The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, August 02, 1895, Image 4

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UNCLE DICK OGLESBY.
Two Characteristic Stories of the Genial
" Ex-Governor of Illinois. '
I think it was during the Cleveland
Blaine campaigns, that - ex-Governor
Oglesby of Illinois, "Unole Dick,',' as
he is familiarly known, first made a stay
. of any length in New York. ' ' '
He and a companion had a sumptuous
. luncheon, ordered of course by the intro
ducer, who wound up by inviting the
jrovp"'ior to smoke. The clerk at the ci-
gar counter handed out some fine Havana
cigars. Uncle . Dick was. about to take
one, when some thought arrested his
hand, and he asked: :'.
"What's the price of these?" '
"Twenty-five cents," was the reply. :
"Holy smoke I" ejaculated the govern
or. "Put1; "em back 1 1 Put 'em back,
quickl" '...r-.;, -' ." i :
"But, governor, this is my treat,"
, Said his friend. '" v -v ;..-.
' "Daren't do it I Daren't do it I Put
'em back!" , . . i,,- .
"Yes, but governor" . ,
" "I tell you I daren't dolt, Why,
man, if they should ever find out in Il
linois that I smoked a 85 cent cigar in
. , New York, they'd turn me ut of " the
church, and it would ruin me politically
forever. Daren't do itl Ten cent cigars
are good enough for me in New York
and 5 centers at home. " ", ,. ' "
Uncle Dick always prided himself on
his success in campaigning when called
upon to reach a man's vote through his
family pride.
. On one of his tours he passed through
a country town in Illinois, when he
came suddenly upon a charming group
a comely woman with a bevy of little
ones about her in a garden with a high
picket fence in front of, it ; He stopped
short, then advanced and leaned over
the front gate. .
"Madam," said he in his most in
gratiating way, ' may I kiss these beau
tiful children?" , .
"Certainly, sir,"; the lady answered
, demurely, "there is no possible objec
tion." "They are' lovely darlings," said tJn
. cle Dick, after he had finished the elev
enth. "I have seldom seen more beauti
ful babies. Are they all yoprs, marm?"
. The lady blushed deeply. '
"Of course they are the sweet little
treasures. From whom else, marm, could
they have inherited these limpid eyes,
these rosy cheeks,, these profuse curls,
these comely figures and these musical
voices?".' i . 1 2
, The lady continued blushing.
"By the way, marm," said Uncle
Dick, "may I bother you to tell your
estimable husband . that Richard J.
"Oglesby, Republican candidate for gov
ernor, called upon him this evening?"
"Alas, sir," quoth the lady, "I have
no husband. " ; ;
"But -these children,, ntadam you
surely are not a widow?",, . & . ,
"I fear you were mistaken, sir, when
you first came up. These are not my
children. . This is an orphan asylum 1"
Exchange.. -r; ; . "-
Doctors or No Dootors. . 1 !
Taka haphazard a number of people
of both sexes and of all ages. - Divide
them ' into communities."..; Let the doo
tors of each nation have a community to
themselves this division wonld-,be in
dispensable because the difference which
exists between the treatment prescribed,
say, by a French and by an English doc
tor, has to bo experienced to be believed.
Let the allopathists, the homeopathists,
the hydropathists, : the thousand, and
one sets of medical faddists, all have a
community of their own.',, Give the nos
trum mongers free; hands,.,; Suffer the
faith healers to work, unimpeded, somei
where, their own sweet will, and amid
the whole number of the communities
permit one to be set apart in which no"
doctor of any sort or kind, regular or
irregular, shall , be allowed . to place a
foot or have a voioa If such a test were
feasible, I wonder what the result would
be.- Or, rather,' I do not wonder I
should like to have a wager depending
on the wfeue. . . ": ;. . " .... ' , ,
, I would wager that, all things being
eqpttf VxMtion, climate, circumstances,
09 V011' a8es physical history
of ve communities would be pretty
wt uohness. They would all suf -fer
yn the same diseases, would beat
them or be beaten by them, in much the
same way, and would die at about the
same age. : Of this I am certain and in
this I believe that the physicians them
selves would be upon my side that the
medically supervised communities would
be every whit as closely acquainted with
pain, disease and suffering before the
curtain finally fell as that one commu
nity in which no doctors were. All the
Year Round.. . ,
VPoiuruj rare.
4W
A BUILDER TALKS.'
A GREAT SUFFERER FOR YEARS
CURED IN TWO WEEKS.
A. N. Tompkins, a Kesldent of Oregon
City, Relates a Most Wen-
derful Story.
From the Enterprise, Oregon City, Or.
A representative of the. Oregon City,
Enterprise visited Mr. A. N. Tompkins;
the" well-known carpenter and. builder
of Oregon City, and finding him ,. hard
at work, , asked if he was the man who
had been ill v. of rheumatism. Receiv
ing an affirmative answer, the reporter
asked if he would have any '(Objections
to making a statement of his base, how
he was oared, eto.'r". for , the benefit of
the public. "V'H '
' VNo objections at . all,1'." said ' Mr.
Tompkins. ; W'l have- suffered with
lumbago for years, having had .bad
spells off and on. Sometimes it would
lay me up entirely. Whenever . I did
any heavy lifting, or got wet or caught
oold, I would have a. bad spell. Some
times I would be so bad . that I could
not straighten up.,, 'I was always look
ing for something on which , I could
oount for certain relief, if not absolute
oure.' I tried many 'physicians. . One
nearly succeeded - in making a mor
phine fiend of me by injecting mor
phine into my body to relieve the pain
he could not oure and was not honest
enough to admit, All these medicines
and dootors did me no good, some even
as in this case, doing me harm, , ,
. . '.'While working on the Barolay
building some months ago I had an at-
tack. I immediately went to Charm an
& Co. 's drug store and told Mr. . Char.
man to give me a box of Pink Pills.
Having bought them I commenced tak
ing them at once, and after the first
day I experienced relief, and ; in two
weeks I was entirely well.' I had in
that time used part of the second box,
Being at the home Of my daughter-in-
law, Mrs. Lena Tompkins, and hearing
her complain of rheumatism, I gave
her the balance. . t -'
.. "Now, I have worked .right along,
and in spite of the present wet weather
and the faot that I have a heavy cold
just now,' I' have no indication of the
presence of my old disease, and any
one of the three things (heavy work,
wet weather and a cold) which ; I now
have oombined, would have given me
a bad spell heretofore." ' I consider Dr,
Williams' Pink Pills a great remedy,
and I " believe they have . absolutely
oured me. At least, if they have not,
it is only a question of continuing the
remedy long enough, and if I ever have
a return of the pain I shall fly to Pink
Pills." a, ir-
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in
a condensed form, all the elements nec
essary to give new life and richness to
the blood and restore shattered nerves,
They are an unfailing speoifio for such
diseases as locomotor ataxia,!, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus dance, sciatica,
neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous head
ache, the after effects of la grippe, pal
pitation of .the heart, pale and sallow
oomplexion, - all forms , of .weakness
eitner in male or female, and all dia
eases resulting from vitiated humors in
the blood.' ; Pink Pills are sold . by all
dealers, or will be sent postpaid on re
ceipt of price (50 cents a box, or six
boxes for $2.50) by adressing Dr. Will
iams'. Medicine Co., Schneotady, N. Y.
' ' '": . .' . Reciprocity. -"Want
a shine?" said thn diminntivn
bootblack to the barber who was sitting
, o
in front of his tonsorial palace waiting
ror aoustomer.N' - - , j " '
"Naw." answered the barber.' "I
can do my own shining. " 5
Then 1 11 do my own shavm, durn
ye!" returned the wrathful hoodlum.
Chicago Tribune.
' VP & -jr Explained. "
Jinks (at a party) I don't see what's
the matter with that pretty woman over
there. She was awfully flirty a little
while-go, and now she won't have any
thing to do with me. J, ; J '? f.f
Stranger I have just come in, I She's
my Wife. London Weekly Telegraph.
TJncong-eniai ' . '" ,
- A washerwoman applied for help to a
gentleman,' who gave her a. note to the
manager of a certain club. It read as
follows: "Dear Mr. X This woman
wants washing. " ' Very shortly the an
swer came back: "Dear Sir I dare say
she does, but I don't fancy the Job. "
London Tit-Bits.
APPLES BETTER THAN..WHEAT. ;
, ,n...t .'- ' " .. h ' '
Borne Startling Figuring Done by an En-
J thnsiastlo Oregon Editor. , ; '.''
. That 't will not do to put all of one's
eggs in one basket has been thoroughly
demonstrated by the berry crop this sea
son. With thousands of crates ripe the
ability to reach a market is without any
fault of ours suddenly taken away. 'The
strawberry crop has been the principal
one of this section, and while it will not
only ' hold its present '-yield but Vill
double and treble it. it will in a year or
two become of ' seoondary importance.
Prunes, "peaches,' cherries and Bmall
fruits generally are a necessity .to the
fruitgrower - because . they furnish him
with- money early in the season as well
as early in his business. They are a
means to an end, furnishing money to
lupport the family and to improve the
farms.: ; They all bear one fatal objection
as a crop to be relied upon, and that is'
the absolute necessity of finding a' mar
ket for them as soon as they are ripe.
This may not be true of. the! prune, but
for it the same condition exists it must
be taken care of at once when ripe. ,'
The fruit of Hood River, the one that
is to make her famous as well as pros
perous, is the winter apple. That can
be kept ? It can be gathered leisurely,
once in bearing,. .bring better and-stead-ier
returns and at the very least outlay.,
John Sweeny's orchard last year, is
first year of bearing,' produced more net
money than-would ' or could have been
derived . , from the same area of land
sown to wheat in 86 yeara- This year it
should 'yield "50 times as "much; next
year 70 times as much; and then for' 20
years 100 times as . much, ; In other
words, one ' acre 'of winter 'apples is
worth more, year in jand year out, than
100, acres of wheat, ,. Six acres-of good
orchard will yield ft larger net yield
than a section of, wheat land. Multiply
the acres: in Hood River valley by 100
and some idea' of the wealth that it will
eventually produce may be gained." -:
,,. In other words, every section in fruit
will produce a cash value equal, to three
townships of. wheat,, ,The winter apple
is going to accomplish this result, 'and
the next few years as the young or'-;
chards come into bearing will prove the
truth' of this assertion, though, it now
seems a wild one.. , We can but reiterate
our former words: "Plant apple trees.
Twenty acres if you can;-one tree if that
is your limit, "but plant at every oppor
tunity. ", When this valley is an orchard
from the mills to the summit east of us
and from .the river back for 20 miles,
then only will it have attained its full
development. Hood ; River (Or.) Gla
cier: '; ;';. " ;'' .'r-.' '. ':. i .
CARUTH'S QUESTIONS.
His Thirst For Information Sometimes
(, Takes All tbe Ginger Out of a Climax. , .
- The habit of , Representative Caruth
of interpolating some pointed question
and spoiling a climax when members
are delivering a speech, as he did re
cently when he asked Mr Quigg at what
period in history and in what country
gladiators were booted and spurred, had
a strong illustration in the Fifty -first
congress. , - ;
Representative Dolliver of Iowa was
in the peroration of an impassioned ad
dress, in which he was pioturing the
loyalty and devotion to Amerioan insti
tutions of sundry immigrants. He was
giving the house a thrilling and touch-:
ing" word ; painting of the goodness of
these poor immigrants, declaring they
had turned , their backs -upon the mon
arch ridden countries of Europe to greet
the sun of liberty in their new home in
America. ',;, :, , ;,:. a .. -.
"1 have had them sitting by my side
in my .office," he exclaimed, .'.'while-1
was writing letters f or them to their
old friends across the sea and to then
old homes, and they Were 1 shedding
tears"., .. .!.,.. L
At this point a strange voice from a
seat somewhere on the other side of the
chamber chimed in. " It was Caruth 'a
"What were they crying about?" he
asked. ' .' ' ' '
There was , an uproar of merriment
all over the floor, and Mr. V Dolliver's
fine f orensio effect was shattered by a
shout of laughter at Caruth's impudent
interjection. Washington Post
i Eugene Field's Portrait of Debs.
, -The newspaper portraits of E.V. Deba
are not aoourate. : They represent ' him
as fat and sleek, and he is not. Debs is
tall, blue eyed, pale,, smooth shaven
and inclined to baldness He looks very
like Bill Nye,, and the fact that , he
wears spectacles emphasizes the ' resem
blanca He dresses very 'plainly, but
neatly, j He talks fluently,, he is ah om
nivorous reader,- and ' he particularly
likes poetry. Of. address he is candid
and cordial. " He has to a degree that
quality called personal magnetism. Five
minutes ' with . him would suffice, we
think, to convince a reader of human
nature that Debs is a man of high ideas,
honest .convictions', unswerving integ
rity, ': great intellectual '. vigor (or per
haps, rather, zeal), exceptional simplici
ty of oharacter and consummate im
practicability. His traits are those, we
believe, which, taken singly, are most
admirable, but which, bunched, are very
likely to get him into trouble. Chicago
Reoord. , , ' ';' ': ;.,
. Information For the Examiners, i ft ;
' 'The Houl Champ Clark, formerly of
Kentucky, has no respect for -the' civil
service laws, and . he does hot hesitate
to say so, as was indicated , by his vig
orous speech in the house the other day.
In the course of his remarks he made a
general assault on ' :the civil ' service
system,' which,':" he'' declared,, was the
most monumental fraud of the century.;
Not 10 men In this house, said he,
'could stand an examination for a $900
clerkship." Why, they asked one man
how many British soldiers were sent ;
over here during the revolution. The
applicant replied that he ' did not know
the exact number, but he knew a d d
sight more came over than went back."
Louisville Courier-Journal. ,-
DEFYING THE DOG DAYS.
Mechanical Processes Employed to Make
-y Winter Temperature This Summer. . ;
j The effort to bring the advantages of
refrigeration obtained by mechanical
processes within the reach of small con
sumers has taken two directions the
production of small and inexpensive au
tomatic machines and a system of sup
ply of the refrigerant from central sta
tions The" latter is now in" successful
operation at both St, Louis and Denver.
In .one.of kthe St Louis restaurants,
which the enterprising owner has deco
rated in, a,. manner suggestive of . the
polar regions, pipes upon the walls are
connected with the street line, so that
in 'sweltering summer he can turn on
the cold and defy the dog daya An at
mosphere of 12 degrees below the tem
perature out of doors has an enticing
coolnesa - !:. ;
. .Another example of the varied appli
cations, of the system to be seen in a
cafe window , daily , is a display of eat
ables upon a heavily frosted table.; This
attraction is secured ' by making for the
top of the table a shallow closed tank
completely filled with brine, through
which are passed the pipes of a refriger
ating coil. ; , The brine,- being cooled be
low the-freezing point, gathers its snowy
covering from the moisture of . the at
mosphere. , Above it in the window are
pipes curved to form the letters of the
proprietor s name. ' They,' too, constitute
an expansion coil and glisten with a
heavy, snowy coat. In a drug store an
elaborate soda fountain exposes not the
customary pictures of frostwork, , but'
real frost The refrigerating pipes, are
ingeniously carried through this foun
tain in such a way as to cool without
danger of - freezing the various : liquids
and are exposed to view in places curved
in fanciful shapes and. presenting a re
freshing sight Qf , dry white frost W,
W. Smith in Cassler's Magazina u
SMALL BEGINNINGS ' !..
Make (treat endings sometimes. Ailments that
we are ant to consider trivial often srow,
tnrougn aegiect, into atrocious maladies, dan
eerous in themselves and productive of otnere
It is tne disregard of tbe earlier indications of
ill health which leads to the establishment oi
nil sorts of maladies on a chronlo basis. More
over, there are certain djsoraers incident to tbe
season, sum . as malaria ana rneumausm,
aeainst which it is ' alwavs desirable to fortifv
the svstem alter' exposure to the conditions
which produce theas. Cold, damp and miasma
are surely counteracted oy Hostellers Htomacn
bitters. After you have incurred risk from
these influences, a wlneglftssful or two of Ho
tetter's Stomach Bitters directly afterward
snouid De swallowed. For malaria, dyspepsia
liver complaint, kidney and bladder trouble
nervousness and debility it is the most de
servedly popular of remedies and preventives,
A wineglasstul before meals promotes appetite,
Host Never shall I forget the time when 1
first drew this sword. ChorusWhen was that?
Host A ta rathe. -. v . . . , , -. ,
GREAT BOOK FREE.
. When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. Y..
published the first edition of his work, The
he announced that after 680,000 copies had
been sold, at the regular price, $1.50 per
copy, tne pront on wnicn would repay him
for the great amount of labor and monev
cxpcuucu iu jjiuuuv:ui it, nc wouiu dis
tribute the next half million free. . As this
number of copies has already been sold, he
jj 1 1 : . , 1 .
is now distributing, absolutely free, 500,000
copies oi this 1 most
com
plete, interest- COUPON
uable common No;-l 14
ing and val
sense tned
published
ical work ever
the recipient only being required to mail
to him, at the a Dove adoress, this little
coupon with twenty-one (21) cents in one
cent stamps to pay for-postatre and pact
in? onlv. and the bonk will be sent bv mail.
it is a veritaDie medical norary, complete
in one volume." It contains over 1000 pages
and more than 300 illustrations.' The Free
jLdition is precisely the same as those sold
at $1.50 except only that the books are
bound in strong mamlla paper covers in
stead of cloth. Send now before all are
given away. : They are going off rapidly,
DIRECTIONS for using
CREAM BALM.-- Apply
a particle of the Balm well
up into the nostril. ' After
a moment draw strong
breath through the nose.
Use three times a day, after
. 1
incut y7G077CU ttjiuurjiic
retiring. ' -- ' -. 1 : : fu
CATARRH
ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses
tion, Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane
from colds. Restores tbe 8enses of Taste and
Smell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives
renei at once.
A particle is applied into each nostril, and is
agreeable. Price, 60 oents at Druggists' or by
- - 66 Warren Street, New York.
;:; motive POWER I-
Urbnill CO GAS and
flLIlUULLO GASOLINE
PiLMEE k BET, Sai Francisco. Cai. aM Portland. Or.
Halter BaRer & Co. Limitetl, f
Th largest Mionfketaren of :
PURE, HIGH CRADE
COCOAS and CHOCOLATES;
On thU Continent, har iweived (
HIGHEST AWARDS
' from th ffraat ' n
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
IN EUROPE AND AMERICA.
.i.! . In of th
; of the Ubeliftnd wrappen on our .
1' (toodt eoniumert ihould make sure '
tbM our piaco ot msnuiciut,
namely, Dorchester, Ata.
it printed on Mch package.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER i CO. LTD., DORCHESTER, MASS, ;
FRAZER
BEST IN THE WORLD. J li
lts wearine qualities are unsurpassed, actually
outlasting two boxes of any other brand.- Free
from Animal Oils. OKT THE (1KNUINK,
FOB SAL-B BY OKEWON AND
Jp-WA8HINGTON MERCHANTS
ana xwaiers generally ,
Best CouRh Syrup. Taetes in ud.
In time, Pol d by driiBfrlMR.
fi mm
fit, H-tf
mm
WT
BOIXX'S SCHOOL.
Nowhere are boys better cared for -and
more thoroughly taught than at Hoitt's
School, Burhngame, San Mateo county,
Cal. - The school is In charge of Ira G.
Hoitt, Ph. D., and will reopen August 6th.
8. F. Chronicle. ' '
' Hoax Is Longbow as fond of fishing as evert
Joax No: he's joined the church. - .
'DBAFNBSS; CANNOT BB CUBED
By local applications, as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
only one way to cure Deafness, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness it
caused ;by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining ol the Eustachian Tube
When this tube gets inflamed you have
a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed Deafness is the
result, and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its nor
mal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. '
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case 01 Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall s Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
r F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
7Sold by Druggists, 75c.
' I am entirely cured ' Ot Hemorrhage of
lungs oy fiso s uure tor (Jonsumption.
louisa Xjindaman, lietnany, mo., J an. 8,'SH.
. NEW WAT EAST NO DUST.
wo aast irom rortiana, renaieton. walla
Walla via O. R. & N. to Spokane and Great
in ortnern itauway to Montana, Dakotas, St.
Paul, . Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha, St
Louie, East and South. Rock-ballast track;
fine scenery; new equipment; Great North
ern Palace Sleepers and Diners; Family
Tourist Cars; Buffet-Library Cars. Write
0. C. Donovan, General Agent, Portland,
Oregon, or F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A.,
St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in
formation about rates, routes, etc. , -
v ARE YOU SICK?
Bend for circulars of Radam's Microbe Killer,
860 Morrison St., Portland, Or. . . -
Try Gibmka for breakfast.
Weakness (
Ii caused by thin, weak,, impure
blood. To have pure blood which
will properly suBtain your health
' and give nerve strength, take (
Hood's
., ,(;.-
Sarsaparilla
TO THE SICK
Radam's Microbe Killer,
Is the only known remedy that will destroy
the Microbe in the Blood without injury to the
system. - Millions of people testify to its won
derful cures. ' -
: BY REMOVING THE CAUSE- ' - .', , '
IT CUKES ALL HUMAN DISEASES.'
Price, S3 per Jar. ; :' 91 per Bottle
" ''' Advice free.. Write for circulars.-. ,
Radam's Microbe Killer Company
, 1330 Market St., San Francisco, Cal.
860 Morrison Street ., PORTLAND, OB.
Orders filled to any. part of the country by
express. . ... ,, .-, , . - ...
GROFULA
Miss Delia Stevens, of Boston, Mass,
writes: I have always suffered from
hereditary Scrofula, for which I tried
various remedies, and many reliable
physicians, but none relieved me. After
taming bottles ot
I am now well. I
am very grateful
to you, as I feel
that it saved me
from a life of un
told agony, and
shall take pleasure in speaking onl;
words of praise for the wonderful m
icine, and in recommending it to all. I
Treatise on
CURED
Blood and Skin
Diseases mailed
tree to any ad
dress. '
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Oa.
DR. GUNN'S
y'.' IMPROVED '
LIVER PILLS
: A MILD PHYSIC.
I1VH Pli.I, POTt. A DOSE.
- - A movement of the bowols each day 11 necessary for
health. These pills supply what the system lacks to
make it reg-ulan They cure Headache, brighten the
Eyes, and clear the Oomplexion better than cosmetics.
They neither Kripe nor sioken. To oonvince you, we
will mail sample free, or a full box for ?5o. Bold every .
where. BOSANKO MED. CO.. Plmoaelpliia. Pa,
X. P. N.4 U. No. 608 -8. F. N. U. No. 685
HEEP-DIP
LITTLE'S
MlTAR
"JAMES UIDUW
MALARIA!
Three dotes only. Try It.
WEINHilRD'SiS
Antifermentine
reserves all kinds of Fruit without cooking, and retains their
'; ,v ' " natural flavor. " ,
DON'T BORROW
SAPOLIO
OXI$ UNJOY
Both tne method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and ; have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in BOo
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. - Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.' :' - :
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
' ' SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
: IDWSVILLE. KY. HEW YORK. N.Y.
HIGHEST AWARD
WORLD'S FAIR.
The BEST
PREPARED
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
JOHN CARLE ft SONS, New York.
AMERICAN
Palmer & Rey Branch
Electrotypers
Stereotypers...
Merchants in Gordon and Peerless
Presses, Cylinder; Presses, Paper
' . Cutters, Motors of all kinds,
T Folders, Printing Material. '
, Patentees of Self-Spacing Type. ,
Sole Makers of Copper-Alloy Type
A SURE CURE FOR PILES
Itching Piles known by moiiture lika perspirfttlon.oanso
Intense itohins- when warm. This form d iilind. Blood- -ing
or Protruding Piles yield at once lo
DR. BO-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY,
which ot directly on parts affected, absorbs tnmors, al
lays itching, effecting & permanent euro. Price 6(10.
tfroggisu or maiL Dr. Bosanko ruilada. Pw
t CHICKEN
if you use the Petalum
lacabaUrs A Brooder.
Make money while
others are wasting
time bvoldoraces&es.
Catalog-tells all about IM 48 Page B H
it, and describes every V3 Illustrated!
article needed for theCM. Catalosue Ul
poultry business. free. ; .
The "ERIE"
mechanically the best
vhMl VmlHjet mrvUI
I We are Pacific Coast
fllll HM-nnn Kmau .4- nu.a wr a wwnn
PETAiinitA rjfCUBATOR CO., Petaluma,CaL
Branch Housb, 131 S Main St., Los Angeles.
MBC WIMCI nWQ SopTHiNG
IIIIIU. IIII1VIL.UII U SYRUP
- FOR CHILDREN TEETHING -ForuIebrallDracelaU.
85 Cents a bottle.
POWDER " DIP THE BEST MADE I
With ftnlli Wator. . Pollnhla anA aafa '
t.CO., foiland, Or. ?S2S:X222Z'-,
fill
RAISINS PAYS
1B3
DO YOU FEEL BAD? DOES YOUR BACK
ache? Does every step seem a burden? You need
MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.
LL-KN OWN BEER
(IN KEGS OK BOTTLES) .. :
none TuT IT.. ""'
where Irom. . lOKILtND, OR.
T ROUBL E." B U Y
'TIS5 CHEAPER IN THE END.