Office ()|M>ra House Block LOCAL NEWS Second Hand Store Phone Groen 83j We have Just what you are looking for r. M. Morley & Co. Buy«*™ and ship)M*rs of BIG SAVING ON FIRST COST HOPS AND POTATOES There are so many things tliat we have that you need, just as gixxl as new. Come in and M*e. Water 8t., Silverton, Oregon Phone Blue 921 Leaxona In the common school CHAS. WEBB branches, higher mathernaticH, the natural eciencea and law, at 25 cent« a lemon, Monday, Wed Property for exchange all over nesday and Saturday night of the world. For quick results, each week. See J. E. Hosmer. | See J. E. Hosmer. i Hansen Hotel lieds 25c to 75c Meals 25c Board and Room by Week, $5.00 Sunday Chicken Dinner a Specialty LADIES AND GENTS SUITS CLEANED, PRESSED, REPAIRED AND MADE TO ORDER SHUN FRAYED COLLARS. Mrs. C. M. Wray went to New port Monday for an outing. Do you want a 40-acre home stead? See J. E. Hoamer. A big punch and shear press worth $720 for sale at $400. J. E. Hosmer. The Journal office is turning out lots of hop checks and doing other fine job printing stunts these days. Mrs. A. H. Sommers, her little daughter, and Miss Mary Zurker went to Portland Monday. Miss Zurker is on her way back to Ohio. Ye editor is obliged to spend much time and all the money he can get hold of these outing days attending court, consulting other attorneys, answering charges, etc. But some people are never so happy as when in trouble, so “let 'er buck.” The booklet of twenty pages and neat cover, entitled “The Escaped Nun From Mt Angel Convent, or the Last Stand of Desperate Despotism,” is fin ished. We think this booklet will be an eye-opener and will not only show the conditions of today, but will also point out what the remedy is really going to be. The price is 10 cents per I copy. Order early as the num ber printed is limited, and we have already received orders for several hundred. Jokes. L. E. BROWN, Opposite Drake Bros’ Studio HARNESS and SHOE SHOP I make a specialty of Harness and Shoe repairing Guarantee Satisfaction or money back. Hamess made to order. < :: < I Raferty—Sure, Kelly, but I’m glad to see yez. I thought ye were dead. I heard siv’ral pay pie shpakin’ well av yez.— Puck. Waiter—And how did you find your steak, sir? Customer-Oh, quite simple. I lifted up the potato, and there it was. - London Tattler. “Your name,” he stammered, “is—is written on my heart.” “Yes?” she whispered, “but PROMPT WORK. GOOD GOODS. RIGHTPRICES « < i wouldn’t it be more like busi ness if your name was writ W. A. CROSS, the Harness Man. ten in a life insurance policy for ■J- »-*♦*$♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦$♦♦♦♦♦ *' ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ my benefit?” A certain girl loved a boy, THAT’S HER BUSINESS A certain boy love«! a girl. THAT’S HIS BUSINESS Finally they married, THAT’S THEIR BUSINESS Than they wanted a house to live in THATS MY ■I . ................... If you want to BUSINESS —I Buy, Build, I ■■ ■ or Rent, See BEN HOFSTETTER Contractor and Builder Phone Black 1341 Telephone Black 1222. Estimates furnished. HERBERT ROE GENERAL CONCRETE WORK Have your bathroom covered with Composition Flooring Waterproof, Fireproof, Crackproof. Put on over board floor at 50c. per ft. Any color LINCOLN SAID HAT WE ANT < > Mrs. Crabshaw—“When the woman next door returned after being away a week her husband was just contemptible enough to say that he hadn’t missed her.” Crabshaw—“I don’t suppose he did. He had the talking machine going all the time.” A very prominent man recently died, and shortly after a friend of the family came to condole with the widow. The caller had been a warm friend of the de ceased, and as he was about to depart he asked: “Did Will leave you much?” “Oh, yes, indeed,” responded the widow, “nearly every night” There was old major who said to his valet one evening: “Go and tell the cook to get me ready a chop and a poached egg.” “Pardon me, major,” said the valet, “but have you forgotten that you are dining with Mr. Smith tonight?” The major frowned. “Yes,” he said, “I had forgot ten it. Tell the cook to make it two chops and two poached eggs.” * OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE and all E W BEGINS it* forty-fifth school year S eptember te. teta. DEGREE COURSES In many phssetof ANT is for those who are opposed to the traffic, to STOP VOTING • with those who favor it. I WILL STOP VOTING with those who vote for BOOZE AGRICULTURE. CNQINEERINQ. HOMS ECONOMICS, MININO. FORESTRY, C om merce . P harmacy . two - year C ourses i » agricul ture . HOME ECONOMICS. MECHANIC ARTS. FORESTRY. COMMERCE. PHARMACY TEACHER'S COURSES is manual training, agriculture, domestic aoieace and art. MUSIC, including piano, string, band instruments and voice culture. A B eautiful booklet entitled “T h R ENntCHMRNT OF RuaAL LlFB" and a C atalogue will be mailed free on application. Address H. M. T knman T, Registrar, (tw-TM to M) Corvallis, Oregon. 1F IT_1SÆLAN EASTMAN, IT ISN’T A KODAK fhoy Are Apt to Irritate ths Neck end Cause Csrbunolss. Tbs back of the neck la the com monest pls co for a carbuncle to ap pear It Is a most sensitive spot, not so much on the surface of the skin as in the underlying tlsnes. wherein are great nerves that communicate very closely with the brain. And It Is In these tissue« that the carbuncle spreads Its “roots.” A carbuncle 1« a breaking down of the tissue caused by the germs call ed streptococcus and staphylococcus. These are the principal but by no men ns the only pus producing germa They eat and break down the tlssi'es. The white corpuscles of the blood rush to the spot and try to devour the at tacking bacteria. Millions of them per ish In the attempt, and pus Is really a mixture of dead white corpuscle« and germs that are exuding virulent pol- sons. Carbuncles select the back of the neck so often because of tbe Irritation caused by the collar If this be slightly frayed or roughened by careless laun dering. The back of the neck la al most as much exposed to dirt as are the backs of the hands and needs washing almost as often. The rubbing of tbe collar scrapes off the scaly sur face of the skin, which Is its protec tion against germs of disease. Thia being gone, tbe germs enter unop posed. A collar button pressing constantly on tbe one spot may produce tbe same effect And In a few days you are going ■round with a bandage on your neck and suffering awful torture. Fortu nately the doctors have discovered an antitoxin that quickly cures carbun cles. Yet even when this la adminis tered the patient Is doomed to mueb pain. The moral of all this la: Don’t wear a collar that la the least bit frayed.— New York World. : 0 0 0 Patton Bros. < > Eating and Talking. We nil ent too much, nnd It la little wonder-there la ao much to eat And we all talk too much, because there la no much to talk about—New Orleans Picayune. “You told me you were worth a mil lion, nnd I find thnt you hnve only n paltry $10.000.” said Blathers’ partner. “Well $10,000 is 1,000,000 cents," said Blathers -Har|>er’R Weekly The Journal for job printing. Salem, Ore. MostatTst ivilization has been moving West for ages. The Panama Cana will give this movement a great impetus. The Willamette Valley is the most practical place for the Great Pacific Coast City of the future, and here is very apt to be a greater than New York or London. In fact, the process of growth is now going on. Electric lines are being built, little homes are springingup along these lines, and everything goes to show that great herds of emigrants and immigrants are headed this way. Don’t lose the chance. Buy a lot now now while land is cheap. We have it, and will treat you right C A FEW SAMPLES OF OUR MANY BARGAINS: •! ? CITY PROPERTY: $ Î $ New bungalow, with everything just right, and fine, large lot, in best of locations. $3000. One acre and beautiful five room cottage, neat new barn, chicken park, young fruit, fine level land, well bricked and cemented, with pump. Dandy bargain at $2100. Good terms. Brand new bungalow, plumbed, wired and plastered. Dutch kitchen, buffe in 'dining room, lot 50x100. $1600 on easy terms. Five room bungalow for $1000. Lot 58x128. House new. Fine garden. Will take $500 down and balance in one or two years at seven per cent interest. Hurry! FARM PROPERTY: $ 130 acres, good barn. 75 acres cleared, most excellent soil, 12 acres fine apple orchard, fine spring of pure, cold water, on public road, only 3i miles from city. Going at $60.(X)Jper.“acre. 50 acres of the above, with orchard, at $80 per acre. 15 acres, three miles from Silverton, small house, barn, chicken house, young fruit trees, going at $2000. 75 acres on'.'Abiqua river, 5J miles from Silverton, good roads, 40 acres.cultivated, 3 acres fruit, 6 acres tim ber. rest pastu:*e, good new house, all fenced. Going at $11500. Terms to suit. Will sell part of land if desired. $ Many other big bargains. Come in and see us now. i • J. E HOSMER ? ? SILVERTON, OREGON WATER STREET Indisputable Evidence. “Say, father,” said little Fred, “did you ever have another wife besides mother?” “Why. certainly not,” said the father. “How do you happen to ask anch a < > question, my boy?’’ < » “Well, father." continued the boy, “1 < * saw tn the family Bible that you mar ried Anne Domini, 1892, nnd I know < > that wasn't mother, for her name was Mary Pnrsons when she was a girl.”— Chicago Record-Herald. Not Too Pushing. “Mndnm, 1 must congratulate you on having such a pushing young fellow for a husband." “Yes; George does very well with the lawn mower, but 1 have a time with him about the baby carriage.”—Balti more American. Brownies, $1.00 to $12.00 The Largest City in The World Thalr Varlat and Val«L “We hav'* only ourselves, or, rather, onr forefathers, to blame for the trou ble about the pronunciation of ‘valet,’ " says the London Chronicle. “If they bad stuck to *varlet' thero would have been no difficulty. •Valet’ and ’varief ■re the same word, meaning originally just a boy, the diminutive of ‘vassal,’ a man. Unfortunately when our ances tors applied a word meaning a boy to signify a servant they went on to make it bear a scornful sense. And so *var- let* degenerated hopelessly, just as did ’knnve.* which is simply the German ‘knabe,’ boy." P F Kodaks, $5.00 up. VARICOSE VEINS. CavMi and Effect« and th« Treatment They Require. ▲ varicose vein is an enlarged ■nd twisted vein, generally In the leg. It Is caused by stagnation of the blood. Often the pntlent has a hereditary pre disposition to varicose veins or be has a weak heart with a consequent tend ency to sluggish venous circulation. Anything that interferes with the flow of blood through the veins may bring on an attack. Pressure from a tight garter and very severe muscular exerUon are often exciting causes. Per sons who are obliged to stanti for sev era I hours at a time, like policemen, washerwomen and saleswomen, are of ten subject to this trouble. Under or dinary conditions the blood I d the legs must run up bill constantly in order to regain the heart In the case of those who stand most of the day the blood has to work hard hour after hour in order to overcome the force of gravity, and as a result the veins gradually en large and harden. In mild cases of varicose veins, espe cially In young and otherwise healthy people, the symptoms are very slight There is a feeling of weight in the leg and a dull ache toward the end of the day. The ache is soon relieved by the patient's resting with the leg somewhat raised so that the blood can flow back more easily. Sometimes painful cramps complicate the trouble, and the cramp la likely to return again and again until life becomes a burden. More serious complications are throm bosis (or the clotting of the blood in the vein) and phlebitis (or infiamma tlon of a vein) Often a form of ec sema appears In the skin of the leg. or an ulcer may arise. W’hen varicose veins are very troublesome surgical treatment la ndvisable, but the milder cases can be much relieved by rest and proper bandaging.—Youth’s Companion ICTURE taking opens a new world of entertainment iviUKt _____ _____ to the children, and they never tire of the fun. The Kodak puts this pleasure in the hands of young and old at small cost. Is. simple enough for a child to use with good results -so efficient the expert can not exhaust its possibilities. Kodak and Kodak supplies always on hand. < > 1 > < > < > < > JOB PRINTING OOD Printing not only creates a good impression of the rd plant which does J the work, but it I also creates a good I impression of the person having the work done. The Job Printing ex ecuted by The Silverton Journal is a little better than seems necessary, and costs no more than what you pay for in ferior work elsewhere. Let us fill your next order for printing of any description. Phone us and we will furnish an estimate of the job. G Silverton Journal