The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942, August 14, 1908, Image 5

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    HelplHelpI
I'm Falling
Thus cried the hair. And a
kind neighbor came to the res
cue with a bottle of Ayer's
Hair Vigor. The hair was
saved ! In gratitude, it grew
long and heavy, and with all
the deep, rich color of early
life. Sold in all parts of the
world for sixty years.
" About on year aeo I lost nearly all of my
hair following an attack of measles. I was
advised by a friend to use Ayer's Hair Vigor.
1 did so, and as a remit I now hare a beautiful
he id of hair." HUM, W. J. BaowN. Menoni
one Falls, WU.
Uads by J. 0. Ayer Oo., Lowell, Mats, f
Also manuiaaturara of I
8ARSAPADJLU.
PILLS.
1
CUGBfir PECTC5AL.
Face.-
"Well," laid the customer, as he pain
the barber and moved toward the door,
"I feel like congratulating myself on get
ting safely out of a mighty bad scrape."
By placing himself promptly on the out
side of the barber shop he avoided get
tins himself into a mic'aty bad scrap.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the car. '1 her is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by constltn
tlonal remedies.. Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustacuian '1 ube. When this tuba is inflamed
r;
rou have a rumbling sound or linperf ict hear
nz. a id when it is entirelv closed. Doafnfts is
the resut, and unless the inflammation can be
taen out and this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever;
li ne cases out of tenjire caused by Catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condition oi
the mucous surfaces.
We will Rive One Hundred Dollars for an
caso of leafness (caused by catarrh) that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send foi
circulars, free. . . .
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
BoM bv Drupcists. 75c.
Taa Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Doesn't Always Follow.
Because some men get over a fence
safely with a loaded gun it is not al
ways safe to assume that they won't
examine a mule's heels to settle a bet
Washington Post . ...... . 1
THS DAISY
FLY KILUI
destrora all the
flies and affords
comfort to every
home in dining
room, sleeping
room and ever
place where flies
are troublesume.
Clean, neat and
will not soil oi
Inlura Btivthins.
k :"; v1a.l -. eft. J y
mKi
Try tham once and yon will never be without them,
U not kep' by aeft.rs, sent prepaid for 20o.
BABOLD HOMERS, lt DeKalt Avs Brooklya, X. T
l -4 . I i , , i i ' !
if
. I". If -' l'
.'(VI : A. i .srtaSj
St, Helen's Hall, Portland, Or.
Resident and Day School for Girls
Catalogue on Request
in
Food 1
Products
Libby's Ccoked
'.Corned -'Beef-'
There's a big dllfer
ence between just
corned beef the kind
sold in bulk and
Libby's Ccoked Corned
Beef. The difference
is in the taste, quality of
meat and natural flavor.
Every fiber of the
meat of Libby's Cooked
Corned Beef is evenly
and mildly cured,
coofeed scientifically
arid carefully packed in
Lilly's Great W'lilte Kiicbcn
It forms an appetiz
ing dish, rich in food
value and makes a sum
mer meal that satisfies.
for Qaick Serving :
Libby's Cooked Corn
ed Beef, cut into thin
slices. Arrange on a
platter and garnish with
Libby's Chow Chow.
A tempting dish for
luncheon,dinner,supper
Writ far frt
"book I I "flow)
to Mlu Good
n.... a. VaL
taiM
Likky'a wl
yaaiealate.
A
u Alters
a jrrr JL. -i i n m Mir cr
a, n ? r s mjr
Ltty. CMcay
STATE CONTROL OF WATER.
Paper Presented at Recent Meeting
of Oregon State Grange.
By John H. Lewis, State Engineer.
When we see the miracles wrought
by irrigat'on and think of the potential
energy of our streams as representing
thousands of acres of the most valuable
coal lands, it is no wonder that we
hesitate to-challenge the statement that
the water resources of Oregon are to
day its most valuable asset. Yet our
legislators have persistently refused to
enact laws governing the use and distri
bution of this valuable commodity.
Far-sighted eorporations are rapidly ac
quiring perpetual franchises to the use
of water for power development, with
out present or possible future compen
sation to the public, from whom the
privilege is acquired.
: Through the lack of a reliable record
of vested rights to the use of water,
the public has no means of ascertain
ing the location and amount of unap
propriated water which is available for
new uses. Large quantities of water
are being held without use through
I actual or threatened litigation, and the
intending investor or settler moves on
to more progressive states, where water
rights can be secured by application to
. the state officers, and when granted are
I protected, the same as other property
, riehts. The holder of. these question
able vested rights joins with the power
interests in opposing the enactment of
any law providing for public control
and making beneficial use the basis of
ights to the use of water.
How Water Is Appropriated.
Any person can acquire a water
rirVht bv simdv costinff a notice at the
1 proposed point of diversion, stating the
! amount of water claimed, the intended
. use, and recording a copy of the notice
: at the county court house. If the water
' 1. Via niAil tnr iirinrafinfl nurrtnaAA. A
certified copy of the notice must be
filed with the state engineer within 30
days thereafter. . It makes no differ
ence if the waters of the stream are
already fully utilized at points below,
The notice can specify any amount,
even though such amount exceed the
regular flow of the stream. It may be
impossible to use the water beneficially
for the purpose as claimed, but that
makes no difference so long as construc
tion is commenced within six months.
Tour title is ' then, complete, but the
reeord is not completed by the filing of
proof that -work has commenced. By
refiling every six months, a water right
oan be held without the performance of
any work until some legitimate investor
trys to secure control of the same water
right. - Then work must be commenced
and prosecuted with due diligence. Un
der this law one of our leading attor
neys has stated that a one-armed man
with a shovel, employed at the intake,
san bold a water right indefinitely.
Thus the legitimate investor must first
bay off the notice mam, wlo has sob
tributed nothing to the public welfare.
Even the payment of this blackmail
does not give him clear title to the
necessary water, for the apparent sup
ply may, perhaps, all be fully utilized
in the adjoining counties below, through
which the stream runs.
In the absence of state eontrol, the
nly way for this investor te even
guess at the amount of unappropriated
water is to first measure the stream,
and then travel down the same, meas
uring the maximum eapaeity of eaeh
ditch, to ascertain how much of this
water has already been appropriated.
If the stream is a hundred or more
miles In length, this task alone would
discourage the most enthusiastic in
vestor or settler. Then the records of
water filings, under our present laws,
must also be examined to ascertain how
many rights have been initiated which
may. ultimately become - vested and
prove prior in time to his right. No
tices claiming water, posted In thick
ets along the banks of a stream, can
not be found and are, therefore, of no
value to him. The county records are
of but little, if any more value, as the
recorded claims to water invariably ex
ceed many times the regular flow of
the stream. For example, the records
of Baker county show claims to the
waters of Powder river for irrigation
purposes amounting to over eighty
times the flood flow of this stream at
Baker City during 1905, and the 1,145
recorded claims for all purposes
amounted to over one hundred and
eighty times this flood flow. These
claims, therefore, eannot all be vested
rights, and it is impossible to ascertain
from the reeord which, if any, are valid,
or ultimately may become vested. Be
sides, many ditches have been built
and water diverted without any public
reeord whatever. In a separate record
will be found court deerees affecting
titles to the water of this same stream.
These decrees may divide the water
among a minority of claimants, without
My consideration whatever of the
rights of the public in the unappro
priated waters. The county reeord thus
serves only to eloud title to unappro
priated water and discourage invest
ments. The stream nnder consideration by
the investor may flow through or bor
der on two or more eounties where wa
ter titles are equally as complicated as
described for Baker eounty. To ab
stract the water records of the
Deschutes river would require a jour
ney of practically 1,000 miles, and the
examination of the worthless records
of five eounties.
Under the 19Q3 act, all filings for
irrigation purposes were to be recorded
in the state engineer's office at Salem,
but no penalty was provided to en
force this provision. Out of 138 filings
in Baker eounty under this act, only
five were reeorded at Salem. Thus
what was intended for a complete ree-
Ovoatlr Enjorcd It.
Borns (struggling author) That last
book of mine agreeably surprised you, did
it? I am glad to hear that.
Naggue (literary editor) Tes; I ex
pected te devote an entire evening to read
ing it It put me to sleep la five min
utes, ld fellow. -
. Umollolt4 Tribute.
"Aunt Letty," said her little nephew
from the city, "I saw a bearded lady ia
ti dime maseam once. She was a fake,
bat you're the reel thing."
ord is, therefore, of no value to the
public.
Resulting Litigation.
The conditions in California are
identical with those in Oregon. The
Commonwealth club has labored for
years to secure the enactment of mod-
em watap Tanra anil in Ilia nrnitAitrlincra -
of this club we find the statement that
the bar of Calitornia was delighted to
find in their primitive water laws such
a fruitful source of income, and did
nothing to remedy conditions. "The
iTiiiJar::Tothi: is
tunes of California, but these fortunes
are held exclusively by the attorneys or tnree canaie power, auu cousiaerauie
of record of the misguided individuals bent, and will burn for about three
who availed themselves of the privilege ours.
tX "A"' " reported that a student of th.
sued ditch "B" and upon the sworn Eleetro-Techiiicnl Institute of St. Pet
evidence introduced obtained a decree ersburg named Frendinberg has invent
giving it a priority of twenty cubic ed an apparatus for exploding mines
feet of water per second. Ditch "B" Dv wireless telegraphy. Numerous ex
sued ditch C" with the same result; periments already made are said to
Sh Z .amTrSt, 'lH !2 ed remarkably successful,
were still 25 ditches diverting water The apparatus is also claimed to be
from the same stream whose rights were
not determined.
Along the Walla Walla river in Ore
gon, litigation to secure a proper di
vision of the stream has been in prog
rest for about 30 years, without settling
a single issue,
eal of many
This experience is typi-,
other communities and
should serve to demonstrate the failure
of the present system of distributing
roceedin s if the brain' ev,dence of 'essenlng
PrTheerena?re approximately 200 ditches ' Power and actlvlty PPears wlth the
diverting water from this stream in a passage of years, he added the very in
distance of 10 miles, for the irrigation teresting statement that the line of
of some 5,000 acres. Nearly 500 per- present investigation demonstrates that
sons or eorporations have been made the electrical current through the
parties to the latest suit, and 25 law- br&ln rotates its molecules to such a
?ie;ht.:etwhi SeTer. i.izr? r
the relative rights of the various Physiological response in the direction
ditches will be known, but how will the ."' improved memory,
water be divided among them! The Everybody knows that the water oi
pieneer irrigator knows that the eourf the Great Salt Lake is verv dense as
cannot deny hto hi. usual water "P-.wen as very salt, but many will be
plv, and though his right has been de-1 . . . ,
termin.d for perhaps the second 0r1BUPPrlsed t0 l"m . that its density
third time, the question is still, how,varles to a remarkable degree from
to get this water at the time when time to time. For Instance, In 18S5 tho
needed. How will he determine which density was 1.1225, and the percentage
of the many ditches above is diverting by weight of solid constituents was
water without right, in order to bring 10-710. ln lm the dellgity nml m.
aVhnejUdn:rree TlZffi? & en the hf?
parties to the suit. New appropriations corded- and tue Percentage of solids
can and will be made, thus forcing new , to 27,721 ; In 1907 the density had di
litigation. The same conditions which mlnlshed to 1.1810, and the percentage
broupht on the present suit still exist of solids to 22.920. Of the solids ln
and this decree, without additional leg- 1907i 12.67 per cent was chlorin, 7.53
islation, will be of no more value in j 53 t
settling conditions than former decrees, i . . , .
Th. .nnm. n.irf h, ,n.i.w. rl.. ! Phate radical, 0.72 per cent potassium,
crees, has enacted practically all the
water law of this state. To expect the
court to provide In their decrees for the
complieatr.l administrative machinery
to make water decrees effective looks
like a complete shifting of the burden
from the legislature to the courts.
This, in the opinion of leading water
right lawyers, is not possible.
One of the leading attorneys in the
Walla Walla river ease estimates thut
the present suit will ultimately cost be
tween $20,000 and $25,000. This enor
mous drain upon the agricultural re
sources of this small valley, for a nega
tive result, cannot help but retard set
tlement and discourage capital.
The purchase of a water right ln
Oregon means the purchase of a law -
suit. no litigation over water riguus
in this state has ever settled any issue
so that it eannot again be raised. The
decrees are binding upon only the
parties to the litigation. These decrees
often serve to eumber title to the un
used waters, as the state, interested in
preserving the unappropriated waters
for future users, has not been repre
sented in court at trials of these eases.
Conserving Our Waters.
In the arid portion of this state the
area of irrigable land far exceeds the
regular water supply. The summer
flow of these streams can be increased
many fold by the storage of water in
the mountains, and using the natural
channel to convey such water to the
place of intended use. This class of
development, which is eneouraged and
protected in Wyoming, Idaho and other
states, is absolutely impossible in Ore
gon, except under the most favorable
conditions. Capital will not invest in
such storage works until the state pro
vides the necessary administrative ma
chinery for protecting stored water as
. it pastes down the stream past numer
ous diteh diversions te the place of in
tended isse.
No State Protection.
It is not a crime in Oregon to steal
water. In fact, the law encourages it,
As stated above, ay person ean ae
autre a water richt bv posting a notice
or digging a ditch and diverting water,
regardless' as to the area of crops de
stroyed at the lower end of the valley
by such wrongful diversion. Without
the necessary administrative machin
ery, and a reliable record of vested
rights to the use of water, it would be
impossible to enforce any criminal law
covering water, even if enacted.
Theft of water in an arid region is
as serious a crime as destroying the
crop of another, since it amounts to
the same thing ln the end, yet this
state maintains no department having
control of diversions from public
streams. There is no department to
which the homeseeker or investor can
write to ascertain if the water rights
claimed for eonstmcted works are as
represented, or whether any unappro-
priated water remains in a certain
stream. Even if-unappropriated water
exists, there is no method provided by
'AT ?.e?nlr,"K e'e8r " P"
title ter this water from the public, to
whom it belongs.
it requires constant litigation ou toe
part of early appropriators to secure
their rights. Where the price of justice
exceeds the value of the wter right,
the place must be abandoned.
" (CONCLUDED NEXT WE.)
Accepted.
"De yon consider your nerve is suffi
ciently steady te It you for an airship
navigator V
"Well, I've been oat In a canoe with a
nervous fat girL" Cleveland Plain Deal
er. ; ,
Foiled, Balked, Tna Dw.
"I will follow you to the end of the
earth l" hissed the villain In her shell
like ear. But the clever girl fooled
him she didn't go there. Boston
Transcript
EffiM7ATD. 1
1 ttw-il7 vf
ayaBrry
In P"3 f Alaska is found a kind
ot fish that makes a capital candle
when it Is dried. The tail of the fisli
9 stuck luto a crack of a wooden table
to hoIJ tt Unrlght, and its uose is
rord1ing to gG,T
and it gives a good, steady light ,
suited for directing Whitehead tor-
oedoes at long ranges.
At a recent meeting of the Roya
Society of Canada, Sir James Grant,
M. D., presented a paper on the neu-
rous ana ceIls of the brains in their
relation to the faculty of memory, and,
after stating that, as with the other
tissues of the body, so with the cells
0.45 per cent magnesium, and 0.04 per
ent calcium.- ' - ; -
The famous Neanderthal skull found
in Switzerland ln 1S5G,' and other sim
ilar skulls and parts of skulls found
elsewhere In Europe, have been re
garded as representing a distinct
species of the human race, to which
the name Homo Primlgcnlus has been
given. Prof. W. J. Sollas undertakes
to' show . that there are no grounds
whatever for regarding the Neander
thal type of man as a separate species.
On the contrary, he thinks that "the
Neanderthal race, the most remote
from us ln time of which we have any
;knowledge( and the Australian, the
most remote from us ln space, probably
represent divergent branches of the
same original stock." Doctor Lydekker
remarks that this conclusion of Prof.
Sollas' accords with the modern view
that the native Australians are low
grade members of the Caucasian, or
European stock, instead of, ns at one
.time supposed, half-bred oceanic ne
groes. "The Veddnhs of Ceylon and
the Toalas of Celebes apparently mark
their line of march from the west to
east"
"SUMMER COMFORT 1"
This Is the very latest for the 190a
ummer glr- She, mu8 wuear a col'ar
tuat mt the neck and shuts off her
hearing, skirts that have enough ma-
terlal In them to make a gus bag for
Roy Knabeusbue's airship, and a hat,
hlg ag a Washtub, that requires a
course in Juggling to keep it balanced
. , , . ' 00 B "
f straight.
j A Gerrou Reqaeat.
Porter Emerson Browne came into
the office yesterday. He had been out
( ln the country for a week and was
, very cheerful. Just as he was leaving
he said: "Did you hear about that
man who died the other day and left
e.11 he had to the orphanage?"
j "Xo," some one answered. "How
ouch did he leave?"
, "Twelve children."
j Mr. Browne left, too. Everybody's
j Magazine.
One poor little fly In the bedroom
In the morning will do more effectual
work than a dozen alarm clocks, costs
less, and never gets out of repaid
4 atom ettr
Woman's Wit.
An emperor of Germany besieged a
city which belonged to one of his re
bellious noblemen. After the siege had
lusted for a long time the emperor de
termined to take It by storm and to de
stroy all It contained by fire and sword.
He did not, however, wish to injure
the defenseless women ; therefore, he
sent a proclamation Into the town, say
ing that all the women might leave
the place unhurt and carry with them
whatever they held most precious. The
uobleman's wife instantly decided to
take her husband, and the other women
followed her example. They soon is
sued from the city gate in a long pro
cession, each one with her husband on
her shoulders. The emperor was so
much struck with the noble conduct of
the women that lie spared all ; even the
city Itself was left untouched.
Mothers will find Mrs. Whitlow's Soothing
Byrup the bet t remedy to useforthelroitldr a
luring ilie teething period.
A Bit Different.
Towne There's one thing about my
wife. She makes up her mind if she
can't afford a thing that she doesn't
need it.
Browne Something like my wife,
only she .buys it first and makes up her
mind afterward. Philadelphia Press.
fit. Yrtns' Panre and all Nervosa Diabases
cermnuontlr cured hr Dr. KUne'a tircat
!r. flANtArtt RnnA fnr PUKK Sltr'ai hnttl -M
treatise. Ur. 1U U.K.llnc,lxL. V31 Arch St, 1-UUa. Ja.
Painful Etiquette.
The royal court of France used to be
n great place for etiquette. Louis XIV.
once caught a severe cold owing to
the fact that ou his arising from his
bed one cold morning the lord of the
chamber, whose duty It was to hand
him his shirt, happened to be absent
Not one of the numerous courtiers
present had the courage to transgress
etiquette by handing the garment to
the shivering monarch. Loudon Scrap
Book.
To Breal- in New Shoes.
Always shake in Allon's Foot-Easo, a powder,
(t cures hot, sweating, aching, swollen Jeet.
Cures corns, Ingrowing nails and bunions. At
all druggists and shoe steres, 2fo. Dont accept
ny substitute. Sample mat IcdFItKE. Addrcsa
alien 8. Olmsted, La lloy, N. Y.
He Wna Practical.
"Young man, you write a good denl
of poetry to my daughter."
"Tes, sir."
"It takes a practlcul man to sup
port a wife."
"Well, it's this way. I have to write
her an occasional letter, and I'm so
busy at the office thut I Just copy the
poetry to fill ln."
The explanation was satisfactory.
Exchonge.
Troable.
Nan So you like Archie, do you? 1
always thought him just the least bi
effeminate.
Fan Well, he's certainly a good deal
more ladylike than you are.
WHEN YOU GQKIE TO PGRTUND
ARRANGE TO STOP AT '
THE CORNEOUS
PARK AND ALDER STS.
A New and Modern European Hotel, catering
particularly to State people. A refined place for
ladies visiting; the city, close to the shopping
center. Rates reasonable. Free Bus.
N. X. CLARKE, (late of Portland Hotel) Mgr.
BORAX FOR FRESH MEATS
Fresh meats, dusted over with pow
dered borax (which is now prepared of
extreme fineness and purity and white
as snow) and rubbed in as you . would
pepper and salt, will keep fresh much
longer. All that is required is to wath
the meat before cooking.
KEEPS POULTRY SWEET
Dead game, poultry, etc., can be
kept Bweet for weeks by rubbing them
well with powdered borax under the
wings, legs, tail and placing a little in
the mouth of the bird.
Looal atffintft wanted. Write for moner mak Inn plan
The Feline Propensity.
"How does Mrs. Sleigh get on ln the
club?"
"Oh, she always comes up to the
scratch."
"Of course she does. The cat!"
Baltimore American.
.flfl.fi jut u
'ilie Kind You Hare Always
Im lm) Vat hi: I V
ture of Clias. II. Fletcher, and has been niario uudcr his
personal supervision for over 0 years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
Just-an-good " are but Experiments, and endanger tho
health of Children lixperienco against lxperiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Hoothlng Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other JNarcotio
Bubstance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and ullays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving1 healthy and natural bleep.
Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend.
Tlie Kind You Hare Always Bought
S7
Bears the
In Use. For Over 30 Years.
tmi timwa eoaimiv, tt aiuaaa btrsit. ntm tokk c.tt.
Truth
and Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed In every
walk of life and are essential to per
manent success and creditable stand
ing. Accordingly, it is not claimed
that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of
Senna is the only remedy of known
value, but one of many reasons why
it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal
organs on which it acts without any
debilitating after effects and without
having to increase the quantity from
time to time
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it. is free from all
objectionable substances. To get ita
beneficial effects alwayB purchase the
genuine manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and tor
sale by all leading druggists.
Onlr Night Air at Nlsbt.
Speaking of Floreuce Nightingale
and her efforts to keep the world
healthy, it seems pertinent to make
special mcntlou of her mission in be
half of the open window at night Ia
the early years of her labors much un
intelligent opposition to this method of
ventilation because of the supposed
harmfulness of the night air was ex
pressed, but Miss Nightingale bad one
stock argument In support of her posi
tion, it being the question, "What air
shall we breathe at night but night
air?" It was unanswerable from her
opponents' point of view, even If It
did not always cohvert them, but It did
lead a countless number into saner
ways ot living and along the way to
the present methods of treating tuber
culosls. Boston Transcript.
More Troable for Johnny.
"No." explained Mrs. I.apnlmg. "Johnny
says he wasn't bitten by the dog, but I'm
not going to take any chances. I shall
have him expurgated juat as soon as I can
get him to the doctor's." Chicago Trib
une. "THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY"
Better each year, and larger. We now
have two floors 65 x 100 feet. Thorough
work tells the story. It counts in tho
end, and we admittedly lead in this re
spect. Get our catalogue, penwork, etc.,
then judge for yourself as to quality.
A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL.B., Principal
Tenth and Morrison Portland, Oregoo
C. Gee Wo
The woll known reliable
CHINESE
Root and Herb
DOCTOR
Hub innde a life ttudf f
rontauriri he rim, and in thai
bi xxiiy dlrKJoveri'd aud la giwm
l,'H'K ln9 to Ule wnrlti iiia wood
iijV-w iul reirtxlitw.
No Mercury, Poison or Drugs Used He Cures
rV 'thorn Operation, or Without the Aid of a Knif
11a Huarante to Cure (Jutnrrh, A tit h ma, Lanib
fhront, Ihmimatnm, Nurvotianowi. Nurvoui Debility,
Rtomttfih, Xjlvtr. Kidney Tronlle:lMLofit MaaUsod.
female WWknwtw ft ml All Prfviito blautintta
A SURE CANCER CURE
Just Received from Peking, China Safe, Sure
Olid Reliable.
IT TOtT ABE AJfUCTKl). 1H)N'T DELAY.
WCLAVS AUK IMNC.hltOUB.
COINSUCTATIOM PKGR
U you oannot call, write for sympton blank and olrata
lar. Incltme 4 thtiIs In flrnniiifl.
, THE O. OKK WO ClUNUSEillCDlcrNECO.
IfSl-ii Vint St., dor. Morrlkon, Portland, Oiaeaa,
fleam Mention This Paver.
PNU
No. 23-0
n
HEN writing- to advertisers pleeae
mention tins paper.
HaiMi.iiWiiii.Vtt,
lioutrht lias borne tho nitriia.
Signature of
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i