an inter national trust in certain line of iron manufacture, to include German, Eiik glish and American manulactorles similar to ssversi now in existent i which embrace German and Itelgisn concerns. An exchange wants to know wl at be come of the lAJ.UtjO.OOO.wortb of chew ing gum that ia sold in the United htaitr every year. That's easy enough. Ju I feel around tinder the chairs and tufa and ben, lies and you'll find it. Wood wanted on subscription at tin Coi'rikr office. SPEIAIi NOTICE ! We have completed arrangements whereby we can show you the very latest in VELVET. MOQUET and BRUS ' SELS CARPETS and from headquarters the largest in the Uuited States. fn v-rr4- n A beautiful new line from ascents per yard tip oarpets-- to $1.20. - Mattings Choice new goods Imports. T-h ! T?N f Vlo. I xxocKers gance a .1 r ri T.1... .: uiuiuti. 1 1cu.11 11 v; urite.i. . TUToH T3onntc SOME EXCEPTIONAL VALUES. TV till HiOliJ" We Lace Curtains arc going fast, G5c to $4.75 per pair. correct things for just noiv " others like them, so will you" FUKNirURE.. FlVTL'R WOI'I.OINOH LC CURTAINS COTS UNOLKI'MH MATTHKSHK8 MATTINUS Ml SHOW ...CARPETS . Dr. Darrln'a Place of Business. Dr. Darrin gives free consultation at Hotel Josephine, Grant Pas, from 10 to (I and 7 to 8 daily. All curable chronic, acute and private disease confidentially and successfully treated. Circulars and question blanks sent tree to any address, and correspondence solicited. Most cases can receive home treatment after one visit lo the doctor's ollice. liatteries and bells furnished with full directions for their use. Hupture, tumors, varico cele, hydrocele and stricture cured In every case. Disease ol women an Impor tant specialty, such a woekuees, die placements, ulceration, painful. Irregular and suppressed menstruation, quickly relieved, The poor treated tree, except medicines, from 10 to 11 daily. Those able lo pay treated for half former prices for another month. "What' Tlie Time,'' ' A booklet with this title, just pub lished by lha Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul Rillway, shoild not only bo in the hands ol every traveler, but should have a p1ac on the desk of every hanker, merchant or olhnr busi ness man. The lour "Time Standard" which govern our entire timo system and which are more less familiar to most of the traveling public, but by many others little understood, are so fully explained and illustrated by a series of charts, diagrams and table that any one who chooses can become conversaut with the subject In question. There are also some twenty-lour tables by which al most at a glance, the time at any place being given, the hour and day can be ascertained in alt the principal cities of the world, , A copy ol tlii pamphlet may he had on application to Geo. II. Heafford, (ieneral Passenger Agent, Chicago, enclosing two-cent stampto pay postage. C. J. Eiiiiy, General Agent. A Minister s Mistake. A city minister waa recently handed a notice to be read (rum his pulpit. Ac companying it was a clipping from a newapaer hearing upon the matter. The clergyman started lo read the ex tract and loun I that it began: "Take Kemp's lialsam, the best Cough Cure." Hilt was hardly what he bad expected and, after a moment's hesitation, he turned it over, and found on the other side the matter intended I 'r tho reading. Pure No inferior or impure ingredients are used in Royal for the purpose of cheapen ing its cost; only the most highly refined' and healthful. Royal Baking Powder imparts that peculiar sweetness, flavor and delicacy noticed in the finest cake, biscuit, rolls, etc., which expert pastry cooks declare is unobtainable by the use of any other leavening agent. 'OYAk SAKIHO rowOCH C0 - the Cream of this Fall's Shades - Jvindow shRdM from to cents nn. r- have a few lines just a lew we re closing out. Three to rive rolls of a kind, 10 cents per double roll and upwards. Here's a chance to paper that little room you've wanted to fix up for so long for little money. ..WALL PAPKB.. dBANITSWABa WOOI1BNWABE AUATSWAS ', OLASSWARB TINWABB Laura ClITLIBT .. CHOCK F.HY... Prlvst Words Tot Women. 1 he eminent and successful electro magnetic physiciau, Dr. Darrin, ha dis covered and protected a system ol treat ment that ha caused a revolution In the treatment of female disease. Wherever their treatment is tested and known it ha done away with all dosing with nauseous drugs and surgical opera tions whoreby so many precious live have been lost. ' A a discovery, It rank with Harvey's discovery of the circulation ol the blood. It ha proved in more than a thousand case ol the wont kind to be a positive cure lor the following female disease: Ovarian tumors, polypus ulceration and dropsy of tlie womb, inflsmatlon, congestion and (ailing ol the womb, Itucurroea, painful and ' suppressed menstruation, flooding, frequent urina tion, bearing down pain, backache, headache, hacking cough, melancholy, absence of ambition or desire to live, or, in fict, any complaint having its origin In a ' disordered state of the generative and accompanying organ, whether from contagious disease, hereditary, accident, tight-lacing, mis carriage or other cause. Their method ol treatment Is harm less, pleasant and mild. It I applied directly to the womb without the use of Instruments; can be applied by the patient themselves, thus securing correct ' local treatment at home, and Hi application is easy and simple. It curative action on the inflamed, congested and ulcerated parts is immediate. Dr. Darrin refrains from making public the name of hundreds of ladies who have been restored to. health with due deference to the delicacy ot their slllicltlons. Dr. Darrin can be consulted (re at the Hotel Josephine, Grant Pas. Hours 10 to 5 and 7 to 8 dally. The uoor Irco, except medicine. The cure of seminal weakness, lost manhood, varicocele, hydrocele, gonorrhea, typhi lia and strict ur a ipecialty, a well a all chronic disease. Ilatleiie and bolts furnished il necessary. Eye tested and glasses fitted. Oesfnei Cured In 10 Mlnulss. Mr. Editor: I wisn to stat-.i through yonr columns that Dr. Darrin, cured me of deafness iu 10 minutes. Kefer any oue to me at 423 Clay Street, Portland. Hinry M. Wiujams. Alam Is and In making chrap baking powtlsts. If you want lo know lha JI ol alum Ik Under llniass ol th atoauih, touck a pan la your totuju. Yon can ralM biscuit witk alaas bakiuf iwwdcr, but si what a cost la kualik I 100 WILUAM ST NtW YORK.