AS A WORKING- TOOL for the student and the writer, as an authoritative reference book for schools, teachers, families, business and professional men, there Is one book which offers superior advan tages in the solid value of its in formation, and the ease with which it is obtained. One's admiration for Webster's International Dictionary increases daily as it comes to be better known. It never refuses the in formation sought and it never over whelms one with a mass of misin formation illogical arranged. Tfce fit. Jama Owwtta of London, garland, sari : Kor the tmohar, the pupil, the student and the litterateur, tbere I nothing better I it covers ererthiiif . The New end Enlarged Edition recently issued hu 26.UU0 new words, a revised Hio irraphlcal Dictionary and a revised (lanrt teer ot the World, S.iHO pares and 6UO0 UliuiraUons. It ha Just reoulved THE GRAND PRIZE (Highest Award) at the World'! Fair. St. Luuia. Our name la on theoopyrtirht paae of all utuentio Webster's diutiouariea, . f R E E-"A Test In Pronunciation," In- truciivu ana I'tiiwiaiiiing fur the whole family, Also llluiltrated pamphlet, Q.&C.MERRIAMCO, e-ueuSMim, 8prinofield, Mass;' Sallowness Transformed to Dusky Beauty A dark ikin become fascinating when delicately soft, undenpread with the radiant glow which indi cated healthy, active akin. Robert- as 9 mi accps we sua renned in quality, keepi pore freefrorn clogging warte and stimulates the tiny capilUriei to contribute the color which charm in blonde sad brunette alike. Robcrt in i eertata protection against tan, unburn and freckle if applied be fore eipoeura to rua or wind. Spread like an imperceptible iheen I gauee over skin surface, forming a skaeM MiaNbttini and preferring a .nrnraie, lustrous neaut y. TOD4T "iROBERTINE EXCHANGE FEED STABLES J. R. WELLS, Prop. E. street between 5th and 6th Large and safe Wagon Yard con venient for hitching Ilorces Bought and Soi l Second hand rigs for sale CARBOLEUM The. Baal Known Dip for Sheep, Ctttle, Swine &rd all Livestock. Non-lntirloie and Non-Polaonoua Ilcst known renaily for Mange or Itch, Scab, Lice, Ticks on Sheep, Fleas, Hen Lice, Hog Cholera, Galls, Sores and Wounds, Thrush, Groase Heel and Scratches, Tape Worms, Ring Worms, Screw Worms. Flits or Maggots, Castra tions. Also disinfecting stables, outhouses, pens, tc. APWtKSS i -v. iii:itoi: MERLIN. OREGON. 4W MEDFORD VS. PORTLAND Team of Pacific Coast Leaiue At Medford, Wednesday, September 4th Game Called at 2 p. m. .At.iitiMxio!., iir. ami Oo TernoU tl,0 lirants Pass Kid will pitch for lVrtlain! ROBBERS STEAL UIGGKST PLOT FOR ROBBING MAILS EVER DISCOVERED IN ALASKA. Back Containing $45,000 in Gold Dust Disappears, Doing Third I'ouch Stolen in Month. Seattle, Wash., Aug. 23. What ts believed to be the biggest plot for robbing the United States malls ever discovered Is now In operation in Alaska. Only yesterday word was received from the coast that the third pouch mlsBlng in a month has been reported at Skagway. The sack contained $45,000 in gold dust, addressed to Seattle banks. Post ofMce Inspectors who are already in the north working on two former robberies have taken up the latest loss. It is almost certain the sacks were stolen In transit on the Yukon river boats between this point and Dawsqn. Several men are under suspicion, but no arrests have been made. Ever slnoe the gold dust shippers decided to use the malls for send ing out the metal Instead of patron izing tRe express companies because of the Increased tariff this trouble has existed. It necessitates the em ployment of guards by the Govern ment to watch each gold shipment. As they have been practically un guarded up to date the robberies were easy, and it is believed the thefts have resulted from the system atic operations of bandits working with well-laid plans. Will Experiment in Growing Rice. Grldley. Cal., Aug. 23. An ex periment In rice growing on a large scale Is to be made near Grldley, in Butte county, during the coming sea son. According to the present plans, (00 acres will be planted on a tract which has been pronounoed by ex perts to be well adapted to the cul ture ot rice. George K. Aokl, a Japanese merchant of San Francisco, who Is one of the leaders ot the ex periment, has made a study of the matter for some years, and he be lieves that a new and profitable In dustry can be built up In California. Mice requires a rich soil, irom a font to '" dann, -lth a hard , OVERTAXED Hundred of Grant Pa Read er Know What It Mean. The kidneys are overtaxed; have too ma eh to do. They tell about it in mauy aches andpains backache, sidoache. lu-ailacliH. Early symptoms of kidney Ills. Urinary troubles, riiah!, Oright's dUoane follow. K. K. Gillian, proprietor of livery and feed stable, at tta Ferry 8t , and ltv liiK at a:ia Water St., Salem. Ore., says: "Vern of alimwt oonalaut driv ing and a tall 1 got several year auo which wrenched my back badly had tended to hnrt my kidueys which I felt iu severe backache au'd laninew so that at tiuns I coold hardly fttrsighteu up. Sharp pains caught nm when I arose after sitting. None of the remedies I tried did me anv good out II a short limn ago I was In duced to get Doan'a Kidney Pill at a drug store, lu a short time I obtained more relief from the backache and disordered condition of the kidney than 1 Imd for years. 1 know of neighbor who have also nsed yoor remedy and they nil speak of it a the lnHt kidney medicine there Is and I lielieve this to bo so." For sale by all dralets. Price M cents. Koster Milburu Co.. HutTuhv. New Ynrlr solo agents for the United States.' itemcinner me uaiue Doaus aud take uo other. pan underneatj which will retain the ..aier. iuo: coiidiilon are found In this section and there Is also an unlimited supply ot water for Irriga tion. Oregon Hailstorm Devastates Farms. Pendleton, Ore., Aug. 26. The hardest hailstorm that ever occurred in Oregon came yesterday. The cloudburst visited two different sec tions of Umatilla county almost sim ultaneously, causing thousands of dollars damage. Hundreds of acres of wheat and alfalfa were ruined Bridges, farm machinery, outhouses and some livestock suffered. The hailstorm struck the wheat belt about fifteen miles east of Pendle ton, swept northward a distance of more than ten miles, covering a sec tlon three-quarters of a mile wide. Hall fell to the depth of from three to four N Inches. The other cloud burst visited the head of West Birch creek, several miles south of Pilot Rocks and washed away several bridges. To Save Redwood Grove. Guernevllle, Aug. 26. Permanent organization of a club for the pur pose of saving from the woodsmen's ax the magnificent Armstrong grove of redwoods has been effected at Guernevllle. It Is likely that the grove will be sold for the purpose of the lumber the trees will furnUh, while the people of Guernevllle and the entire county and section of the State are desirous or having the trees preserved. A committee has been named to take the matter in hand. The grove was the property of the late Colonel Armstrong and at one time he was willing to make the trees a gift to the State, but the offer was not ac cepted. Miss Vandcrbilt Ha (10,000,000. New Tork, Aug. 22. Miss Gladys M. Vanderbllt, daughter of the late Cornelius Vanderbllt, will come into full control of the fortune lefl tn trust for her at the end of the pres ent month, and will then be one of the richest young women in the country. The direct in?rltance of $7,000,000 leftTier has, by success ful manipulation, now grown to over ft, 000,000. In addition Miss Van derbllt will secure over $2,v00,000 from the estate of her mother. This, at the most conservative estimate, will bring Miss Vanderbllt's total for tune to 110,000,000. HIS NECK WAS BROKEN WHILE EXTRACTING A TOOTH A DENTIST BREAKS MAN'S KECK INSTEAD. Chicago, Aug. 28. George Davis, 38 years old, died in the county hos pital as a result of a broken neck caused by the extraction of a tooth. According to Dr. A. B. Eustace, Davis entered ths hospital a day or so ago and was supposed to bo suffer ing from paralysis of the right arm. While Dr. Eustace was making an examination Davis complained of se vere pains In tho neck. Further In spection showed that the man's neck was broken. "He told me hu had visited a dent ist about two weeks ago to have a tooth extracted," said Dr. Eustace. "The dentist was forced to jerk at the tooth several times before he succeeded In removing It. At that time Davis said he felt no pala In the neck. Sunday he lost the use of his right arm and felt a slight pain iu his spine. I tried to learn the nam-; of the dentist, but he could not re member It." Coroner's Physician Hunter con ducted a pot mortem examination and ascribed death to a tiroken neck. The police are endeavoring to leuru the name of the dentist. Sanaa xssa $1.35 Hound triP f,oni Grants There will also be a panic on Sunday,' Sept. 1, between Modf.-rd and tho O. H. N. team of Portland. : GETTING REM H1R TH E VOYAGE DETAILS OF MOVEMENT OF THE BATTLESHIPS ARE NOW NEARLY COMPLETED. Big Fleet Will Reach the Pacific in 108, and Will Stop at Magda len for Target Practice. Washington, Aug. 28. Details of the movement of the great battleship fleet around the South American con tinent are being systematically de veloped aboard Admiral Evans' flag ship Connecticut and at the Navy Department, where, by the Presi dent's orders, various bureaus' are now authorized to execute plans for the fleet movement. It Is settled that the battleships, or at least a number of them, will go to Puget Sound. The number will be deter mined by the capacity ot the Sound to accommodate them. The battle ships will carry only 120 fathoms of anchor Chain, and most of the water there Is more than sixty fathoms deep, so, as safe practice requires chains to be not less than three times the depth of water, only a few vessels can be accommodated near Bremerton at once. The details of the cruise will he left to Admiral Evans and the details ot preparation to bureau chiefs. The precise-date of departure la not fixed because no officer Is willing to forego target practice, although this makes necessary a certain amount ot re pairs to the ships. Also a number of turret changes will probably have to be made as a result of the antici pated report of the board of Investi gation on the accident on the battle ship Georgia and Inspecting turret of the various ships. However, it has been determined that all will be in readiness to start on December 1st, and that between that date and December IS the start will be made, the fleet steaming ten knots, which is the most economical speed so as to enable the colliers to keep up with the warships. Starting with full bunkers, shlpa en route will require 100, S04 addi tional tons of coal. Where possible, American coal will be UBed, but much foreign coal will have to be bought. Magdalena Bay, according to rough plans, will be reached about March 9, but the Itinerary at this point gives ten days additional for target practice, which will continue for about a month. Some of the battleships will go to Puget Sound and others to San Francisco. Nothing has been set tled about the return of the fleet and probably will not be until within two months in advance of the actual return. Must Maintain Great Fleet on Pacific. New York, Aug. 2 8. Congress man Roberts of Massachusetts, who, with other members of the naval committee Investigating the needs of the Brooklyn navy yard, said the trip of the battleships via the Straits of Magellan Is for tactical reasons alone. He said: "We all believe the Suez route Is the easier and cheaper, but going by hard route will determine some of our needs In the Pacific, particularly in the matter of coaling stations alons the mainland. I have not the slightest doubt that n million dollars will be used up by taking the Pncillc route, but If .rmval tacticians wlsn to determine certain things now Is the time." Representative Foss, chairman of tho committee, said the committee will probably ask Congress to au thorize four more battleships, and added: "We may as well make up our minds now that It Is necessary to maintain a large fleet In the Pacific. Our Interests are too great on that coast to do otherwise." Infernal Machine Sent to Cortelyoa. Philadelphia, Aug. 2 8 An Infernal machine gent through the mails to Secretary of the Treasury Georg) Ti. Cortelyou partially exploded in the Nlcetown sub-postofflee last evening while a clerk was postmarking the stamps. He was severely burned by the explosion. Had the packigo been opent.t in the hands of the Sec retary both he and his associates would have been blown to atoms. The bomb was Inclosed In an of ficial card hoard package four Inches long by three and one-half Inches thick, and was brought into the Nice town station by a carrier who had gathered It on his route. J"? work at Portend prices at the Courier office. Clean. Firm 7 - - j -wvii rirnw witrinnt, Trricfition. We save vnn v.. , . uivi'f . . . w. q . J w v uy Qfifl, ing with us direct, Leading varieties of apple, 4 to 6 ft., 10c each. Comic Rnse and Bartlett Dear $ 15 Der hundred. Standard -l ries $25 per 100. Standard peach, 1 year $16 per inn Seedling peaches, 4 to 6 ft, $25 per 1000. Twelve large i year old flowering shrubs $1.. Roses 20c each our selection SOUTHERN OREGON NURSERIES, Oakland, Oregon TREES! BUY YOUR "Old Reliable Albany Nurseries" and you are sure of gettidg just what you order. We grow our trees for quality not cheap pri ces. GEO. H. 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